A noisy afternoon in Westminster |
To the Palace
of Westminster in the
line of duty, for a meeting of a parliamentary group on – what else? – North Korea.
It's the first time I've ever been inside the building that
I've been past hundreds of times in my life. In fact, it was the source of
years of youthful terror when I was small. This stems from the days when we
would routinely drive through Westminster and
along the Embankment on the way to my grandfather's house on the far side of London – by far the least
slow route in the days before the M25, and probably still the case now.
Big Ben filled me with dread. What would happen if the bell
struck when we were driving past? Blood out of the ears, painful death, the
whole nine yards. What an arse I must have looked, cowering in the foot-well of
the family car. I'm over it now. After all the traffic's so loud, you can
barely hear it on a good day.
(Nevertheless, in my days as a boy technician at the BBC,
one of the feeds we had coming through the control room was the microphone up
in the bell tower, which was used for – among other things – the chimes on
Radio 4 at 6 o'clock. Just listening to it, hearing the traffic hundreds of
feet below gave me the willies.)
So – inside I go for the first time ever, and it's exactly
like visiting your local town hall, except for a genuine student riot going on
outside, and considerably more heavily-armed police officers.
Despite terrorist fears, its amazing how much of the place
is open to the public. So much so, you can wander through Westminster Hall, arrow-straight
corridors, winding staircases, peeking into rooms, occasionally to the bark of
"No photography!" from important-looking people in extravagant
headwear. I might have taken some pictures.
The Palace of Westminster, twinned with Hogwarts |
The real show – naturally enough – comes thanks to the
public galleries above the main debating chambers. They're a long, long way up,
and you have to surrender your bag, your phone, and sign a piece of paper
promising not to be an arse. Unfortunately, you're sat behind a glass screen,
because certain people in the past cannot be trusted on that front. And there's
some poor bastard whose job it is to watch you watching the politicians, and
there can surely be a more thankless task in the whole of the world.
The view is magnificent, especially if there's something
interesting on the agenda. I got Home Secretary Theresa May quietly sitting
through a proper, heart-warming bollocking from Yvette Cooper, a waft of dusty
old Ken Clarke, a touch of Keith Vaz, and an Ed Balls.
I repeat: ED BALLS.
Some of their lordships have frankly bizarre names |
Then, another wander around Hogwarts, the committee room, a
sighting of William Hague in a penguin suit, then out and home.
Tourist tips: Avoid the gift shop. You get better stuff from
the tat stand on Westminster
Bridge, which does
Princess Diana postcards into the bargain.
Find and excuse and take a trip before UKIP turn up in
droves and fuck it all up for everybody.
2 comments:
No spaceships crashing into the side of it? Any drastically overweight, flatulent officials wandering around?
It's falling down, apparently, and they want three billion quid to shore it up. For that kind of money they could have a proper Parliament building.
In Swindon.
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