
We are driving the some of the best politicians out of politics | thearticle
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As she sat down recently for our conversation for _The House_ magazine, Lib Dem MP Heidi Allen shared just how tired she was. Days later, as a December election looked all but certain, she
announced that she would not be re-standing. She’s not the only one. At every election a number MPs choose to stand down, but this time around it feels like more than the usual changing of
the guard. One-by-one, a succession of mostly moderate politicians have decided they have had enough of Westminster. They include Culture Secretary Nicky Morgan, former Home Secretary Amber
Rudd, Theresa May’s de facto deputy David Liddington, one-time Labour leadership contender Owen Smith and Change UK MP Anne Coffey. In their statements announcing their decision, many of the
women standing down cited the toxic political atmosphere that we are currently operating in. In a letter to her constituents, Allen said she was “exhausted by the invasion into my privacy
and the nastiness and intimidation that has become commonplace.” Morgan, meanwhile, spoke of “the clear impact on my family” and “the abuses involved” in being an MP. Many will not be
sympathetic towards the protestations of MPs. Much of the public considers our politicians well-rewarded and privileged. And, to a large extent, they are. What is more, they chose to do
this. But politicians of all stripes now work in increasingly hostile conditions, barracked in their workplace and harassed at home. There are stories of panic alarms and filled-in
letterboxes in order to keep safe. Anna Soubry, who is aiming to stay in Parliament, shared a card on Twitter that had been sent to her partner. It was a condolence card. Inside, it had the
message “your treasonous bitch of a partner will be gone very soon”. Most ominously, it added: “Note the postcode, we are on your doorstep.” Apparently a similarly pleasant piece of post had
been sent to Soubry’s mother last year. How many of us would choose to work in a role where our friends and family were subjected to such horrors? One of those stepping down in a few days
time told me that it would have “destroyed” them to re-stand. That is what our politics is doing to people. Destroying them. Those subjecting politicians to abuse may feel like they are
having their say or believe that because MPs are public servants we have the right to say whatever we want to them. However, all this behaviour actually achieves is driving good, talented
people out of politics. It allows mediocrity and mendacity to rise, and reduces the talent pool looking to enter in the first place. It also makes MPs less accessible, as they need to reduce
advertising for public meetings and suchlike in order to protect themselves. We in the media do have to bear some responsibility for this. Screaming tabloid front pages that lead people to
brand MPs traitors. Partisan new media outlets that whip up their supporters. None of it has anything to do with holding power to account, and it leads to this polarised, frenzied atmosphere
that we see manifesting itself everyday on College Green and in MPs letterboxes. It is an atmosphere in which Jacob Rees-Mogg (accompanied by his son,) and Diane Abbott are screamed at by
protesters when leaving Parliament, and Anna Soubry is heckled as a Nazi mid television interview. When Jo Cox was murdered we all said we’d raise the tone of political debate. That we’d do
better. We’ve failed. The likes of Heidi Allen, Nicky Morgan, Amber Rudd et al will undoubtedly go on to have successful careers outside of the Commons, but we, the public, do ourselves a
disservice by forcing them into that position. We have never needed intelligent, moderate, sensible people in our politics more. The next six weeks are likely to prove a watershed moment in
the British public’s relationship with politicians, but the likelihood of the new intake being an improvement on those we are driving out seems slim.