A most un-British spectacle broke out in the House of Commons
Wednesday of last week. As a people, Britons are better know for
resolving political disputes with barbs of finely honed wit than
with fisticuffs and bloody noses. The issue at hand, however, was
such that passions could not be contained. And what was this matter
of life and death? Not the war in Iraq, which is stretching the
British military thin, not the National Health Service, not the
future of Britain in the European Union. No, it was -- believe it
or not -- fox hunting.
Outside the Houses of Parliament, where the Labour Party bill to
ban fox hunting was up for a vote, a motley crowd of thousands had
gathered, ranging from plain country folks to tweedy ladies and
more glamorous, upper-crust types. According to news reports, the
crowd at first did nothing more damaging than throwing plastic
bottles of Evian water and Harvey's Bristol Cream sherry (a
terrible waste, by the way). But soon the scuffle with police soon
turned nasty, and the violence got out of hand. Several young men
broke into the parliamentary chamber and started fighting with
officials until security staff tackled them and wrested them to the
ground.
In the end, the Labour government prevailed, and the ban was voted
into law by 339 to 155 votes. Hotly debated from just about the
moment Labour took power in 1997, the ban on fox hunting is now set
to take effect in July 2006. A compromise solution has been
proposed in the House of Lords for licensed foxhunting, but it's
future is far from certain.
At this point, it is tempting to feel that only a great satirical
poet could do justice to these events -- Alexander Pope, for
instance, who in the 18th century wrote a entire epic poem, "The
Rape of the Lock," about a silly scandal over a gentleman who had
snipped a lock of hair from a socialite lady and caused an almighty
uproar in polite London circles.
But there is more to the fox hunting issue than satire would allow.
This is not just about sandal-footed, animal-hugging activists, on
the one side, and toffee-nosed, pink-coated hunters, on the other.
What has recently become clear in public statements, is that Labour
activists regards this as payback to conservative Britain for
everything from the crushing of the miners' strike under Prime
Minister Thatcher in the early 1980s to preserving traditional
British values.
Now, Prime Minister Blair is said to have exclaimed to the man who
first proposed the fox hunting ban, "Oh for goodness' sake. I
thought you were someone who concentrated on things that matter."
But he soon found it very useful. For Mr. Blair, fox hunting became
a bone tossed to the angry leftwing of the Labour Party, which has
been widely disillusioned with the prime minister's stance on the
war in Iraq and his government's business-friendly economic
policies.
As Labour MP Tony Banks was quoted in The Sunday Telegraph as
saying, "This issue is not a matter of great significance in animal
welfare, but it has become totemic." Or in the words of another
Labour MP, Dennis Skinner, "There is not a subject under the sun
that is better suited to the Labour Party, for raising its morale
in constituencies, than the ban on fox hunting."
The rural world they have in their sights is not multicultural or
politically correct, and its bastions are to be found in small-town
Britain and the countryside, dotted with pubs named things like
"The Fox and Hound." It is very old, solid, decent, and has a lot
in common with Middle America, the red states for election
purposes. Urban Labour types, city dwellers in multicultural
environments, have little understanding or sympathy with it
whatsoever. In this they resemble East Coast, big city
America.
Clearly, this is all about politics and not animal welfare. In
fact, Britain's foxes don't stand much to benefit from the ban,
which is sure to be broken anyway. According to a Blair
government-sponsored study of the fox population conducted in 2000,
British foxes would need to be destroyed if they were not hunted to
protect livestock and prevent over-breeding. If the foxes were
asked, would they really prefer to be gassed, shot or trapped?
Given such options, taking their chances against the dogs, which
often fail to catch their prey, might sound quite good.
Helle Dale is director of Foreign Policy and Defense Studies at
the Heritage Foundation. E-mail: [email protected].
First appeared in The Washington Times