I attempted a visit a couple of months ago- on the day of the final PMQs before the snap general election- but unfortunately I just missed out on the last available seat in the public gallery. It wasn't a wasted trip however: I ended up with the memorable experience of watching the debate on a TV screen from a dusty room just off Westminster Hall, alongside a group of muttering strangers of various political persuasions resembling a scene from 12 Angry Men.
This time, with the help of my local MP, I'd managed to source a ticket to guarantee a spot, and thankfully received permission to draw in the public gallery from the Serjeant-at-Arms- a good person to have on your side as the only individual traditionally allowed to enter the House of Commons armed with a sword.
Meandering my way through the opulent halls and grand lobbies of Westminster, I felt like I was visiting a museum of British political history where half the exhibits have come to life. Alongside ornate statues and epic murals showing a sweeping timeline of kings, queens, and political figures like Gladstone, William Pitt, Churchill and Keir Hardie, I spotted a who's-who procession of today's politicians- the new deputy leader of the Liberal Democrats Jo Swinson, the DUP’s Ian Paisley Jr, Tory grandee Oliver Letwin, Labour veteran Dennis ‘Beast of Bolsover’ Skinner- chattering beneath the archways and making their way to the Commons chamber in time for the day's session.
With the Speaker John Bercow keeping us all alert with his remarkable bellow, I settled into my seat in the Commons public gallery, and over the course of two days I spent almost fifteen hours observing this historic and grand forum for our democracy. I drew as Jeremy Corbyn challenged Theresa May over the response to the Grenfell Tower tragedy and the cuts to emergency service funding, as Chancellor Philip Hammond clashed with his shadow counterpart John McDonnell over the economy, jobs and the impact of austerity, and as Home Secretary Amber Rudd debated Diane Abbott over security and policing.