As someone who
has never been in line for any honour or award, the latest row is of academic
interest. Also, if the Honourable
Company of Charladies award their Golden Kneepads of the Year to a member that
is their business.
My only wish
is that the when the media, arts and acting people do the same it would not be
the sole issue of the news of the day.
If aliens did ever decide to land and sort us out they would only have
to find the date of one of these ceremonies and we would never know.
The notion of
awards and honours have been with us for a long time. Perhaps the ancients honoured their mammoth
hunter of the year. Back in the 15th
Century it is likely that in the Guild of St Anne of Balsall, the member Shakespeare's
and Cumberbatch's were happy to recognise those who did most for the sick and
the poor.
We are told
that the resignation honours of departing Prime Ministers is a relatively
recent innovation. Certainly, it added
to the strains on an already creaking system of handing out recognition and
awards. It has become such a sundry
collection of items that it is little wonder that it defies rationality or
logic.
But how far
did those qualities ever exist? We may
like to think of a golden past when they did but digging deep it becomes more
and more unlikely. Basically, there are
titles and awards. Check out the titles
and you see very many handed out in the past which raise eyebrows.
My favourite
in this is Good King Charles II. One of the most striking collection of titles
were handed out to ladies of his court, see picture above. They were a comely group of lovelies and were
a lot more fun that his devoutly religious Queen. Today, a great many of our
aristocracy and other upper classes can number one or more of them in the
ancestral files.
But monarchs
come and go and their views and impact could be very different. William Pitt the younger was free with
peerages it is said and King George III in no position to refuse. King George IV was easy going, King William
IV open to favourites etc. Queen
Victoria was another matter. Keen on
detail, alive to the need to keep the reputation of the monarch and critical by
nature, Prime Ministers did not have an easy ride.
King Edward VII was very different, so King George V who followed him certainly had reservations, but this was the age of Lloyd George, Maundy Gregory and the Honours (Prevention of Abuses) Act of 1925. But political generosity lived on, winks and nods included.
King Edward VII was very different, so King George V who followed him certainly had reservations, but this was the age of Lloyd George, Maundy Gregory and the Honours (Prevention of Abuses) Act of 1925. But political generosity lived on, winks and nods included.
King Edward
VIII might have made some interesting choices, had he been allowed to. King George VI was quite particular and very
well informed on medals and honours but still at the mercy of his ministers. One feature relating to the House of Lords is
forgotten. That is that the Scottish
peers were fixed to a certain number, but this was avoided by the simple device
of awarding a subsidiary English title that allowed a seat in The Lords.
Our present
monarch has had to deal with a motley collection of Prime Ministers who have
had some very individual ideas about what honours, titles and awards are for
and who should get them. As in money and
other things we have endured a full half century of inflation and debasement. Didn't we all have a lot of fun in working
out why who got what in Wilson's time?
Recently, it
has become much more Alice in Wonderland, that is curiouser and curiouser. The detail is spared, if only to avoid the
attentions of no win no fee libel lawyers.
Despite being something of a traditionalist in many matters, my view is
that this nonsense has now gone on far too long and is damaging what is left of
The Constitution.
Because the
issues have not been addressed as they arose in the past because of politics,
yet again we are in the unhappy position of quite radical change being needed
with major effects. This means it will
be a lot harder and nastier to achieve, short of a revolution. Indeed we might recognise major achievements
and contribution, but what do we scrap and what will be the new?
Personally, I
would leave the military awards alone, they have long had functioning controls
that work comparatively well, allowing for the difficulty at the margins of
deciding which deserves what. Also, I
would have a separate system for sports with perhaps four or so levels and
maybe different sections for achievement and contribution to running them and
community work.
As for the
rest, peerages included, they would go in their present form and be replaced by
six or seven levels, with sections for different forms. The Order of Merit and Companions of Honour
for example would be top level or category with others with a clear
stratification down and with sections.
This would finally bring about the end of Empire, although very late in
the day.
A major
constitutional impact of this would be the end of the House of Lords at last
and facing up to the question of the second chamber of Parliament, what it is
for and how it functions. This has been
left on the shelf for half a century and it is time to deal with it because the
stink is smelling the House out.
All those with
titles and awards at present hold them for life and be recognised, but none in
the future would be hereditary.
What will
matter is the procedures for nomination, the nature of examination of worth,
who recommends and who decides. Whoever
can work this out deserves to be one of the first in the top level of honours.
Any ideas?
I'd get rid of the whole sorry mess. It invites corruption and cronyism.
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