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Having lived in India, Indonesia, Kenya and other recent adopters of democracy, I’m no stranger to the untidy realities of parliamentary government. And while the mother of parliaments has not been setting a good example in recent months, one of the legislative backdrops to the expenses scandal tells us more about parliament’s true strengths and weaknesses. To find out more I have been talking to Catherine Stephens, a sex worker who, like many in her trade, has spent time hanging around Westminster. Lately Catherine has been there on parliamentary business, trying to knock some sense into the nation’s laws on prostitution. And she scored a significant victory on 19th May at the third reading of the current policing and crime bill.
The legislation covers gang law, airport security and what the government can do with your DNA—as well as whether men should be jailed for paying for sex with prostitutes. If it passed you by it might well be because the Speaker interrupted its third reading to make a statement about MPs’ expenses, and promptly fell on his sword.
Evan Harris, the Liberal Democrat MP for Oxford and champion of safer sex work, was speaking at the time. He soldiered on as gaggles of MPs took possession of the chamber. Harris politely gave way for the Speaker’s eight minute interruption, and then quietly resumed as most of his colleagues drained away.
The debate gave a fascinating glimpse into British democracy. Discussion of a law that may mean life or death in the sex trade, and that threatens men with arrest for an offence that is not clearly defined, was sandwiched into a couple of hours. The government bangs its drum on “evidence-based” policy but failed to present any evidence that locking up prostitutes’ clients will reduce trafficking of women. Labour’s John McDonnell summed it up well: “We not only do not give ourselves the time to discuss legislation, but we legislate in absolute ignorance of the facts of what is happening on the ground… This is no way to run a country, is it?”
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