Stephen Low writes:
Scots, it is frequently stated, are progressive
or radical, even left-wing. This, on some readings, gives independence a
radical potential.
Posed slightly differently, independence is deemed necessary
to preserve a welfare state that is cared about here in Scotland but, by
implication, not elsewhere. "We’re different up here" is the
assertion. But who are we different from? And how different are we?
Given much of current debate around independence
is predicated around the idea that there is a gulf in attitude north and south
of the border, this is no small matter. Many will assert that we are seeking a
progressive future through independence to escape the politics of a UK
simultaneously proclaimed to be moving to the right and incapable of
change.
(In such narratives the oft stated enthusiasm of the SNP to keep levels
of corporation tax below those set at Westminster and their intention to grow
the financial sector as a share of the Scottish economy seldom get much of a
hearing.)
If the comparison is between Scotland
(population: five million) and England (53 million), it’s no real surprise to
find some diversity of views. Yet even here, a Nuffield Foundation report in 2011 concluded that in terms
of being "more social democratic in outlook than England, the differences
are modest at best".
In what, perhaps, should serve as a warning for those
who would conflate constitutional and social change they also note that
"like England, Scotland has become less – not more – social democratic since
the start of devolution."
But what if a less disproportionate comparison is
used? A Study for the Red Paper Collective of British Social
Attitudes Surveys going back to the mid-1980s examined not the difference
between Scotland and England but rather between Scotland and our 15 million
closest neighbours, the three northern regions of England.
Looking at a range of measures that might
indicate some level of progressive opinion (e.g. role of government in tackling
unemployment, support for taxation to fund services, attitude to benefit
claimants etc), Scots are no different at all.
It can, of course, be argued
that during much of this timeframe Scotland operated largely within the same
political and economic environment as the three regions sampled, so a degree of
congruity is to be expected. This would be to miss the point. It is not simply
that Scottish opinion was and is the same as these places – it is that Scots
reacted in the same way to the same issues.
Perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised, our problems
of unemployment, industrial decline and exploitation are much the same. Yet
many are increasingly content to define Scottish difficulties as being a national
question while issues in the English north are an economic question.
Such an analysis ignores the realities of the
political and economic power wielded by business and capital. Much of the
Scottish economy is owned and controlled at a UK level. But for the north of
England as much as Scotland, 'the UK' in this context is really a synonym for
the City of London. (See Richard Leonard in The Red Paper on Scotland 2014 .)
In this context, insisting that progress for
people in Scotland depends on independence is saying that those with similar
problems and outlook to our own must be written off as partners in building
something better. Despite problems on Clydeside and Merseyside having similar
causes and people feeling the same about them, the response, put bluntly, is a
statement that "Connection with you is holding us back".
Those who advocate such a course seldom show any
signs of having considered how Scotland’s retreating from tackling issues on a
UK basis, in pursuit of a (quite possibly illusory) sectional advantage, will
impact on those they wish to leave behind.
Some of course are explicit in advocating a
lifeboat scenario, saying in effect, "It’s all terribly sad for the
Scousers, but it’s nothing to do with us". This attitude suffices for
nationalists, who, as Eric Hobsbawm put it, don’t really care about
anyone’s country but their own. But for those who would claim to espouse any
sort of politics of the left - this is an inadequate response.
The question of whether or not Scotland leaving
the UK would be a progressive move depends of course on a range of factors far
wider than the convergence of opinion between Scotland and the north of
England. But that congruence of attitude is not trivial either.
Their issues of lack of accountability and
economic democracy, the consequences of financialisation and external ownership
are our issues too. They feel the same way about these things as we do. In such
circumstances, surely the burden of proof lies with those who would argue for
putting a political divide between us.
They should show, rather than simply
assert, how independence would improve, or at least do no harm, to our capacity
to jointly confront our common problems.
Goldman Sachs should be prosecuted over Royal Mail, the Daily Mail says today.
ReplyDeleteIs editorial "Robbed by the bank" says:
""On Wednesday, Adrian Bailey MP compared asking Goldman Sachs to advise on the Royal Mail flotation to seeking security tips from Great Train Robber Ronnie Biggs.""
""Yesterday, only a few months after telling Vince Cable to flog off Royal Mail for 330p a share - analysts at the bank shamelessly predicted a price of £6.10 within the year! ""
""These are, of course, the same shares on which favoured clients of Goldman Sachs have already made a killing, while the taxpayer has lost £1.1billion.""
""At least Biggs went to jail for his crime. Goldman has been paid £2.8million by a Business Secretary whose claim to understand business is ever more risible.""