Workingman wrote:Hungary and Poland have been criticised for violating democratic standards, which if they operated in your own ballywicks would lead to revolt. The EU has the high ground. It is also investigating those countries for undermining the independence of courts, media and non-governmental organisations. That's a bad thing: right?
This subject does interest me - the indepencence or otherwise of courts, media and quangos.
For a long time I have believed that there is very little true independence in British public life.
In the first year of Tony Blair's government 75% of appointments to head up Quangos were Labour supporters.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/articl ... today.htmlThen you could look at the allegedly independent CPS. It's former head Keir Starmer is now the leader of the Labour party.
Or the posts of Police and Crime Commisioners. These people have to swear an oath of impartiality when they get the job. Our local PCC, who was previouly a Labour councillor promptly took his oath and then in an appointment that was only open to members of the labour party, he appointed another Labour member as his Deputy Crime Commissioner. Then he appointed another ex-Labour councillor to work for him.
I could go on (OK, sometimes I DO go on!). But if you were to examine the whereabouts of ex-MP's like Jacqui Smith (Head of a Health Trust) or Mary Creagh (Head of a pedestrians charity), or Tom Watson (Chair of UK music) or Stephen Ladyman (Head of Somerset Partnership NHS Foundation Trust), or Estelle Morris (is or was Head of the National Children's Bureau) you would find a lot of politicians in "independent" jobs.
The point being that politicians love power and influence and money. And if there's any going, they want it.So positions which you would reasonably expect to be independent and politically neutral are anything but.
So the quangos, justice system and academia in the UK are thoroughly politicised. Ed Balls and Mary Creagh both have part time lecturing jobs, amongst many others.
In the State the Democrats are screaming that Trump has put his supporters into their Supreme Court - and he did. He replaced Democratic appointees with Republican appointees! Always accuse your opponents of what you do yourself.
So why should Hungary and Poland be any different?
Are their courts etc packed with progressive liberals who wish to put the brakes on elected conservatively inclined governments? As Tony Blair doubtless intended when he created our own Supreme Court?
I'd hazard a guess that they are.
Politics has become increasingly aggressive and confrontational, to the point where imo true independence barely exists in our public life.