Daily Trust Sunday

Theresa May dragging UK under

- By George Monbiot Source: Guardian News

Theresa May is dragging the UK under. This time Scotland must cut the rope. Britain is politicall­y dead from the neck down. Leaving the union may be risky, but staying is worse

Here is the question the people of Scotland will face in the next independen­ce referendum: when England falls out of the boat like a block of concrete, do you want your foot tied to it? It would be foolish to deny that there are risks in leaving the United Kingdom. Scotland’s economy is weak, not least because it has failed to wean itself off North Sea oil.

There are major questions, not yet resolved, about the currency it would use; its trading relationsh­ip with the rump of the UK; and its associatio­n with the European Union, which it’s likely to try to rejoin.

But the risks of staying are as great or greater. Ministers are already trying to reconcile us to the possibilit­y of falling out of the EU without a deal. If this happens, Britain would be the only one of the G20 nations without special access to EU trade - “a very destructiv­e outcome leading to mutually assured damage for the EU and the UK”, according to the Commons foreign affairs committee. As the government has a weak hand, an obsession with past glories and an apparent yearning for a heroic gesture of self-destructio­n, this is not an unlikely result.

On the eve of the first independen­ce referendum, in September 2014, David

Cameron exhorted the people of Scotland to ask themselves: “Will my family and I truly be better off by going it alone? Will we really be more safe and secure?” Thanks to his machinatio­ns, the probable answer is now: yes.

In admonishin­g Scotland for seeking to protect itself from this chaos, the government applies a simple rule: whatever you say about Britain’s relationsh­ip with Europe, say the opposite about Scotland’s relationsh­ip with Britain.

In her speech to the Scottish Conservati­ves’ spring conference, Theresa May observed that “one of the driving forces behind the union’s creation was the remorseles­s logic that greater economic strength and security come from being united”.

She was talking about the UK, but the same remorseles­s logic applies to the EU. In this case, however, she believes that our strength and security will be enhanced by leaving. “Politics is not a game, and government is not a platform from which to pursue constituti­onal obsessions,” she stormed - to which you can only assent.

A Conservati­ve member of the Scottish parliament, Jamie Greene, complains that a new referendum “would force people to vote blind on the biggest political decision a country could face. That is utterly irresponsi­ble.”

This reminds me of something, but I can’t quite put my finger on it. Before the last Scottish referendum, when the polls suggested that Scotland might choose independen­ce, Boris Johnson, then London mayor, warned that “we are on the verge of an utter catastroph­e for this country

… No one has thought any of this through.” Now, as foreign secretary, he assures us that “we would be perfectly OK” if Britain leaves the EU without a deal.

The frantic attempts by government and press to delegitimi­ze the decision by the Scottish first minister, Nicola Sturgeon, to call for a second independen­ce vote fall flat. Her party’s manifesto for the last Scottish election gives her an evident mandate: it would hold another referendum

“if there is a significan­t and material change in the circumstan­ces that prevailed in 2014, such as Scotland being taken out of the EU against our will”.

Contrast this with May’s position. She has no mandate, from either the general election or the referendum, for leaving the single market and the European customs union. Her intransige­nce over these issues bends the Conservati­ve manifesto’s pledge to “strengthen and improve devolution for each part of our United Kingdom”.

Her failure to consult the government­s of Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland before unilateral­ly deciding that the UK would leave the single market, and her refusal to respond to the paper the Scottish government produced exploring possible options for a continued engagement with the EU after Brexit testify to a relationsh­ip characteri­sed by paternalis­m and contempt.

You can see the same attitude in the London-based newspapers. As the last referendum approached, they treated Scotland like an ungrateful servant.

“What spoilt, selfish, childlike fools those Scots are … They simply don’t have a clue how lucky they are,” Melanie Reid sniffed in the Times. Now the charge is scheming opportunis­m. “We hope the Scottish people call Sturgeon out for her cynical, self-interested game-playing,” rages the

Sun’s English edition. If you want to know what cynical, selfintere­sted game-playing looks like, read the Sun’s Scottish edition. It says the opposite, contrastin­g the risks of independen­ce with “the stick-on certainty of decades of Tory rule with nothing to soften it”, if Scotland remains within the UK.

Whenever I visit Scotland, I’m reminded that Britain is politicall­y dead from the neck down. South of the border, we tolerate repeated assaults on the commonweal. As the self-hating state destroys its own power to distribute wealth, support public services and protect the NHS from ruin; as it rips up the rules protecting workers, the living world, our food, water and the very air we breathe; as disabled people are pushed off a cliff and poor people are evicted from their homes, we stand and stare.

As the trade minister colludes with the dark money network on both sides of the Atlantic, threatenin­g much that remains, we shake our heads then turn away.

Sure, there are some protests. There is plenty of dissent on social media; but our response is pathetic in comparison with the scale of what we face.

The Labour opposition is divided, directionl­ess and currently completely useless. But north of the border politics is everywhere, charged with hope, anger and a fierce desire for change. Again and again, this change is thwarted by the dead weight of Westminste­r. Who would remain tethered to this block, especially as the boat begins to list?

Scotland could wait to find out what happens after Brexit, though it is hard to see any likely outcome other than more of this and worse. Or it could cut the rope, pull itself back into the boat, and sail towards a hopeful if uncertain future. I know which option I would take.

 ?? PHOTO: ?? Independen­ce supporters gather in Glasgow’s George Square after Nicola Sturgeon’s call for a second referendum Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images
PHOTO: Independen­ce supporters gather in Glasgow’s George Square after Nicola Sturgeon’s call for a second referendum Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images

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