The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Scotland’s Tories have sabotaged the Union

Jim Hunter has a beef with party’s stance on food standards

- Jim Hunter Jim Hunter is a historian, awardwinni­ng author and emeritus professor of history at the University of the Highlands and Islands

If Scotland becomes an independen­t country once more – something recent polling suggests is increasing­ly likely – any future study of how Scotland’s unionists lost out to nationalis­ts may well make a bit of space for last week’s stooshie about beef.

The week began with a key Commons vote on a House of Lords amendment to the UK Government’s Agricultur­e Bill. Backers of this amendment wanted to enshrine existing food standards in law. That would make it impossible, they pointed out, for post-Brexit Britain to be exposed to low-quality food products from overseas.

These products, say consumer groups, should be kept out on health grounds.

Farmers fear being undercut by cheaply priced foodstuffs from countries with poorer animal welfare and crop production standards than those mandatory here.

But Boris Johnson’s Tory government was having none of this. Legal protection of current standards was ruled out and the Lords amendment to the Agricultur­e Bill was duly voted down, to the undisguise­d fury of Scottish farming interests.

“NFU Scotland and the vast majority of our members are bitterly disappoint­ed that the amendment was not supported,” runs a statement from the organisati­on representi­ng most of the country’s farmers.

Scottish Conservati­ve leader and Moray MP Douglas Ross was one of the few Conservati­ves to vote as the farming lobby wanted. No other Tory MP from Scotland followed his lead, with the result that the Conservati­ve Party in Scotland finds itself at odds not just with the Scottish NFU but with the wider agricultur­al community that, for ages, has been one of the party’s most loyal sources of support.

This might have been expected to result in some caution from Mr Ross and his colleagues when, days after the Agricultur­al Bill showdown at Westminste­r, it emerged that one of First Minister Nicola Sturgeon’s advisers, Kate Hi g g i n s , had been pressurisi­ng supermarke­ts to stop selling as “British” steaks and other cuts of “Scotch Beef ” – an expensivel­y created brand which, a bit like “Scotch Salmon”, has been of real help to Scotland’s food producers.

But reaching out to farmers they’d just a l i e n at e d , it appears, was of less consequenc­e to Scotland’s Conservati­ves than seizing a chance to rubbish Holyrood’s SNP administra­tion. “In the middle of a pandemic,” declared Oliver Mundell, who holds the Tory rural affairs brief in the Scottish Parliament, “it’s jaw-dropping that a key SNP government adviser is ferociousl­y investigat­ing how the Union flag ended up on a packet of meat”.

Douglas Ross tweeted that beef labelling was in no way “the big issue facing Scotland today”.

Mr Ross is clearly right about that. But his line on the labelling fracas might yet be seen as historical­ly significan­t – not because of its intrinsic importance, which isn’t great, but as one of several pointers to a potentiall­y far-reaching and fundamenta­l shift in the way Scotland’s Conservati­ves connect with what it is to be Scottish.

For centuries, Tories in Scotland set great store by Scottish distinctiv­eness. This, they insisted, was a very different country from the UK’s other component nations.

Un l i k e Wa l e s and Ir e l a n d , they maintained, Scotland had never been conquered by England. Its independen­ce had been secured by kings like Robert Bruce, and this eventually enabled Scotland to enter into a freely-agreed Union with England – a Union which guaranteed the continuing separatene­ss and independen­ce of Scots Law, the Presbyteri­an Church of Scotland and much else.

This Tory commitment to a Scotland that, though in partnershi­p with England, was entitled to express its own strong sense of itself endured into recent times.

In a just-published account of national policy on Gaelic, Edinburgh University academic Wilson McLeod notes that Malcolm Rifkind, when Scottish secretary in Margaret Thatcher’s government managed to secure from the Treasury an annual contributi­on of £8 million (£20m at today’s prices) for Gaelic broadcasti­ng. He had been “fighting behind the scenes”, McLeod quotes Rifkind as saying, “to support a hugely important part of our history and culture”.

This sort of stance is worlds away from that adopted by Liz Smith, who leads on education for the Conser vatives at Holyrood, when earlier this year she described as “deeply troubling” a move to enhance Gaelic educationa­l provision in the Western Isles.

It’s worlds away, too, from David Mundell MP’s declaratio­n that “there is no border between Scotland and England” or, for that matter, Douglas Ross’s contention that it’s wrong to be trying to ensure Scotch Beef products carry Saltires rather than Union flags.

Many Scots Tories, it seems, have abandoned their party’s traditiona­l stance and concluded that the Union is best defended by decrying and disparagin­g everything and anything that might promote, safeguard or acknowledg­e Scotland’s sense of itself as a nation in its own right.

The trouble with this approach is that a Scottish identity undoubtedl­y exists and is, if anything, becoming stronger. By turning their backs on it, Conservati­ves risk making the SNP the sole defenders of those things that make Scotland Scottish. And that, from a pro-Union perspectiv­e, doesn’t look terribly clever.

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Amateur photograph­ers are invited to submit pictures for inclusion. Please send high-quality prints to: Scottish Life, The Press and Journal, 1 Marischal Square, Broad Street, Aberdeen, AB10 1BL. We are sorry that we are unable to return them. You can email your photograph­s to: pj.pictures@ajl.co.uk

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