Bill Jamieson: Queen’s Speech can’t live up to pomp

Queen Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh arrive at Parliament. Picture: PAQueen Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh arrive at Parliament. Picture: PA
Queen Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh arrive at Parliament. Picture: PA
THE content of yesterday’s Queen’s Speech points up the limits of a timid government tied in partnership, writes Bill Jamieson

It is a grand occasion. Yet in key respects the Queen’s Speech is both a resonant celebration of the strengths of our parliamentary democracy and its weakness. The scarlet robes, the ermine and the flummery bring together Commons and Lords, the monarch and parliament, the constitution and the will of the people in one centuries-old display of ceremonial. It is a telling and timely reminder in a world of transient enthusiasms that our history did not begin yesterday.

But the content rarely lives up to the grandeur. As in the revolving spokes of a wheel, what it is not subtly defines what is. There are legislative changes to everyday life that form part of the government’s legislative programme that were absent from yesterday’s speech, and items which, seemingly effective, may prove difficult, if not impossible, to enforce. And there were items excluded, such as gay marriage legislation and minimum alcohol pricing, where the government does intend to legislate. “Just because something is not in the Queen’s Speech doesn’t mean the government cannot bring it forward as law,” Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt said yesterday. And, he could have added, vice versa.

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