By Danny Nicol
University of Westminster
“The Daleks’ Master Plan” (1965) is one of the most ambitious Doctor Who sagas of the show’s history. It is a twelve-episode space odyssey which (despite a measure of padding) builds to a thrilling climax. The plot involves a group of alien leaders who form a Universal Council in which they are allied to the Daleks. This Council plans to unleash a weapon of mass destruction, the Time Destructor, with which it can conquer the Universe. It has recruited the Guardian of the Solar System, Mavic Chen, as one of its members. Doctor Who’s script editor at the time, Donald Tosh, has suggested that the Universal Council is a satire on the United Nations.
University of Westminster
“The Daleks’ Master Plan” (1965) is one of the most ambitious Doctor Who sagas of the show’s history. It is a twelve-episode space odyssey which (despite a measure of padding) builds to a thrilling climax. The plot involves a group of alien leaders who form a Universal Council in which they are allied to the Daleks. This Council plans to unleash a weapon of mass destruction, the Time Destructor, with which it can conquer the Universe. It has recruited the Guardian of the Solar System, Mavic Chen, as one of its members. Doctor Who’s script editor at the time, Donald Tosh, has suggested that the Universal Council is a satire on the United Nations.
The plot of “The Daleks’ Master
Plan” raises a vital political and constitutional question. Throughout the period in which Doctor Who has been broadcast, supranational organisations
have become more and more prominent in our country’s politics. To what extent can these organisations be
reformed in a progressive direction? In
the recent UK general
election Plaid Cymru The Party of Wales argued for reform in the European Union, reflecting “the
need for Europe to support its population, not
international neoliberal corporations who have no responsibility to
people”. The Green Manifesto also sought
EU reform, criticising “the EU’s unsustainable economics of free trade and
growth”.
But how realistic is this? The policies which Plaid Cymru and the Greens
don’t like are, for the most part, enshrined in the EU Treaties.
These can only be amended by common accord of the leaders of all the EU member states,
with each state ratifying the changes in accordance with its own constitutional
requirements. The idea that every leader of every member
state would wish to change the Treaties in an anti-corporate, anti-free trade
direction requires an excessive dose of wishful thinking. Yet this obstacle is studiously ignored by Plaid Cymru and the Greens.
Such excessive optimism regarding the progressive potential of the supranational regimes stems from the deeply-held assumption that
international cooperation is a noble endeavour.
“The Daleks’ Master Plan” puts forward an altogether less favourable view. It points to international governance as an
escape from accountability. Mavic Chen’s
adoring public assume that the great leader is going off on holiday; in fact
he’s off to plot with the Daleks in the expectation of becoming supreme ruler
of the universe. (In this regard it is
easy to see the solar system as a metaphor for Britain : we’re told that “the solar
system is exceptional. In its power lies influences far outside its own sphere”. It’s the usual image of Britain
punching above its weight.) Other alien leaders have also kept their
participation in the Universal Council a closely-guarded secret.
Unaccountable power: Mavic Chen in league with the Daleks |
It is well established that leaders
increase their power through supranational forums since these serve to insulate
them from pressure back home. In this
regard they come to resemble the very corporations “who have no responsibility to
people” with which progressive critics of the EU are rightly concerned.
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