Kenan Malik writes:
There are two fundamental issues at the heart of the
Scottish independence debate: Independence from what? And for what?
The answers
to both questions seem obvious. Independence for Scotland means independence
from the UK, or, more specifically, from rule from London.
And it would be
independence for Scotland to pursue its own policies. Dig a little deeper,
though, and we find that the answers are not nearly so straightforward.
The nationalists seem strangely
reluctant truly to break away from Westminster. The SNP wants, for instance, to
keep the British Queen as the head of state – a more potent symbol of an
undemocratic system and of ‘London rule’ it would be hard to imagine.
It wants
also to keep sterling as its currency, a policy which would hand the Bank of
England and the British Chancellor of Exchequer considerable control over the
Scottish economy.
For all the talk of breaking free of British rule, and of
establishing a more democratic system, the pro-independence movement itself is
seeking to constrain Scottish democracy and independence.
The answer to the question
‘independence for what?’ is equally problematic.
For many, especially leftwing,
nationalists, Scotland needs independence to pursue its own radical agenda
because it is being held back by English conservatism.
There are currently 304
Conservative MPs at the Westminster parliament; just one comes from Scotland.
Free of England, nationalists suggest, Scotland would no longer have to suffer
the Tories’ austerity policies or cuts to public services.
Whether an independent Scotland
would actually ditch austerity policies or create the health service that Scots
need is a moot point.
But the nationalist argument is a challenge as much to
democracy as it is to Tory policies. If everyone always got the government they
desired, democracy would be redundant.
We only need democracy because different
people hold different views, and we often disagree with government policies.
The Scots have, of course, a democratic right to vote for independence. But to suggest
that they should do because there is a conservative-led government at
Westminster seems fundamentally to misunderstand the nature and demands of
democracy.
Democracy puts the onus upon us to engage with people and to change
their minds. Rather than create a movement that can challenge Tory policies
throughout the UK, however, proponents of Scottish independence seek to create
a new constituency that they think will be more amenable to their views.
An independent Scotland will not solve the dilemma that
democracy often creates governments with which a large proportion, even the
majority, of the population disagree.
There is no single Scottish view on any
issue from abortion to Iraq to independence. Scots, like the rest of the UK,
are divided by class, culture, politics, gender, age and much else.
And, when it comes to politics and values, rather than a mythicised national identity, Scots often have greater affinities with people in England than with fellow-Scots.
And, when it comes to politics and values, rather than a mythicised national identity, Scots often have greater affinities with people in England than with fellow-Scots.
As the comedian Billy Connolly has put it, ‘I’ve always
remembered that I have a lot more in common with a welder from Liverpool than I
do with someone with an agricultural background from the Highlands.’
The very fractiousness of the
independence debate shows how divided Scotland is.
If Scotland becomes
independent, should the Labour-supporting areas of Glasgow, or the Orkney and
Shetland Islands that for decades have voted for the Liberal Democrats, insist
that they have no desire to be ruled by Edinburgh and seek to self-govern?
Or
should those who oppose independence seek to form their own mini-state?
Just as there is no Scottish view, so there is no single
English view. Resentment of Conservatives is as great in Liverpool and
Newcastle as it is in Glasgow and Edinburgh.
Billy Connolly’s ‘welder from
Liverpool’ is more likely to oppose the Conservatives than ‘someone with an
agricultural background from the Highlands’ [not quite true, but never mind; the Highland are many things, but they are not a bastion of the Conservative Party].
There is also in England
widespread resentment of the power wielded by London – though ironically, the
image of London in England is often the opposite of that expressed by many
Scottish nationalists.
For Scottish nationalists, London rule represents a
suffocating conservatism. Many in England see London, on the contrary, as too
liberal, too diverse, too supportive of immigration.
UKIP, the populist
anti-immigration, anti-EU party, made sweeping gains throughout England in this
year’s council election. The one place it did not make much headway was in
London.
The irony is that many in England support UKIP for much
the same reasons as many in Scotland support independence: because they feel
disengaged from mainstream politics, marginalized and voiceless.
Not just in
Scotland, nor even just in the UK, but throughout Europe there is a crisis of political representation, a growing
sense of political institutions as being remote and corrupt, of voters being
denied a voice, of traditional parties abandoning their traditional
constituencies.
One expression of this has been growing support for populist
parties, such as UKIP in Britain or the Front National in France. Scottish
nationalism is another expression of this social mood.
It is not that the SNP
and UKIP have the same kinds of policies. Clearly they don’t.
And I would not
want to suggest that the SNP is reactionary in the way that UKIP is. What
connects them is growing disconnect between the public and the political
sphere.
As the political sphere has
narrowed in recent years, and as mechanisms for political change have eroded,
so the ways in which people have begun to view themselves and their social
affiliations has changed.
Social solidarity has become defined increasingly not
in political terms – as collective action in pursuit of certain political
ideals – but in terms of ethnicity or culture.
The question people have come to
ask themselves is not so much ‘What kind of society do I want to live in?’ as
‘Who are we?’.
The two questions are, of course, intimately related, and any
sense of social identity must embed an answer to both.
In recent years,
however, the two questions have come more and more to be regarded as
synonymous.
The answer to the question ‘What
kind of society do I want to live in?’ has become shaped less by the kinds of
values or institutions we want to struggle to establish than by the kind of
people that we imagine we are; and the answer to ‘Who are we?’ defined less by
the kind of society we want to create than by the history and heritage to which
supposedly we belong.
Or, to put it another way, as broader political, cultural
and national identities have eroded, and as traditional social networks have
weakened, so people’s sense of belonging has become more narrow and parochial,
moulded less by the possibilities of a transformative future than by an often
mythical past.
The politics of ideology has, in other words, given way to the
politics of identity. This shift is apparent in both England and Scotland; it
has merely expressed itself in different ways.
There are many cases, from India to Ireland, in which
nationalist movements have sought to overthrow the restraints placed by an
external power upon democracy or self-determination.
National identity in these
cases may play a major role in fostering the collective action against
injustice and for democratic rights.
Scotland today is not such a
case.
The problem of democracy is not one of ‘London rule’ or external
restraint. It is not a matter of injustice or denial of democratic rights.
Scots are not being denied the right to vote, or to celebrate their culture, or
to express the identity, or to act as citizens.
The problem, rather, derives
from the same kinds of trends evident throughout the UK, and indeed throughout
Europe – the disengagement of people from the political process, the breakdown
of more universal movements for social change.
The challenge we face is to build
new social mechanisms that can overcome the fragmentary character of
contemporary politics, reverse the replacement of broader political and
cultural identities with more narrow, parochial ones, confront the shift from
the politics of ideology to the politics of identity.
Scottish independence
will not help achieve any of this. In fact, it will only exacerbate those very
problems.
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