The Scottish Mail on Sunday

A good Brexit will PROTECT the Union that puts the Great into Britain

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By BORIS JOHNSON

TO UNDERSTAND the genius of this country, you sometimes need to see us through the eyes of others. And having served as Foreign Secretary, I can tell you that across the world we are admired – sometimes even loved – far more than we realise.

When foreigners look at this country, they see a place that stands up for certain values and certain freedoms: democracy, the rule of law, human rights, free speech.

They see a country with fantastic Armed Forces and a globally trusted national broadcaste­r.

They see a place that has provided the world with its greatest explorers, scientists, inventors, poets, suffragett­es and environmen­talists.

And what is the name of that country? It isn’t England, or Scotland, or Wales, or Northern Ireland.

It is Britain, or rather the UK: the whole composite – the most successful political and economic union in history.

It is the United Kingdom that is the great global brand, and the Union Flag that captures imaginatio­ns around the world – the amalgamate­d red, white and blue that sums up the softpower superpower of the 21st Century, recently rated by one leading thinktank as the second most influentia­l country on Earth – and only beaten by the United States, a country that is, when all is said and done, a part of the political and spiritual progeny of the UK.

It is the UK, and not its constituen­t components, that is defined by some of our greatest national glories: from our National Health Service to our sense of humour to the sports and games that we largely invented and codified and which help to bring the world together today. We members of this precious Union are therefore so obviously and so irrefutabl­y more than the sum of our parts; and that is why I am a passionate believer in the unions – all of them – and when you look at the scale of our collective achievemen­t I simply cannot understand why anyone would want to mutilate this country and to break it up.

SO IF I am lucky enough to be elected as leader of the Conservati­ve Party in the next few weeks, I will do anything in my power to stop that disaster, and to bring this country together. That does not mean reversing devolution. Of course not – and we should give due acknowledg­ment to the successes of that programme.

But devolution must not mean dissolutio­n. Devolution should not mean decay of the vital bonds that hold us together.

We should accordingl­y be far more vocal in illustrati­ng and explaining the success of the whole UK.

We will have a unit in No10 to sensetest and stress-test every policy for the results it may bring to the Union.

When projects or funding are owed to UK investment – and not the devolved authority – we will be less bashful in claiming credit for the Government of the UK. We should actively campaign for a public understand­ing of the benefits of the Union, economic and strategic, for the people of all its component nations. And why? Because there are still passionate voices – especially in Scotland – that are campaignin­g night and day to break our Union up, to diminish our country. We cannot just leave the field to them, and refuse to engage in the argument.

And to protect the integrity of the

whole UK, we need to get Brexit done. We need to fulfil the mandate of the people and come out of the EU, as instructed in the referendum of 2016. We need to get Brexit done sensibly and cleanly – because that is precisely the way to spike the guns of the SNP.

Think of their argument once the whole UK has left the EU.

What are the Nationalis­ts going to say then?

Are they really going to propose to rejoin the EU as an independen­t Scotland? Are they going to use the euro in Scotland, to submit to Schengen rules on immigratio­n for Scotland, and to make Scottish business and citizens bow to the full panoply of EU law – while the rest of the UK, Scotland’s most important trading partner, seeks a different and more global destiny?

When the UK leaves the EU, Scotland will finally take back control of Scottish fisheries, which are among the richest in the northern hemisphere.

Are the Nationalis­ts really going to campaign – post-Brexit – to throw that opportunit­y away? Will it seriously be their manifesto to hand back control of fisheries to Brussels? Of course not. Properly done, Brexit will not threaten the Union; a sensible Brexit will enhance the Union and protect it and make life more difficult for those who wish to destroy it.

Now is the time, therefore, to be resolute, to get on with Brexit and to bring the whole country together; with better infrastruc­ture, and full fibre broadband, across all four nations.

We should be boosting Scottish fisheries; improving transport in Wales; and we should be restoring and protecting the governance of Northern Ireland, and insisting on the sovereignt­y of the UK – as upheld in the Good Friday Agreement.

NOW is a great opportunit­y to entrench and intensify our Union, and it should be an easy sell and an easy argument to make. The world can see our collective strength. We need to celebrate it ourselves, because we are the awesome foursome – far more together than we are apart.

To underscore the importance of these multiple partnershi­ps that develop and grow richer with every year, I also propose a cost-free but symbolical­ly important addition to the office I seek.

I believe that the occupant of No10 should be not just Prime Minister and First Lord of the Treasury and Minister for the Civil Service.

He or she should be Minister for the Union as well.

Leaving the EU sensibly and cleanly will spike the SNP’s guns

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