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'Hostage' to an anachronism?
By Hasan Suroor
LONDON, DEC. 5. Tomorrow, the Queen gives the new millennium's
first speech to Parliament amid a renewed and predictably
partisan debate on the relevance of the monarchy in the 21st
Century.
It is not what the Queen would say - she would say no more than
what has been written for her by Downing Street speechwriters -
but the ambience of the occasion that the Republicans are
underlining to emphasise the anachronism of the institution she
represents.
Consider this: an MP designated as the Vice- Chamberlain of Her
Majesty's Household would go to Buckingham Palace when the Queen
leaves for Parliament and would stay there until she returns in a
replay of the ancient practice when a member of the Commons used
to be held ``hostage'' against the possibility of the Queen being
executed or imprisoned by the Republican ``hordes''. His
``detention'' in the Palace ensured that no harm came to Her
Majesty.
At Westminster, meanwhile, there would be scenes of absurdly old-
fashioned pageantry. Critics of the monarchy find such
``buffoonery'' at odds with the temper of the new millennium and
the demands of a modern-day Parliament. ``It is not just that it
is incongruous to open a 21 Century legislature with toffs called
Silver Stick... dressed in silly clothes and walking backwards.
The real trouble with this flummery is that it stops us taking
democracy seriously'', says Mr. Peter Wilby, editor of the New
Statesman in an article in The Observer. He objects to the fact
that an elected Parliament should be subjected to a demonstration
of such anachronistic rituals as though it were ``an offshoot of
the heritage industry.''
Not all those who want the monarchy to go have problems with the
idea of an MP being held ``hostage'' in the Palace for sometime
or the Silver Stick walking backwards. They raise a more
fundamental point: the very idea of having a hereditary Royalty
maintained at public expense is repugnant to the ethos of an
avowedly egalitarian society. It turns citizens into
``subjects'', a popularly elected Government into Her Majesty's
Government and is a constant reminder of British imperialism
which in turns breeds, as Mr. Wilby says, a ``false sense of who
and what we are.''
The view from the ``other'' side is that monarchy, for all its
``flummery'', is a symbol of stability, a common bond which
unites the people cutting across class barriers. Her Majesty's
``subjects'', it is pointed out, include the entire spectrum of
British citizenry irrespective of whether they are Barons and
Baronesses or commoners. After the flag, it is only the monarchy
that has the power to get people lined up behind it to defend
Britain and British values.
There is another reason why monarchy should stay, says the
writer, Mr. Peter Hitchens, joining issue with Mr Wilby in The
Observer debate. He thinks that the Queen is the only safeguard
against the increasing centralisation of power in the hands of
the Government. A ``toy Parliament in which the concept of
Opposition is unknown'' is not a reliable check on governmental
excesses, he says putting his money on the monarchy which he sees
as one of the more effective ``barriers to the triumph of this
illiberal system''. The need for such a barrier, he argues, is
the greater today with a European superstate staring Britain in
the face.
So, while the arguments fly fast and thick, the Vice- Chamberlain
of Her Majesty's Household would do his time at the Palace
tomorrow morning until the Queen returns home safely; and as the
Silver Stick in their silly clothes - well, be sure, they would
be walking backwards!
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