#216 – Ian Dunt on why governments in Britain and elsewhere can't get anything done – and how to fix it

#216 – Ian Dunt on why governments in Britain and elsewhere can't get anything done – and how to fix it

When you have a system where ministers almost never understand their portfolios, civil servants change jobs every few months, and MPs don't grasp parliamentary procedure even after decades in office — is the problem the people, or the structure they work in?

Today's guest, political journalist Ian Dunt, studies the systemic reasons governments succeed and fail.

And in his book How Westminster Works ...and Why It Doesn't, he argues that Britain's government dysfunction and multi-decade failure to solve its key problems stems primarily from bad incentives and bad processes.

Even brilliant, well-intentioned people are set up to fail by a long list of institutional absurdities that Ian runs through — from the constant churn of ministers and civil servants that means no one understands what they’re working on, to the “pathological national sentimentality” that keeps 10 Downing Street (a 17th century townhouse) as the beating heart of British government.

While some of these are unique British failings, we see similar dynamics in other governments and large corporations around the world.

But Ian also lays out how some countries have found structural solutions that help ensure decisions are made by the right people, with the information they need, and that success is rewarded.

Links to learn more, video, highlights, and full transcript.

Chapters:

  • Cold open (00:00:00)
  • How Ian got obsessed with Britain's endless failings (00:01:05)
  • Should we blame individuals or incentives? (00:03:24)
  • The UK left its allies to be murdered in Afghanistan (to save cats and dogs) (00:09:02)
  • The UK is governed from a tiny cramped house (00:17:54)
  • “It's the stupidest conceivable system for how to run a country” (00:23:30)
  • The problems that never get solved in the UK (00:28:14)
  • Why UK ministers have no expertise in the areas they govern (00:31:32)
  • Why MPs are chosen to have no idea about legislation (00:44:08)
  • Is any country doing things better? (00:46:14)
  • Is rushing inevitable or artificial? (00:57:20)
  • How unelected septuagenarians are the heroes of UK governance (01:01:02)
  • How Thatcher unintentionally made one part of parliament work (01:10:48)
  • Maybe secrecy is the best disinfectant for incompetence (01:14:17)
  • The House of Commons may as well be in a coma (01:22:34)
  • Why it's in the PM's interest to ban electronic voting (01:33:13)
  • MPs are deliberately kept ignorant of parliamentary procedure (01:35:53)
  • “Whole areas of law have fallen almost completely into the vortex” (01:40:37)
  • What's the seed of all this going wrong? (01:44:00)
  • Why won't the Commons challenge the executive when it can? (01:53:10)
  • Better ways to choose MPs (01:58:33)
  • Citizens’ juries (02:07:16)
  • Do more independent-minded legislatures actually lead to better outcomes? (02:10:42)
  • "There’s no time for this bourgeois constitutional reform bulls***" (02:16:50)
  • How to keep expert civil servants (02:22:35)
  • Improving legislation like you’d improve Netflix dramas (02:34:34)
  • MPs waste much of their time helping constituents with random complaints (02:39:59)
  • Party culture prevents independent thinking (02:43:52)
  • Would a written constitution help or hurt? (02:48:37)
  • Can we give the PM room to appoint ministers based on expertise and competence? (02:51:51)
  • Would proportional representation help? (02:56:20)
  • Proportional representation encourages collaboration but does have weaknesses (02:58:51)
  • Alternative electoral systems (03:07:44)


This episode was originally recorded on January 30, 2025.

Video editing: Simon Monsour
Audio engineering: Ben Cordell, Milo McGuire, Simon Monsour, and Dominic Armstrong
Music: Ben Cordell
Camera operator: Jeremy Chevillotte
Transcriptions and web: Katy Moore

Avsnitt(323)

#233 – James Smith on how to prevent a mirror life catastrophe

#233 – James Smith on how to prevent a mirror life catastrophe

When James Smith first heard about mirror bacteria, he was sceptical. But within two weeks, he’d dropped everything to work on it full time, considering it the worst biothreat that he’d seen described...

13 Jan 2h 9min

#144 Classic episode – Athena Aktipis on why cancer is a fundamental universal phenomena

#144 Classic episode – Athena Aktipis on why cancer is a fundamental universal phenomena

What’s the opposite of cancer? If you answered “cure,” “antidote,” or “antivenom” — you’ve obviously been reading the antonym section at www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/cancer.But today’s guest Athe...

9 Jan 3h 30min

#142 Classic episode – John McWhorter on why the optimal number of languages might be one, and other provocative claims about language

#142 Classic episode – John McWhorter on why the optimal number of languages might be one, and other provocative claims about language

John McWhorter is a linguistics professor at Columbia University specialising in research on creole languages. He's also a content-producing machine, never afraid to give his frank opinion on anything...

6 Jan 1h 35min

2025 Highlight-o-thon: Oops! All Bests

2025 Highlight-o-thon: Oops! All Bests

It’s that magical time of year once again — highlightapalooza! Stick around for one top bit from each episode we recorded this year, including:Kyle Fish explaining how Anthropic’s AI Claude descends i...

29 Dec 20251h 40min

#232 – Andreas Mogensen on what we owe 'philosophical Vulcans' and unconscious beings

#232 – Andreas Mogensen on what we owe 'philosophical Vulcans' and unconscious beings

Most debates about the moral status of AI systems circle the same question: is there something that it feels like to be them? But what if that’s the wrong question to ask? Andreas Mogensen — a senior ...

19 Dec 20252h 37min

#231 – Paul Scharre on how AI-controlled robots will and won't change war

#231 – Paul Scharre on how AI-controlled robots will and won't change war

In 1983, Stanislav Petrov, a Soviet lieutenant colonel, sat in a bunker watching a red screen flash “MISSILE LAUNCH.” Protocol demanded he report it to superiors, which would very likely trigger a ret...

17 Dec 20252h 45min

AI might let a few people control everything — permanently (article by Rose Hadshar)

AI might let a few people control everything — permanently (article by Rose Hadshar)

Power is already concentrated today: over 800 million people live on less than $3 a day, the three richest men in the world are worth over $1 trillion, and almost six billion people live in countries ...

12 Dec 20251h

#230 – Dean Ball on how AI is a huge deal — but we shouldn’t regulate it yet

#230 – Dean Ball on how AI is a huge deal — but we shouldn’t regulate it yet

Former White House staffer Dean Ball thinks it's very likely some form of 'superintelligence' arrives in under 20 years. He thinks AI being used for bioweapon research is "a real threat model, obvious...

10 Dec 20252h 54min

Populärt inom Utbildning

rss-bara-en-till-om-missbruk-medberoende-2
historiepodden-se
det-skaver
alska-oss
harrisons-dramatiska-historia
rss-viktmedicinpodden
sektledare
nu-blir-det-historia
allt-du-velat-veta
johannes-hansen-podcast
roda-vita-rosen
rss-sjalsligt-avkladd
i-vantan-pa-katastrofen
sa-in-i-sjalen
not-fanny-anymore
sex-pa-riktigt-med-marika-smith
polisutbildningspodden
rss-om-vi-ska-vara-arliga
rss-max-tant-med-max-villman
rss-traningsklubben