I have a degree in politics, and when I was at Uni wanted to become an MP.
Why haven't I?
Well - for all the reasons already listed here, and more.
I worked in industry/management jobs for 20 years, and by comparison Parliament is just such an archaic and ineffective way of doing things - the lengthy 'debates' - verbal out-pourings - would be laughed down in a modern business world.
All the old boys networks and the schoolboy antics and heckling - pathetic.
I agree 100% with Chil - why is it deemed OK to abuse ALL MPs these days, irrespective of whether they are working hard or not? Of course there are good and bad MPs, but it's just so lazy to tar them all with the same brush.
FWIW I think the current set-up means that MPs are disproportionately drawn from minority groups and also over-represent certain 'quirky types' which means that they are definitely NOT representative of the electorate they serve.
I know quite a few MPs. One is a self-made millionaire lesbian. She works very hard, an is an excellent MP, but I can't help feeling that she can only do this because:
a) she has money from her previous own business, and can therefore 'afford' to live on an MPs salary, and
b) she does not have children/ parenting commitments.
Relative to the population there must be a disproportionate number of MPs who are gay/unmarried/ not parents?
Every so often I think of becoming a PPC to 'keep my options open' (I'm not getting any younger) and then I imagine:
- the media prying into the lives of my children
- old boyfriends coming out the woodwork claiming "she liked to dress up in a nurses outfit" (hmm)
or discovering that I underpaid £1.20 of income tax in 1982 or some such rubbish.
Sad really.
The country must be losing out on a lot of potential talent...