The paralysis of public inquiries | Chris Davies

Instinctively, I am sceptical about public inquiries and the like. Having lived long enough to see successive governments use inquiries as a means to avoid difficult questions “in the moment” and then avoid the same difficult questions when the findings of the inquiry are reported as “it is all in the report and we will learn the lessons from it”, nothing I have seen this week has reduced my scepticism, perhaps even augmented it.

The long awaited Sue Gray report into the potential breaches of lockdown restrictions at 10 Downing Street became an update comprising 12 pages, of which one was the front page and another was “intentionally left blank”.

With the Metropolitan Police investigating all but 4 of the events that Sue Gray was commissioned to investigate, her “findings” were confined to a general admonishment of the culture of entitlement and mismanagement inside 10 Downing Street and the Cabinet Office. 

As all of the events the Met are investigating are over 6 months old, they are either wasting taxpayers money (as any offences would be time barred for issuance of Fixed Penalty Notices) or Gray’s evidence gathering has uncovered criminal activity that falls outside the scope of the Coronavirus Act.

When will the Met conclude its investigation? Who knows. What odds by the time it does, the Partygate circus will have long since left town?

The latest whitewash report on Pakistani Muslim male child abusing rape gangs, with chairs of the inquiry lasting in post anything from 6 days to 18 months is another waste of time, money and paper. 

Despite the sentencing of “Lord” (hopefully not for much longer) Ahmed to five and a half years imprisonment for his participation in this heinous crime, the ritual abuse of young white girls, often in care, who are groomed into modern day slavery, county lines drug distribution and prostitution in towns and cities up and down the country, continues unabated.

This national disgrace is an uncomfortable subject for the woke dominated mainstream media. Not as uncomfortable as those who are being abused but presumably this is payback for their white privilege.

Apart from as a slogan “Levelling up” is nebulous in the extreme. With around 50% of GDP generated inside the M25, it is laudable in principle to seek to provide the same job opportunities throughout this United Kingdom, regardless of geography.

This week’s white paper appears to be little more than box checking. £1.5Bn is being awarded to 20 areas of relative economic deprivation. Improving infrastructure, transport links, housing and other tinkering at the margins rather misses the point.

If you liked this article and want to help our organisation expand, please consider donating.

Chris Davies

Chris is an economic Research Fellow for the Bow Group and small C Thatcherite. He has previously been a Young Conservative Branch Chairman and active within the Conservative Policy Forum, once speaking at Conservative Party Spring Conference. Chris also has a successful career in insurance broking and niche financial services, specialising in guarantee bonds predominantly for the construction industry. He is now our Economics research lead.

Previous
Previous

Exploring the conservatism of Benjamin Disraeli | Edward Kendall

Next
Next

Ukraine and British Grand Strategy | Dominic Lawson