It was a farcical scene.
On 21 February, the UK parliament debated a serious matter: the Gaza war. The motion, proposed by Britain’s third largest parliamentary party, the Scottish Nationalist Party (SNP), called for an “immediate ceasefire” in the Middle East conflict.
Both the Conservative government and the opposition Labour party have been broadly supportive of Israel’s operations against Hamas since October 2023 and instinctively opposed the SNP motion.
However, Labour, which had dozens of its MPs rebel in November when the SNP tabled a similar motion, was worried even more would join this latest ceasefire call.
To head off the embarrassment such a rebellion might cause, Labour added an amendment to the SNP’s wording, calling instead for an “immediate humanitarian ceasefire” — a dilution that suggests a temporary pause in fighting rather than a decisive end.
Controversially, the Parliamentary Speaker — who determines which motions are to be debated — allowed Labour’s amendment, prompting chaotic scenes.
The government, which had hoped a Labour rebellion would humiliate its leader, Keir Starmer, was furious the Speaker had allowed the debate, given it was not usually permitted for opposition parties to amend one another’s motions.
The SNP was similarly outraged, given its original motion had been changed, and there was to be no debate on the lasting ceasefire it craved.
SNP MPs barracked and heckled the speaker while the government announced it would not participate in the debate. The SNP concurred, and both parties led their MPs out of parliament in protest.
Labour’s motion passed unopposed, but the affair was indicative more of the sorry state of British politics and its diminished global clout than pointing to any significant shift in the UK’s Middle East policy.
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The squabbles over procedure and the attempts by all parties to gain political leverage over one another suggested all saw the Gaza war primarily as an opportunity for domestic political advantage.
At the same time the intensity of the debate on all sides suggested that UK politicians were unaware of how limited Britain’s influence over the Middle Eastern conflict is.