Exactly. I want a government that creates legislation based on a consensus of differing views and philosophies, not on the basis of one crazy guy's chat with the fairies.
OK, Let's look at the fun fun fun we get with weak government.
- It is very much more expensive, with the beurocracy costs going through the roof. Meeting after meeting after meeting, and trying to get 7 different people to completely agree on all points within a 29 page white paper, it jsut a blimin' nightmare.
- Actually No-one gets exactly what they want within the legislation by the government. So in a manner of speaking everyone loses. Ironically this is why we are having a referendum on AV rather than Proportional rep. NO-ONE wants the AV referendum -- not the tories, not Labour, not the Libdems. Its a huge compromise - but effectively everyone kinda loses .. !
- Small bits of extreme legislation can get through, because those last few votes are essential (eg. OK Mr BNP - we need your 6 votes so desperately, what do we need to do for you to get them?)
- The government is VERY slow reacting. Earthquake in Japan? Shall we send aid? Well, let's have a 6 week negotiation period with all the members of the coalition to decide how much, and work out the other 17 bits of legislation that need to change as everyone is negotiating their votes. Receptionist - book 12 meetings please Oh, everyone's dead now? Ooops ..
- Governments are less honest. They produce a manifesto - and can't implement any of it because some part of the coalition or other complains and wants changes. So they put the whole lot in the bin, and just say to the opposition who would normally skin them alive for this: 'er, no-one got voted in, all our promises are mute .. hohoho'
- No bold steps can be taken as people that frankly don't care about whether there is a major train route built in London or not, think 'Everyone wants this to work, so I'm going to say no JUST so I can wheel and deal for a leisure centre in Grimsby'. It actually CAUSES friction where there is absolutely no decent reason for friction - and then we're back YET AGAIN to meeting after meeting after meeting to try and work it out.
- U-turns are very prominent - as people compromise more elsewhere to change legislation they don't like
- The moment any member of the coalition disagrees whole-heartedly with the legislation and isn't prepared to compromise - the whole lot hits the dustbin. So if 1 person in the coalition is unreasonable ('I will only vote on anything if Grimsby gets an international airport, full stop')- the whole gig becomes a farce
Or, to sum it up into 1 word -- dithering.