I do not like the way a democratically elected leader has been drummed out of parliament.
He was not drummed out. He resigned.
I do not think that those who sat in judgement on him were unbiased.
The committee has a majority of Tory MPs. Plus all they have done is made a recommendation. That would then go for a vote in the Commins where Johnson’s own party has a 60+ majority. Are they all biased?
I do not like the fact that there is no appeal against their findings.
But there is the opportunity to present submissions to be considered before the Committee’s recommendations are finalised. Johnson was given two weeks to do so, instead of which he resigned, and publicly attacked the probity of the Committee. He then entered a submission exactly 3 minutes before the deadline.
Had he not resigned, he would have had the opportunity to present his views to the Commons ahead of a free vote on the recommendations. Had that vote gone against him, he would have had the chance to persuade enough of his constituents not to sign a recall petition, thus keeping him as their MP. Had that failed, he could then have argued his case at a by-election, and if enough voters believed him, he’d have been re-elected.
That’s a fairly robust appeals process.
I think that all this business is a threat to our democracy.
On the contrary, upholding standards in Parliament and MPs at all ranks behaving in a way which ensures the electorate can trust them are underpinnings of democracy, as is holding those who breach our trust accountable.