Campbell Robb, Chief Executive, Shelter
Democracy, in the UK and across the world, faces so many challenges today that it is hard to know where to begin when thinking about the year ahead. From the perspective of Shelter, and the people we work with day in and day out, the most pressing challenge is how their voices are heard in the democratic system during this time of unprecedented change.
In some ways it is not the electoral system itself that will have the biggest impact on this but this government’s pursuit of a more localised agenda and the emergence of an era of direct action and people power. Unprecedented public spending cuts and mass redundancies, an angry and challenging student movement, burning resentment about bankers’ pay and company tax avoidance may all collide with this new agenda of localism to challenge both the established political parties but also the systems that elect them.
Localism could be the ideology that defines the coalition. The theme of devolving and empowering is the common thread running through all major policy shifts, from healthcare to education to the flagship Localism Act, which promises to “lift the burden of bureaucracy, empower communities to do things their own way… open up government to public scrutiny and strengthen accountability to local people”. Even the welfare bill aims to empower the unemployed to take control of their lives. How does this sit with the current democratic processes?
It is clear that the leaders of both coalition parties believe that their system of Government will sanction people to make better decisions about things that directly affect them. Local councils and grassroots organisations will have more freedom to do what they believe is right for their local area. People will be able to vote on local housing developments, GPs will control their own budgets; parents will be able to run their child’s school. This is people power, allowing both locally elected decision makers and local people to make important decisions, free from the trappings of centralised government and its elected representatives.
However legislating to allow people to get involved in local decision-making or more involved in politics or the political system is not the same as facilitating it. People need to be informed and encouraged, which takes time and resources.
To genuinely create long term community engagement and to avoid engagement fatigue, public institutions, politicians and campaigners need to be highly resourceful and have time and patience. At the moment this is just not in place. The current plans to reform the voter registration process are just one example of how the marginalised and those with the quietest voices risk getting left behind or left out.
Localism must work, not against the democratic systems that we are so proud of in this country, but with them. Both must adapt and reform to ensure that everyone in this country can feel empowered and engaged, and everyone, even the most disadvantaged and dispossessed can have a real say in how decisions are made.
The current systems and structures place great power in the hands of a relatively small number of people. If they genuinely wish to share it out, they must accept the great responsibility for this. A failure to do so properly risks great anger and further disengagement with politics. Success could mean a healthier more vibrant democracy which truly engages and inspires everyone.
Campbell Robb, Chief Executive of Shelter, recently spoke at the Electoral Reform Society’s New Year Reception.

