It is "entirely bonkers" and "ridiculous" that Big Ben's famous bongs will be silenced for four years next week as major conservation work is carried out, a Tory MP has said.
A shadow minister added that the bells had not stopped during the Blitz but were now being silenced by health and safety.
The deafening chimes are being stopped to protect workers who are renovating the Elizabeth Tower that houses the Great Clock and its bell.
James Gray, who sat on the administration committee which first approved the work, told the Daily Telegraph he regretted the committee's decision to give its backing and there was never any indication it would mean Big Ben being out of action for so long.
He said: "This is entirely bonkers. It is ridiculous to silence the bell for four years. I am very sceptical about the whole thing.
"What is the point in putting in a lift that will only go as far as three-quarters of the way up?"
The former shadow Scottish secretary said it was right that construction workers should be protected from the regular, deafening "bongs".
But he added: "Big Ben is terribly important to the mental wellbeing of the nation. Why can't it ring out from 5pm to 7am when building work has ceased for the day?"
Labour MP Stephen Pound, meanwhile, told the Daily Mail: "They kept the bells tolling through the Blitz.
"The Luftwaffe could not stop it but health and safety has. There has to be a way around this."
The bongs will fall silent after sounding at noon on Monday, August 21, and are set to begin again regularly in 2021, although they will still ring out for important national events such as New Year's Eve and Remembrance Sunday.
It will be the longest period Big Ben has been silenced in its 157-year history.
The 13.7-tonne Great Bell was last stopped for maintenance in 2007 and before that was halted for two years in 1983 for refurbishment, but has been stopped on a number of other occasions since it first sounded in 1859.
Steve Jaggs, keeper of the Great Clock, said: "Big Ben falling silent is a significant milestone in this crucial conservation project. As keeper of the Great Clock, I have the great honour of ensuring this beautiful piece of Victorian engineering is in top condition on a daily basis.
"This essential programme of works will safeguard the clock on a long term basis, as well as protecting and preserving its home - the Elizabeth Tower.
"Members of the public are welcome to mark this important moment by gathering in Parliament Square to hear Big Ben's final bongs until they return in 2021."
As well as conservation work to Elizabeth Tower, the Great Clock will be dismantled piece by piece and its four dials will be cleaned and repaired.
Brexit Secretary David Davis said it was "mad" that Big Ben's bongs would be silenced for four years and told those working on the renovation to "just get on with it".
He told LBC radio: "I think it's mad, I'd forgotten of course, I've been out of government for a lot of years, and I've forgotten how long it takes to get the approvals for this and the approvals for that.
"There's a sort of rude phrase which I will shorten to 'just get on with it'.
"When I was in business, it was my standard line, just get on, just do it, don't faff."
He added: "I actually can't understand, I haven't been in the details... I can't understand why.
"There's hardly a health and safety argument, it's replacing a bell.
"I mean maybe it's to do with all the trouble about the £3 billion they want to spend on Parliament, who knows? Also an interesting problem.
"They should get on with it."