Extract from Business Questions: Police and Crime Commissioners - Mar 18
Friday, 19 March 2021 08:13
Mr Peter Bone (Wellingborough) (Con) [V]: I was first elected as a
councillor to the County Borough of Southend-on-Sea, so I am glad
to hear that it is moving towards becoming a city. I am also
delighted—I give the Government great credit for this—that the
Government are pushing ahead with the elections on 6 May, when we
are going to have local elections, police and crime commissioner
elections and now a parliamentary election, and are allowing
campaigning to be carried out during the...Request free trial
(Wellingborough)
(Con) [V]: I was first elected as a councillor to the
County Borough of Southend-on-Sea, so I am glad to hear that it is
moving towards becoming a city. I am also delighted—I give the
Government great credit for this—that the Government are pushing
ahead with the elections on 6 May, when we are going to have local
elections, police and crime commissioner elections
and now a parliamentary election, and are allowing campaigning to
be carried out during the period up to those elections. That is the
cornerstone of our democracy and the Government should be credited.
However, the regulator of those elections is the Electoral
Commission, which is inefficient, arrogant and politically corrupt.
It is not fit for purpose, so could we have a debate in Government
time about a new regulator that would be acceptable to people of
all political persuasions?
Mr Rees-Mogg: Serious concerns have been raised
about the Electoral Commission, not least by my hon. Friend and, as
he knows, I was very concerned about some of the points he raised
when this was last debated on the Floor of the House. With a
modicum of ingenuity and with a benign Speaker or Deputy in the
Chair, there is a debate on Monday on a motion relating to the
appointment of the chairman of the Electoral Commission, which
being a motion under an Act lasts for up to 90 minutes, where I
think my hon. Friend may be able to say a few words of this kind. I
have a feeling that I may be responding to that debate, so I may
well say a few words in response.
(Bath) (LD) [V]: Following the Home
Secretary’s announcement that the elections for Mayors and
Police and Crime
Commissioners will return to being first past the
post, will the Government publish the assessments of which
political party will benefit and any correspondence they received
from Mayors and PCCs, to demonstrate to the public
that this is not just about party politics, but properly leads to
better democracy and more accountability?
Mr Rees-Mogg: Everyone knows that first past the
post is better for democracy because the most popular candidate
wins, rather than the one that nobody much likes but cannot be too
bothered about. Dare I say that it is the party that is so good at
losing elections that most wants to change the system.
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