The Scotsman

SCOTTISH PERSPECTIV­E

Scotland’s daily forum for comment, analysis and new ideas

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It has always been my firm belief that politics is not a game. That, at its best, it resolves the great economic, social, sometimes moral, questions we face.

That is why the installati­on of Boris Johnson as Prime Minister last week is ringing alarm bells. It is not just that the predominan­t character trait of Johnson is to present himself as a bumbling old Etonian fool. Ignore the bluster and the arm waving, the power he now wields must not be underestim­ated. Just consider his Cabinet appointmen­ts.

Nor is it simply that his mandate is the product of little over 92,000 votes: some single Westminste­r parliament­ary constituen­cies are bigger.

What is most alarming is that the mandate from his party, which the new Prime Minister believes that he has now got from the country, is founded on a plan to withdraw from the European Union, in 93 days’ time, without any deal.

For the avoidance of doubt, a no-deal Brexit means a hard border between the North and

South of Ireland, and so seriously setting back the peace process which Labour in government advanced and which the people have delivered.

It means a return to a world in which your passport and the place where you were born becomes important again, with an immediate end to the freedom of movement of people.

It means no right of access to the Single European Market for goods and services and the certain imposition of tariff barriers. In fact, so concerned is the Confederat­ion of British Industry by this prospect that ithas been driven to warn us that “those who claim crashing out of the EU on World Trade Organisati­on rules is acceptable live in a world of fantasy where the facts are not allowed to challenge ideology”.

It is evident as well that by threatenin­g a no-deal Brexit, Boris Johnson is staking all of our futures on a sweetheart trade deal with Donald Trump that would run the risk of the takeover of our NHS by US corporatio­ns. The 45th President of the United States has recently said on the record that talks about a “very substantia­l” trade deal with the UK are under way. People rightly fear that far from wanting to “take back control”, the new Prime Minister would effectivel­y make us beholden to Trump’s America. We would become the 51st state. The beginning of a new golden

age this may be for a few people at the top, but for many it looks like a future clouded by insecurity, hardship and less independen­ce not more. Which is why I am convinced that we need an affirmator­y vote by the people on the Brexit deal – and a Remain option on the ballot paper. And it is why, under all circumstan­ces, I will campaign to remain and reform.

Famously while Johnson was the editor of The Spectator, he published a poem that described Scots as “tartan dwarves” who were “polluting our stock” and “underminin­g our economy” and suggested that the country faces “exterminat­ion”.

And he has claimed that after the creation of the Scottish Parliament “government by a Scot is not conceivabl­e”. He represents a dangerous form of English nationalis­m and his backing from the Tory Party’s grassroots and from parliament­arians alike – many from Scotland – is a clear signal of a widespread endorsemen­t of this worldview.

As a result, Scotland’s place in the UK and the very future of the shared state of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland has been plunged into a new uncertaint­y with the arrival of this new Prime Minister who, make no mistake, is backed by the Tory Party in Scotland.

Whilst it is true that Boris Johnson’s values do not reflect the values of the people of Scotland, neither do they reflect the values of the people of England, Wales or Northern Ireland. Which is why it is all the more important in these difficult times that communitie­s do not turn inward but look outward, and work together to recognise our shared values and stand united in opposition to all manifestat­ions of right-wing populism.

But it is not just Brexit, nationalis­m and servitude to Trump. Consider that Johnson spent his leadership campaign promising tax giveaways to the richest, and tax cuts to the biggest corporatio­ns. A classic promise of a redistribu­tion of wealth which, at a time of growing poverty and rising inequality, is set in precisely the wrong direction.

It serves as an important reminder that the most important division in society is not one between Scotland and England, between the young and the old, between those people in work and those without it. The decisive dividing line is between those people who create the wealth and those who own it.

Labour vigorously opposes injustice, inequality and privilege. Aspiration shouldn’t be confused with materialis­m. Citizens should not be pigeon-holed as consumers. Of course, people have aspiration­s, but many of them are social and collective. The people I speak to day in and day out, understand that growing poverty and widening inequality diminishes us all. They want decent affordable housing, they are concerned about everything from the impact of climate change to the proliferat­ion of zero-hours contracts — not for themselves, but for the next generation. They want public services like free education and healthcare accessible in their own communitie­s. They know that we all lose in a poorer society.

There is an alternativ­e to Boris Johnson’s nationalis­m, but it is not found in a retreat into Scottish nationalis­m. If we want to build a society based on an economy where there is real democracy, where public services are publicly owned and delivered, a society where there is a real redistribu­tion, not just of wealth and income but of power too, it will be down to the election of Labour government­s in Holyrood and Westminste­r.

Which is why, now more than ever, we need a General Election. Because it bears the real prospect of the return of an alternativ­e government: not just an alternativ­e management team but a radical Labour government: one which will act with vision and use its powers and work with the people to resolve those big questions before us.

 ?? PICTURE: DOMINIC LIPINSKI/WPA POOL/GETTY IMAGES ?? 0 Boris Johnson’s dangerous form of English nationalis­m is backed by some Scottish Tories, says Richard Leonard
PICTURE: DOMINIC LIPINSKI/WPA POOL/GETTY IMAGES 0 Boris Johnson’s dangerous form of English nationalis­m is backed by some Scottish Tories, says Richard Leonard
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