Gordon Brown’s right to silence


       English cricket fans were delighted when their team defeated Australia – long the foremost nation in international cricket. Supporters of Brighton & Hove Albion Football (soccer) Club were no doubt joyous when their team escaped relegation from top flight English football. Supporters of both teams were no doubt pleased, if a little surprised, to learn that British Prime Minister, Gordon Brown, was sharing vicariously in their joy. Brown is not English (he is Scottish) and hails from a part of Britain that could not be more distant from Brighton & Hove.

Though Brown is not English, some 85% of the voters he will face in next year’s UK general election are. Though he is not from Brighton & Hove the city returns three Members to the UK Parliament.  Like Brown, all are members of the Labour Party, and all will face tough fights in next year’s election. Perhaps this is why he was so keen to align himself with these sporting successes.

But it leaves an important question open.  If Brown can take time from his busy schedule to comment on uncontroversial but ultimately inconsequential matters, why do we still not know his views on the release from a Scottish prison of the largest mass murderer in UK history? Even considering the British deaths alone – 52 of them – the Lockerbie bombing claimed more lives than all the serial killers held in British jails combined.

Perhaps Brown thinks that Americans would be confused by the subtleties of the British constitution, and unable to understand why he could not prevent the release of al-Megrahi. But such a suggestion is ridiculous. Most Americans may be unable to explain the difference between a Duke and an Earl, or be puzzled as to why the husband of our Queen is not a king, but Americans do understand federalism. Your President does not control the actions of the various state governors any more than Brown can give orders to the government of Scotland.

            He cannot give orders, but he can say whether or not he thinks the Scottish decision was a good one. Barack Obama had no hesitation in distancing himself from his own state governor earlier this year, when the man was impeached. I am sure Bill Clinton did the same, when his hand-picked successor as governor of Arkansas was sent to jail.

            The problem is, what would Brown say? He has let it be known that he thinks the hero’s welcome accorded to al-Megrahi was ‘repulsive’. But what of the decision to release him? He could say he supported the decision, but that would offend the US.  He could say he opposed it, but there is documentary evidence that British government ministers favored releasing al-Megrahi two years ago, for purely commercial reasons. They wanted to facilitate an oil deal for BP.

            If UK ministers wanted to release al-Megrahi in 2007, why did it take until 2009 for it to happen? Well, in 2007, the Labour Party, which controls the British government, lost control of the Scottish Parliament and Executive. The administration in Edinburgh is controlled by the Scottish National Party. A pliant Labour administration there would probably have released al-Megrahi two years ago.

            So, let’s give the SNP credit for one thing. They kept al-Megrahi incarcerated for longer than Labour would have. The evidence that shows this also reveals why Prime Minister Brown maintains his right to silence.


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4 Comments Leave a comment

Quentin, thanks for sharing the view from your side of the Pond

civil truth (Diary) Monday, August 31st at 12:52PM EST (link)

What I haven’t figured out yet from the reports is the money trail. Many reports have linked al-Megrahi’s release with oil contracts with Libya, but how does this benefit Labour – or more accurately, who are the key Labour officials or supporters who will rake in the profits from these oil deals? And why would these people have such an armlock on the Labour government?Is it gobs of potential payola for Brown to risk the backlash or is there political blackmail going on by the movers of this deal?

And what benefit does the SNP gain from all-Megrahi’s release (since it’s Britain, not Scotland that will reap the rewards of the oil contracts) that would compensate for the blowback. Were their arms twisted, are they appeasers at heart, or were they circumvented by the legal or political system structures?

The greatest evil…is conceived and ordered (moved, seconded, carried, and minuted) in clean, carpeted, warmed, and well-lighted offices, by quiet men with white collars and cut fingernails and smooth-shaven cheeks who do not need to raise their voice. Hence, naturally enough, my symbol for Hell is something like the bureaucracy of a police state or the offices of a thoroughly nasty business concern. -C.S. Lewis

http://www.gmsplace.com/

 

It is about votes

qlangley (Diary) Monday, August 31st at 2:03PM EST (link)

It is less often about party or personal ‘donations’ in the UK – our elections are less expensive. It is about jobs, especially in marginal constituences.

Think of Scotland as Texas. If there are oil jobs going to the US, most of them will go to Texas. In Scotland’s case, much of the expertise will come from the Aberdeen area, and all four parties (Labour, Conservative, SNP and Liberal Democrat) have something of a base in that area.

Quentin Langley
Editor of http://www.quentinlangley.net

 

My guess is that Obama signed off on the release

Tbone (Diary) Monday, August 31st at 9:13PM EST (link)

when he was over there a couple on months ago. That is why Obama had nothing to say before and waited until well after to comment.

Follow the money in this deal.

Envisioning when all that is Left is the Right.

It's nothing to do with him

qlangley (Diary) Tuesday, September 1st at 5:36AM EST (link)

No-one would have asked his opinion, let alone asked him to ‘sign off’ on it. The deal was ready to go in 2007, but I don’t suppose Bush approved it either.

What money?

Quentin Langley
Editor of http://www.quentinlangley.net