Queueing MPs got a taste of life for us commoners – and they didn't like it one little bit

Waiting game: MPs stand in the sunshine before casting their votes - Justin Tallis/AFP
Waiting game: MPs stand in the sunshine before casting their votes - Justin Tallis/AFP

The scene would have been familiar to anyone who has had to pay a visit to a supermarket since the lockdown began.

Ordered to stand two metres apart, and with little choice but to remain polite and patient, the general public have largely reacted to the unprecedented restrictions on their civil liberties with commendable good grace.

If only the same could be said of their elected representatives, who on Tuesday angrily likened the queue outside Parliament to "Alton Towers" while complaining about being subject to the social distancing measures that voters have had to put up with for weeks.

Despite the public having been instructed to "go back to work if you can't work from home", it seemed some politicians were still desperately trying to hang onto their glitchy Zoom calls as they were ordered back to the House of Commons.

Sir Keir Starmer, the Labour leader, queues with fellow MPs  - Justin Tallis/AFP
Sir Keir Starmer, the Labour leader, queues with fellow MPs - Justin Tallis/AFP

The voting lobbies have been deemed unsafe by Public Health England, so MPs had to form a coronavirus conga line to feed into the Commons chamber 50 at time and cast their votes at the despatch box instead.

As the mercury topped 24 degrees in Westminster, the lengthy line to vote on whether to end the virtual Parliament became heated, with a number of MPs taking to Twitter to condemn the "ridiculousness" of no longer being able to hold the Government to account from the comfort of their back gardens.

Yet even more ridiculous, perhaps, was the fact that MPs joined a lengthy queue to vote for more lengthy queues, approving the Government's motion to only allow them to vote in person by 261 votes to 163. Although the majority of objectors were from opposition parties, 20 Tories rebelled.

Naturally, the Leader of the House, Jacob Rees-Mogg – who on Monday declared that "if Parliament is to deliver on the people's priorities, it must sit physically" – found himself on the receiving end of some colleagues' wrath.

Jacob Rees-Mogg was on the receiving end of some colleagues' wrath - Justin Tallis/AFP
Jacob Rees-Mogg was on the receiving end of some colleagues' wrath - Justin Tallis/AFP

Lloyd Russell-Moyle, the Labour MP who scandalised the Commons by grabbing the parliamentary mace in 2018, was among many who could not resist poking fun at the "Honourable Member for the 18th century", tweeting: "Jacob Rees-Mogg will really go to extreme lengths to prevent Parliament from coming into the 21st century."

Yet weren't the Labour MPs voicing the loudest complaints the very same politicians who have been calling for the strictest adherence to the two-metre rule? How ironic that those who have been most critical of the Government's Covid-19 response were now actively trying to avoid a face-to-face confrontation with Boris Johnson.

Onlookers could have been forgiven for thinking the entire exercise was designed to expose what one suspects Mr Rees-Mogg regards as the sheer ludicrousness of the lockdown.

Summing up the somewhat hysterical mood on the opposition benches, Liberal Democrat leadership hopeful Layla Moran – who only on Sunday accused the Government of "accelerating out of lockdown" – tweeted: "Each vote is going to take at least 30mins and we have 3 today. What a shower."

Imagine what she might have made of the chaotic scenes had it been raining?

Anyone who has recently visited a McDonald's drive-thru with hangry children in the back of the car will vouch that 30 minutes per vote is actually is pretty good going, all things considered.

And at least the MPs had Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle barking the orders to stay safely apart rather than his bombastic predecessor, the non-peer John Bercow.

At times, the usually mild mannered Labour MP for Chorley had to resort to yelling: "Keep moving" as MPs dawdled, eagerly updating their social media feeds with the latest developments.

Sir Lindsay Hoyle was on hand to urge the MPs to keep moving - AFP
Sir Lindsay Hoyle was on hand to urge the MPs to keep moving - AFP

The eminently sensible Defra minister Victoria Prentis, a mother-of-two who, one imagines, has joined her fair share of Waitrose queues during the lockdown, was much more pragmatic, tweeting from Westminster Hall: "Great to be back in Westminster today. Socially distanced voting & clear instructions in place. Thank you to all the staff at the @HouseofCommons who have worked so hard to make this possible."

One of the biggest bugbears among her rivals was that the new rules seemingly make it impossible for the shielded to vote.

Luke Pollard, the Labour MP for Plymouth, Sutton and Devonport, made good use of his queuing time to record a selfie video, shaded from the sun in The Cloisters (and there are surely worse places to be on a hot June day?).

"What we are seeing from the Government is discriminatory," he railed. "It sends the message that disabled people need not apply to be a Member of Parliament because they'll be excluded from participating."

Little wonder, then, that Mr Rees-Mogg agreed to table a motion on Wednesday that will enable MPs unable to attend Parliament on medical grounds to take part in certain proceedings, including questions, urgent questions and ministerial statements.

"The stopgap of a hybrid Parliament was a necessary compromise during the peak of the virus, but by not being here the House has not worked effectively on behalf of constituents," he insisted, conceding that the new system would have "teething problems".

It came after Labour MP Valerie Vaz had accused him of "living in another universe" – a strange claim when us ordinary folk have been inhabiting Planet Queue since March 23.

The MP for North Somerset's wardrobe – double breasted suit, tie and black brogues – certainly appeared a world away from some of his fellow parliamentarians.

The Commons dress code requires male MPs to wear a suit, although this is not as strict during votes. As a consequence, some turned up tie-less, in short-sleeved shirts and even denim shorts, to do their democractic duty.

Not only did they not have to dress up, but after their queue exertions they also got to go to the tea room – albeit just 30 at a time – at least a month before their constituents will get to enjoy a similar pleasure.