The Guardian view on restoring trust in politics: Labour must not soft-pedal on standards reform | Editorial

TruthLens AI Suggested Headline:

"Labour Urged to Strengthen Standards Reform to Restore Trust in Politics"

View Raw Article Source (External Link)
Raw Article Publish Date:
AI Analysis Average Score: 7.6
These scores (0-10 scale) are generated by Truthlens AI's analysis, assessing the article's objectivity, accuracy, and transparency. Higher scores indicate better alignment with journalistic standards. Hover over chart points for metric details.

TruthLens AI Summary

In a recent speech commemorating the 30th anniversary of the Nolan Report, former Prime Minister John Major highlighted the urgent need for restoring trust in British politics. He pointed out that Britain's once-sterling reputation for integrity has diminished significantly, primarily due to a series of scandals that have eroded public confidence in political institutions. Major emphasized that this issue transcends party lines, noting that while the Conservative Party has been implicated in numerous scandals, Labour has its own history of ethical lapses. The overarching concern is the declining trust in public life, which, if not addressed, risks becoming irreparable. Major's call to action underscores the necessity for both major parties to engage in a serious reevaluation of their ethical standards and practices to regain public confidence.

The Labour Party's plans for reform, including the establishment of an independent ethics and integrity commission, remain vague and lack clarity on enforcement mechanisms. A year after Labour's election victory, there is growing concern that the government is stalling on these reforms, with discussions shifting towards a more principles-based approach to regulation. Major warns that merely adjusting the existing system without substantial change could lead to another scandal, further damaging public trust. He advocates for a robust revisiting of the Nolan principles, which are essential for rebuilding the ethical framework within government. The risks of complacency are high, and without decisive action, the political landscape may face renewed public contempt, potentially benefiting fringe political figures like Nigel Farage. The need for clear, effective reforms is more pressing than ever to restore faith in the political process and ensure accountability across all parties.

TruthLens AI Analysis

You need to be a member to generate the AI analysis for this article.

Log In to Generate Analysis

Not a member yet? Register for free.

Unanalyzed Article Content

John Major did not beat about the bush. In aspeechthis week to an Institute for Government conference marking the 30th anniversary of theNolan reporton standards in public life, the former prime minister went straight to the heart of the matter. “For many decades,” he said, “Britain enjoyed a global reputation for being free of corruption and bad practice. That is less true today. It is in our national interest to regain that reputation.”

That is indisputably true. But it is not just the global reputation that matters. It is also, at least as significantly, the domestic one. Trust in British public life has diminished, is diminishing and urgently needs to be rebuilt. Confidence in politics and government to change lives is draining away.As Sir John said, the trend needs to be reversed before the damage is “beyond salvage”. That point may, indeed, have been reached already.

This is an issue that transcends political parties. So there is no enduring virtue in pointing out thatthe Nolan committeehad to be set up by Sir John precisely because of the Conservative sleaze scandals of the 1990s, the decade of David Mellor and Jonathan Aitken. Or in pointing out that most of the reputational damage highlighted in his speech was committed in more recent Tory years, under the shameful premiership of Boris Johnson in particular.

All of that is true. ButLabourgovernments have not been without sins of their own – some of them serious – either in the past or more recently. It does public life no favours at all to turn this into a partisan issue. Both major parties (and smaller parties too) like to pretend that they alone are virtuous and that all blame rests with the others. But that is not true.

There is a real danger that the Starmer government and the Labour party are giving way to this self-deceit. Since they, they tell themselves, are good people trying to do good things, the system is safe and trust will be restored. That is not true either. It is the system that is at risk, and which needs to be rebuilt and safeguarded. The clock is ticking.

The Nolan report’s seven principles for public life – selflessness, integrity, objectivity, accountability, openness, honesty and leadership – provide a rock on which to rebuild. But, as Sir John’s speech underlines, the increasingly extensive network of ethical supervision, advice and enforcement within parliament and government is complex, fragmented, uneven and sometimes ineffective.

Labour’s2024 manifestopromised some reforms, including the creation of an independent ethics and integrity commission across government. Yet the manifesto remained unclear on key points. These included whether the enforcement processes would be statutory, and whether the commission would replace the network of existing machinery or be grafted on to them in some way.

A year on from Labour’s election victory, the plan is still no clearer. The government seems to be stalling on the commission and is considering a more “principles-based” approach to regulation. Sir John thinks “stiffening up” Nolan is the key. But both approaches risk reinventing an only slightly better version of the “good chaps” system of regulation that broke down so badly under Mr Johnson. That is simply not good enough. Merely tweaking the system risks leaving it a scandal away from a fresh outbreak of public contempt for politics that can only help Nigel Farage.

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in ourletterssection, pleaseclick here.

Back to Home
Source: The Guardian