The Economist - UK (2022-04-16)

(Antfer) #1

48 Britain The Economist April 16th 2022


chequer,  was  supposed  to  be  thealterna­
tive. He is diligent, thoughtful andserious,
especially compared with the primeminis­
ter—a  family  man  next  to  a  manofmany
families.  When  revelations  ofpartiesin
Downing  Street  first  emerged,MrSunak
was  slow  to  support  the  primeminister
and  quick  to  chide  him.  Mr  Johnson“was
right  to  apologise”,  he  said,primly. But
now Mr Sunak too has been fined.Hispop­
ularity  was  fading  anyway  aslivingstan­
dards fall (see chart). It may vanishentirely
as Britons digest the fine and recentrevela­
tions  that  his  wife,  Akshata  Murthy,isa
“non­dom” for tax purposes. 
Other  potential  successorshaveblun­
dered to a lesser degree. Liz Trussprovedto
be  an  efficient  and  energetic  tradesecre­
tary.  As  foreign  secretary,  shehasbeena
Thatcher­like  hawk,  mixing  photo­opsin
tanks with an aggressive, nowvindicated,
position  on  Russia.  Jeremy  Hunt,thefor­
mer  foreign  secretary,  is  highlyregarded
within  the  party.  But  both  havedoubters.
Ms Truss splits opinion amongthosewho
have  worked  with  her.  Ten  yearsagoMr
Hunt  had  a  reputation  as  a  slightlypecu­
liar, if pleasant, cabinet minister.Thefact
that  he  has  become  the  party’swiseelder
suggests in part how few untarnishedmps
it now contains.  

Don’t just do something, sit there
While  no  one  moves  against  MrJohnson,
little  moves  in  government.  Inthe1980s
the  party  launched  an  economicrevolu­
tion  that  changed  Britain  for  good.Those
who  wait  for  similarly  sweepinglegisla­
tion will do so for a long time. Trivialmea­
sures  such  as  privatising  Channel 4, a
broadcaster, are advanced; boldonessuch
as changing planning laws are ditched.
Mr  Johnson  is  accused  of misleading
Parliament. Such an offence is supposedto
be a resigning matter. Little holdsbackthe
executive  other  than  Parliament and a
prime  minister’s  own  sense  ofrestraint.
For  all  that  successive  governmentshave
attempted  to  codify  the  constitution,the
country still runs on the “goodchap”theo­
ry.  But  the  prime  minister  hasneverpre­
tended to be a good chap. ThattheConser­
vative Party saw fit to place himinthejobis
an indictment of the party ratherthanhim.
Those  expecting  Mr  Johnsontoresign
will be disappointed. If he werethetypeof
person  to  resign  over  attendinganillegal
party in a pandemic, he wouldnothaveat­
tended  an  illegal  party  in  a  pandemic.If
Conservative  mps  want  Mr  Johnsongone,
they will have to move againsthim.Butif
they  wanted  him  gone,  theyhadreason
enough to move months ago. Instead,they
appear doomed to copy EstragonandVlad­
imir  at  the  end  of  Beckett’s  play.“Well,”
says  Estragon.  “Shall  we  go?”  Vladimirre­
plies:  “Yes,  let’s  go.”  The  finalwordsarea
stage direction: They do not move.n

Prisons

Victorian values


O


n april 7th Harborough District
CouncilinLeicestershirerefusedplan­
ning permission for a new prison  that
wouldhavehoused1,700inmates.Buck­
inghamshireCountyCouncilandChorley
inLancashirehaveinthepastfewmonths
voteddownrequestsfromtheMinistry of
Justicetobuildnewprisons.It wouldseem
asthoughBritonsdonotwantprisons  in
theirbackyards.Butthingsarenotquite
thatsimple.
Violent crime in Englandand Wales
peaked in 1995 according to the British
CrimeSurvey,thebestguidetothetrue lev­
elofoffending.Buttheadultprisonpopu­
lationhasrisen.Some80,000people  are
insidetoday—afigurethatisexpected  to
riseto98,500by 2026 thankstostiffer sen­
tencing,a riseinthenumberofpolice offi­
cersanda pushtoclearthebacklogin the
courtsthatwascausedpartlybycovid­19. 
Manyofthe prisonsin England  and
Walesareoldandinadequate—themainte­
nancebacklogisestimatedtoamount  to
£1bn ($1.3bn). A recent inspection  of
Wandsworth, aVictorianedificeinLon­
don,describeditas a“crumbling,over­
crowded, vermin­infested prison”, with
someareasinhabitedbymice,ratsand pi­
geons. The MinistryofJusticewants  to
buildsixnewonesbytheendof2026, in­
cluding a prison called Five Wells  that
openedearlierthisyear.
Theeasiestwaytodothatistobuild on
landthegovernmentalreadyowns.Find­
ingandgettingplanningconsenton  new

property is expensive and slow, says Julian
Le  Vay,  a  former  finance  director  for  the
Prison Service. Former industrial sites are
ideal—in 2017 a prison opened near Wrex­
ham in north Wales on the site of a former
tyre factory. The next best thing is property
adjacent  to  existing  prisons,  since  a  place
that already has a prison might be amena­
ble to another one. 
The proposed prisons in Leicestershire,
Buckinghamshire and Lancashire are next
to  smaller  existing  ones.  They  were  op­
posed anyway. (The Ministry of Justice will
appeal against the Lancashire prison deci­
sion. It has not said if it will appeal against
the  others.)  Locals  argue  that  prisons  in­
crease  car  traffic  and  drain  local  govern­
ment  resources.  In  Buckinghamshire,
planners cited the threat to butterflies. 
But  closing  prisons  is  also  unpopular,
largely because so many local people work
in  them.  A  plan  to  shut  the  19th­century
Dartmoor  Prison  (pictured)  has  been
dropped  after  objections,  including  from
the  local  mp.  In  2012  the  government
closed  Wellingborough  Prison,  drawing
criticism  from  the  local  mp,  Peter  Bone,
who called the decision “disgraceful”. Five
Wells prison opened on that site. 
The  tug­of­war  over  opening  and  clos­
ing prisons often omits a crucial question:
what would be best for prisoners and soci­
ety as a whole? A study published in 2016 in
the British Journal of Criminologyfound that
visits from parents made incarcerated men
less  likely  to  reoffend  upon  release.  The
Ministry of Justice itself found that prison­
ers who did not receive family visits were
39% more likely to reoffend. That suggests
prisons  ought  to  be  built  in  or  near  large
population  centres.  A  prison  might  pro­
vide  jobs  for  a  struggling  town;  it  may  or
may  not  disturb  local  butterflies.  But  if
prisoners’ families cannot reach themeas­
ily,  the  prison  population  could  wellcon­
tinue growing as people cycle in and out.n

Britons don’t want to open new
prisons or close old ones

At least the views are good
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