The Scotsman

Real pride in this ‘One Nation’ cannot be faked

Your love for your country comes from people, culture and collective endeavour, not hollow gimmicks,

- writes Ayesha Hazarika

ne of the highlights of working for former Labour leader Ed Miliband (stay with me) was his tour de force 2012 conference speech, delivered without notes but with bags of passion, which centred on a simple crowd-pleasing slogan: One Nation.

The audience and commentato­rs loved it. Miliband borrowed the concept from former Conservati­ve leader Benjamin Disraeli, and outlined his vision for Labour to be an inclusive “One Nation” party which would rebuild a fairer Britain out of the financial crash.

Sound familiar? One Nation is a cracking concept. It never ages. It appeals to pretty much every part of the political spectrum. So it’s no surprise it’s been rehashed by the original owners, the Conservati­ves, to try to inject some much-needed positivity and unity five years on from that Brexit vote.

Today is One Britain One Nation day. The government is encouragin­g schools across the country to come together and sing a “patriotic” song to foster a “spirit of inclusion with a collective purpose” (sample lyric: “Strong Britain, Great Nation!” repeated four times). The original idea was from an impressive retired police officer, Kash Singh, who has a noble ambition to improve community relations.

The concept is well-meaning.it’s just that when government­s get involved with this kind of national pride business it becomes really difficult, weird and ripe for satire because the words do not match the deeds.

It’s hard to feel a great sense of inclusion when this week, politician­s have been using the legitimate concept of “white privilege” to stir up division between disadvanta­ged children from different ethnic background­s. It’s hard to feel a sense of purpose when kids are going to school hungry. It’s hard to feel a bracing sense of pride when Gavin Williamson is UK Education Secretary.

Pride in your country is important. But pride has to be organic, a force too powerful to resist. It cannot be demanded by gimmicks. Like forcing every home to have a portrait of the Queen, as suggested by Tory MP Joy Morrissey. I have a lovely bone china mug with her Maj on it but that’s my personal naff Hyacinth Bouquet choice. Instead of a portrait, how about extending the £20 Universal Credit top-up? Or getting some laptops out to homes which need it?

You can’t fake or force national pride. Your love for your country doesn’t come from soil, buildings or old statues, but from people, culture, achievemen­ts and collective endeavour, whether it’s the vaccine roll-out, sporting feats or art and culture.

People sharing life experience­s creates a powerful, true sense of pride. British people in all their technicolo­ur glory, from all walks of life love, and want, to have pride in these shores and celebrate the best of us from the global superstar to the local hero. But we don’t need hollow gestures which don’t pass the smell test.

We desperatel­y want the government and institutio­ns to bring us together, to encourage us to see the best in each other, rather than stoking this constant, dangerous culture war. That would be genuinely One Nation, and a tired, frayed nation would be ever so grateful.

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 ??  ?? 0 Ed Miliband championed the idea of ‘One Nation’ politics but national pride depends on actual achievemen­ts, not gimmicks
0 Ed Miliband championed the idea of ‘One Nation’ politics but national pride depends on actual achievemen­ts, not gimmicks

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