As Bella
Caledonia pointed out yesterday, last week was a busy one for the
self-styled ‘saviours of the union’ as they fight their battle to prevent the
break-up of the UK, although the highlight wasn’t so much the slew of articles
full of grim warnings as the resignation,
after just two weeks in the post, of the man Johnson had appointed to lead the
government’s work on the matter. If they can’t even maintain a united approach
in Downing Street, their chances of success look slim. Part of the problem is a
lack of clarity about what it is that they’re trying to maintain and what the
best way of doing that is.
The PM, always a lover of grandiose and
impractical follies, seems to be determined to press ahead with a tunnel linking
the UK mainland to Northern Ireland, with one option being a four-tunnel
approach with a splendid roundabout
under the Isle of Man, as though the solution is better physical links. (Apparently, some people also believe that this will 'solve' the problems of the Northern Ireland protocol, because those silly Europeans will never think to impose checks at the end of a tunnel.) Perhaps
they’ve seen the pictures of another roundabout under
the Faroes, although I wonder whether they’ve thought about asking the Manx
whether they want to become an English-Scottish-Irish hub; it is, perhaps, an
inconvenient and ironic fact that the island enjoys rather more self-government
than Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland, and unlike the devolved
administrations, the Isle of Man would be able to say ‘no’ to such a scheme.
Others in the governing cult seem to
believe that plastering the union
flag on anything and everything, including vaccines,
will somehow make all Scots and Welsh feel more British and patriotic. It
underlines, in a way, how shallow is the idea of Britishness and British
patriotism; it often seems as though that particular style of patriotism is
more about symbols than substance. A truly ‘patriotic’ government would ensure
that none of its people went hungry, that none were excluded or left behind,
that we had functioning and properly funded services. Yet for ‘patriots’ like Johnson,
it’s more about declaring loyalty to a flag, to the monarchy and to the armed
forces. It’s a very narrow definition of what it means to be a patriot, and
part of the reason why the union is failing is precisely because increasing
numbers of people, particularly in Scotland, are coming to realise both how narrow
it is, and that there are alternative and more modern views. Trying to put that
genie back in the bottle by imposing a uniform definition of patriotism and
national identity is likely to be counter-productive, but it seems to be all
that they have.
Three months ago, Johnson said that devolution
had been a disaster, and he’s been trying to row back his words ever since.
Last week, he said
that it hadn’t, after all, been an ‘overall disaster’, the problem, it seems is
that the devolved administrations haven’t used their powers in the way he would
have wished. He hasn’t – yet – gone quite as far as one of his party’s members
in Wales, who argued
last month that the Senedd should be abolished because there is no chance of it
ever electing a Tory majority, although one can’t help but wonder if that isn’t
what Johnson actually thinks. Abolishing Welsh democracy because the Welsh elect the ‘wrong’ people is not an approach which any democrat would
propose, but it looks entirely natural from a perspective in which god vested
all power in the English monarch.
One of last week’s flurry of articles was one
from a former senior adviser to David Cameron in the Financial Times. It’s
behind a paywall, but there’s a summary here
on Nation.Cymru. It calls for a revised devolution settlement which recognises
that all sovereignty belongs to Westminster and cuts back on the extent to
which the devolved administrations can follow different paths. But above all,
it highlights the question of identity and demands the reassertion of a British
identity, without, apparently, really defining what that is. It is that question
of identity – or more precisely, the extent to which different identities
should be ‘permitted’ political expression – which is at the heart of the
question. There is no doubt that people who self-identify as British see their
identity as being in some way threatened by way in which growing numbers of
people in Wales and Scotland see their identity as being Welsh or Scottish. And
that seems to be a major part of the momentum behind the anti-Senedd forces:
they seem to genuinely fear that the Senedd is going to somehow impose a Welsh
identity upon them, a fear which often emerges in their views on the Welsh
language. Given that imposing identity, culture, and language is exactly the
way in which Britishness was established in the first place, it’s easy enough
to see why British nationalists would assume that everyone else would operate
the same way.
It doesn’t need to be that way, though. It’s
true that there are independentistas who attempt to insist that people
choose between being Welsh or being British. It’s impossible, they argue, to be
both. Given that large numbers of people in Wales do consider themselves to be
a bit of both, telling them that they can’t has always seemed an unproductive
approach to me. On the other side, it seems that British nationalists are
insisting that we must all fit their definition of national identity, and that
the extent to which we can be ‘different’ should be tightly limited, and mostly
expressed in the field of culture rather than politics. The problem with this approach
to politics is that it treats identity as a zero-sum game; we must all make a
firm choice, not a vague one, and one side must emerge as the winner. In trying
to eliminate the possibility that nationality (other than in the strict legal
definition for purposes such as passports issued by a state) can be much more
subtle than that, the approach is inherently divisive. Had British nationalism
been more accommodating both of difference and of political expression of that
difference over the past three decades, they might have had a better chance of
saving their precious union. It is a common refrain from the unionist side that
independence is all about identity politics, but they don’t even seem to
realise that identity politics is even more at the heart of their own project.
The result is that they are doubling down on their demand for conformity even
at this late stage. It will prove to be their undoing.
1 comment:
Brit nationalism is all about assimilation and homogeneity with exceptions allowed for stuff like national sports teams, although there are some seriously defective wallies who'd like to unify those too ! It seems that we have a mass of people who derive some kind of security from this kind of merged identity mostly found within the AngloBrit demographic but with significant chunks of compliant Welshies( loving honours, ceremony, bowing and scraping and all that muck!). Sadly far too many of our BAME communities aspire to "succeed" by integrating into that identity also, which is surprising given the AngloBrit track record of behaviours towards them.
Bit like those dogs that get beaten but still love their owners !.
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