How does Westminster really work when government does not want to be challenged?
In Institutionalised Deceit, Ron Bailey draws on 40 years of parliamentary campaigning to reveal the hidden pressures, tactics and habits that shape decision-making at the heart of British politics.
This is not a detached textbook about Parliament. It is a first-hand account from a campaigner who has worked with MPs across parties, helped promote Private Members' Bills, and seen how the machinery of government can resist reform, sideline scrutiny and protect itself from accountability.
Bailey writes with the insight of someone who has been inside the process without becoming part of it. He shows how Ministers, civil servants, whips and procedure can frustrate change, even when a proposal has strong public and parliamentary support.
Yet this is not only an expos . It is also a book about persistence, organisation and democratic pressure. Bailey shows how citizens, campaigners and backbench MPs can work together to challenge power and win meaningful change.
Direct, detailed and often startling, Institutionalised Deceit is for readers who want to understand Westminster beyond the speeches, headlines and official explanations. It is a powerful account of how government works, how it fails, and how determined people can still make it answer.