Leader: The Union is under threat but the Tories and Labour aren’t listening
While Westminster is fixated on the EU, Scotland is moving ever closer to independence.
By Staff blogger Published 27 October 2011In his first conference speech as Conservative leader, David Cameron memorably told his party that it had to stop "banging on about Europe". The events of the past week prove that it did not take his advice. Unemployment is rising and growth is falling but Tory MPs have chosen this moment to reopen the debate about Britain's membership of the European Union. They seem neither to care nor to remember that their party's last two prime ministers were destroyed by divisions over Europe. As Karl Marx observed, history repeats itself, "the first time as tragedy, the second time as farce".
Mr Cameron was right to impose a three-line whip on his recalcitrant backbenchers but he must share the blame for the record rebellion. He has consistently indulged the fanatical Eurosceptics in his party, withdrawing the Conservatives from the mainstream European People's Party and perpetuating the myth that EU regulation is to blame for Britain's growth problems. His refusal cogently to explain the benefits of EU membership has encouraged the perception that there are none.
The debate over Europe has obscured a far more significant constitutional development. Largely unnoticed by Westminster, Alex Salmond has been advancing his strategy for independence. As the Scottish National Party leader told the SNP conference in Inverness, the referendum ballot paper will contain two questions: the first on full independence and the second on fiscal autonomy or "devolution max". Aware that he may not be able to win a majority for the full break-up of the Union, Scotland's First Minister is hedging his bets.
But talk of devolution max as an agreeable compromise disguises what a bold step it would be. Scotland would win complete control over spending, borrowing and taxation, leaving Westminster in charge of only foreign affairs and defence - a degree of autonomy comparable to that enjoyed in Spain by the Basque Country and Catalonia. The economic relationship between England and Scotland would be profoundly altered. What, for instance, would be the consequences for English business of Scotland adopting an ultra-low rate of corporation tax? If judged successful, would fiscal autonomy be extended to England and Wales? It is these sorts of questions that Westminster must begin to debate.
In the meantime, it would be hubristic to dismiss Mr Salmond's chances of winning full independence. The SNP has amassed a £1m war chest and the polls are moving its way. A ComRes survey published on 15 October showed that 49 per cent of Scots now favour independence, with just 37 per cent opposed. The Scottish Lib Dem leader, Willie Rennie, posed the question: "What if devo max got 99 per cent Yes and 1 per cent No in the vote, while the independence option got 51 per cent Yes and 49 per cent No?" But Mr Salmond has confirmed that a slim majority for independence would overwrite a large majority for devolution max.
Labour and the Conservatives, currently leaderless in Scotland, have struggled to articulate a coherent alternative to independence. So unpopular are the Scottish Tories that Murdo Fraser, front-runner for the leadership, has pledged to disband the party and establish a new centre-right grouping if he wins. Labour, which for so long assumed that its hegemony over Scotland was permanent, remains dazed after its second defeat at Holyrood, though some in the party are beginning to think imaginatively about how to respond to the nationalist threat.
Henry McLeish, the former Labour first minister, has called for the party to embrace devolution max as a "serious alternative to independence". The political calculation is that fiscal autonomy would leave Mr Salmond less able to offer the panoply of benefits - free university education, free NHS prescriptions and free personal care for the elderly - on which SNP support rests. Indeed, as its own creator now concedes, the "Barnett Formula" for allocating public spending gives Scotland an unfair advantage over the rest of the UK.
When the SNP completed its extraordinary victory last May, Mr Cameron vowed to defend the Union with "every fibre" in his body. However, many in his party, which has held just one seat in Scotland since 1997, do not feel the same way. For the Tory right, an independent England - economically liberal, fiscally conservative, Eurosceptic, Atlanticist - is an attractive prospect. The United Kingdom, one of the most successful multiracial, multi-faith, multinational states the world has ever known, remains a cause worth fighting for. Yet, over the past weeks, fixated by the EU, the Conservative and Unionist Party seemed less aware of this than ever. And Labour remains complacently quiet.
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31 comments
Why are you a unionist, Matthew Fox? Are you Scottish? If not, try posting on one of Alan Cochrane's bitter diatribes against Salmond and the SNP on the Telegraph site. You'll be in the company of plenty of other English people mortified at the ingraditude of the Scots for even thinking of breaking up the union: there's plenty of other Britannia cultists making ad hominem attacks on Slamond there too.
Perhaps one of the reasons that Labour and the Tories haven't presented a compelling case for the union is that there isn't one.
north breeze; Like I've said in the past there's no greater cheer leader for Scottish independence than the English, having said that, what kind of self-rule will an independent Scotland enjoy then eventually all political law making and economic decision taking will be dictated from Brussels and not London. The nationalist having thought this throw or is it just blind English hatred that motivates them..
I am all for Scottish independence. As a Conservative I cannot wait for those 50 or so safe Labours seats being lost from the Westminster parliament!
Labour governments in England will thus be a thing of the past!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Alicia Murray
"What would the consequences be for English business if Scotland adopts ultra low corporation tax rate?"
England will respond by lowering its tax rate to the same level, no businesses will relocate from England to Scotland but the tax base of both countries will be eroded. Lose-lose. Scotland and England will both be worse off.
The SNP aren't motivated by Scotland's interests. They are motivated by romantic nationalism.
The countries are just too different politically for the current status quo. The bitterness seems to be ever increasing over matters political and economic. Certain sections of the media haven't helped by telling a pack of lies.
Devo max as a minimum with independence the preferred option seems like the way forward. Scotland and England will probably get along better once the settlement has been agreed and there aren't these arguments over money and political representation.
Luddite
If it's a choice between dictation from Brussels and dictation from Brussels via London then I'll take dictation from Brussels thank you.
The European Union is still a work in progress.The union of 1707 is not.That is the difference.
FA
Those who cannot envisage a different political arrangement than the London dominated UK and delude themselves that Britain is a world power are motivated by romantic,imperialistic nationalism.
Scotland is the pub bore
Alex Salmond is the one charismatic politician with a bit of nous in what is presently known as the United Kingdom. And he is on the right track. The Eurozone is the obvious choice for an Independent Scotland - Alex is an an economist and an experienced financier who understands the benefits. He doesn't suffer the xenophobia which is a major disease amongst UK Conservatives which allied with the vested interests - Murdoch Press - the Finance Industry - turned Britons against the Euro and which try to make the Eurozone problems more serious than they really are.While Britain is an economic basket case.
No, terence. That's you.
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