Let's have a referendum on punishing Blair
R.A.McCartney | 27.01.2010 16:38 | Anti-militarism | Iraq

As we all know, Blair deliberately misled Parliament to involve the UK in an unnecessary war which killed over 400,000 Iraqis, turned 3 million into refugees, and killed 103 British soldiers, with 6,700 casualties (British figures from

Evidence to the Chilcot Enquiry makes it clear that the war was illegal. The 27 lawyers employed in the Department of Foreign affairs unanimously took that view. A Dutch enquiry also reached that same conclusion. Many people therefore believe that Blair should be tried as a war criminal before an international tribunal. It would be possible to demand a referendum on that. However, it would be difficult to hold anyone to account for the failure to hold such a tribunal. If a referendum demanded that Blair was punished for misleading Parliament, the responsibility for doing so would fall squarely on MPs. This may seem like getting Al Capone for tax evasion, rather than for his more serious crimes, but it is far more important than that.
The original purpose of Parliament was to hold the government to account. It didn’t take on the role of passing legislation until hundreds of years later. The bedrock of British democracy is supposed to be that Ministers are accountable to Parliament, and that Parliament is accountable to the voters at elections. Erskine May’s rules for Parliament say that any attempt to mislead Parliament is contempt of Parliament. Until November 2004, the House of Commons used to start each session by passing a resolution promising to punish this with the "utmost severity". This was then stopped, ostensibly on the grounds that it didn't add to the power of Parliament to punish offenders. MPs must also have been conscious of the fact that it was pure hypocrisy.
The fact is Blair’s lies about Iraq is merely the most infamous example of government Ministers misleading Parliament. They lie all the time about absolutely everything, and are never punished for it. (See my previous articles such as

Making people tell the truth in Parliament would be the single most important improvement in the way Britain is governed. We should have a written constitution which ensures that anyone who misleads Parliament is tried before a jury, which can not only determine guilt or innocence, but also impose fines and terms of imprisonment. Unfortunately, those who support a written constitution don’t seem to be interested in this issue.
Right now it’s up to Parliament to govern itself. It can fine and imprison people for breaking its rules. (See

I would like to see a referendum ask “should Parliament, as the highest court in the land, sentence former Prime Minister Blair to the maximum term in prison which could be given for lying in a court of law”. I’m pretty sure that would get a majority vote anywhere in the country.
R.A.McCartney
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