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Conga Shambles: MPs Queue Out Door To Vote As Jacob Rees-Mogg Tries To Force Return To Parliament

© REUTERS / UK Parliament/Jessica Taylor/HandoutBritain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks during the weekly question time debate in Parliament in London, Britain May 6, 2020
Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks during the weekly question time debate in Parliament in London, Britain May 6, 2020 - Sputnik International
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The House of Commons and the House of Lords were both suspended in March when the coronavirus crisis hit Britain. MPs have returned to Westminster to discuss the long-term future of Parliament.

MPs have voted to suspend virtual proceedings and go back to face-to-face debate but many are upset about the lack of protection.

​Because of social distancing rules MPs were forced to queue in a huge line outside the building and Labour MP Jess Phillips said the system resembled the line for a theme park ride. MPs took turns to tweet about the chaos, which trended as #moggconga.

Jacob Rees-Mogg, the Leader of the Commons, said virtual politics was "no longer necessary” and said a resumption of normal working would be "much more effective."

Labour MP Margaret Hodge and Conservative backbenchers Robert Halfon, Caroline Nokes and Julian Knight said it would be “democratically unjust” to return to Parliament when some MPs cannot return in person because they are self-isolating due to age or underlying health issues.

​Mrs Hodge, who is 75 and has been MP for Barking in east London since 1994, said: ”I feel both discriminated against and disenfranchised. We should be holding the government to account. We can't if we don't have the right to vote.”

Mr Halfon, who has cerebral palsy, said the government was being "harsh and unbending" and added: "The MPs who genuinely cannot come in, our democratic rights are being snipped away and we're being turned into parliamentary eunuchs."

​Halfon, Nokes and Knight backed an amendment brought by former Northern Ireland Secretary Karen Bradley which would have allowed for the continuation of virtual voting.

But MPs voted by 242 to 185 against Ms Bradley's amendment.

​MPs then voted by 261 votes to 163 in favour of the government's proposition that MPs must return to Parliament but be "physically within the parliamentary estate" in order to participate in debates and votes.

But Mr Rees-Mogg said he would put forward a plan on Wednesday, 3 June, to allow MPs who cannot attend for physical reasons to participate remotely. But they would not be able to vote unless they were in the building.

Since late March, Parliament has adopted a hybrid system where only 50 MPs at a time are allowed into the House of Commons chamber and Zoom screens allowed the remaining 600 to participate in the debate and vote.

​But the government, believing coronavirus has peaked, wants MPs to return to Westminster and vote in person.

Mr Rees-Mogg said they should be setting a “return to work” example to the country and he told a parliamentary magazine: “The virtual Parliament brought us through the peak of the pandemic but it is no longer necessary to make the compromises it demanded. We can do so much better.”

​Mr Rees-Mogg said Parliament said hand sanitiser dispensers would be available and the floor would be marked to enforce social distancing in a “COVID-secure workplace.”

© AP Photo / Matt DunhamPro-Brexit, Conservative lawmaker Jacob Rees-Mogg adjusts his glasses as he speaks to the media outside the Houses of Parliament in London, Thursday, Nov. 15, 2018.
Conga Shambles: MPs Queue Out Door To Vote As Jacob Rees-Mogg Tries To Force Return To Parliament - Sputnik International
Pro-Brexit, Conservative lawmaker Jacob Rees-Mogg adjusts his glasses as he speaks to the media outside the Houses of Parliament in London, Thursday, Nov. 15, 2018.
But Angus MacNeil, an SNP MP whose constituency is in the north of Scotland, said: ”Asking people to travel from all corners of the UK to go to the global hotspot that is London...is gambling with the virus. Jacob Rees-Mogg is setting the wrong example.''

There have been an estimated 45,000 coronavirus deaths in Britain since February and London has been one of the worst affected places.

​Prime Minister Boris Johnson is gradually easing the nationwide lockdown, with many children returning to school this week, shops like Ikea opening and Premier League football due to return on 17 June, all be it without fans.

​But critics of the government say the lockdown is being eased too soon and could lead to a second wave of infections.

Lindsay Hoyle, who was elected as the new Speaker in November, said he was worried about the possibility of infection in the traditional voting lobbies, where MPs crowd in to small rooms to vote Yes or No.

The vote on whether to return to voting in person will take place later on Tuesday evening, following a debate.

The House of Lords - whose average age is 70 - is not returning to Parliament and peers will be voting by smartphone.

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