"A very British revolution" - this was the headline of the Daily Telegraph in London on Wednesday last week, stretched across its front page in large print. As a comment on a great historical event, it was true. It is a lesson to South Africa. People of all parties, but especially in the Opposition, should learn from it.
For the first time since 1695, the Speaker of the House of Commons was forced to quit his post, by a combination of a free press, an outraged nation and a sufficient number of honourable and independent-minded MPs of the three major political parties. He will go next month, disgraced.
Corruption in Parliament, MPs who function as a self-enrichment club at the taxpayers' and the general public's expense: that was and is the issue, in both countries. The difference lies in how the two countries deal, or, in South Africa 's case, don't deal with it.
A free press, fundamentally self-regulating (subject to the law of libel, which is very ferocious in Britain), was crucial to this quiet and unviolent "revolution" in Britain, in which the most senior official in the country after the Queen and the Prime Minister metaphorically had his head chopped off.
The Speaker, Michael Martin, 63, a Scots former trade union official and Labour Party time-server, whose predecessor Speaker Lenthall refused submission to King Charles I in 1642, was pulled down from his office on Tuesday by the MPs he was meant, but had failed, to serve, after the Daily Telegraph had enraged the nation and shamed the House with issue after issue filled with details of corrupt practice by MPs of all parties, at the public expense. Speaker Martin had shielded the abuse.
"On the take!" What a South African story! By contrast with the shameful scam that is the National Assembly in South Africa, the parliamentary expenses scandal in Britain was brought to light, and will be dealt with, by a free press and a constituency-based parliamentary system. No cabal of party bosses will be able to save any corrupt MP in Britain from the wrath firstly of that MP's local constituency party and then, if the sleazeball still survives to be a candidate, from the electors in the coming general election, due in June next year at the latest.