The Scotsman

Brown: ‘Cameron has made

- ANDREW WHITAKER POLITICAL CORRESPOND­ENT

GORDON Brown has accused David Cameron of turning the Conservati­ves into an “anti-scottish” party and of abandoning its historic support for the Union by “deserting British nationalis­m for English nationalis­m”.

In a speech last night, Mr Brown attacked Mr Cameron for attempting to ”whip up English nationalis­m” with the Conservati­ves’ controvers­ial plan to introduce English Votes for English Laws (Evel) that would restrict the role of Scottish MPS.

In a scathing attack on the man who ousted him as Prime Minister in 2010, Mr Brown warned that Mr Cameron’s plan was “hammering a further nail in the coffin of the Union” that would lead to a rise in nationalis­t sentiment both north and south of the Border.

Mr Brown said the Conservati­ves had sought to present themselves as the only alternativ­e to an “imaginary Snp-led Labour government controlled from Scotland” in a bid to appeal to voters in England.

Mr Brown, widely credited with playing a key role in the No campaign’s referendum victory last year, said his successor was using “Scottish nationalis­m to incite English nationalis­m” as a desperate tactic to win next week’s election.

He said Mr Cameron’s stance was a departure from his party’s approach during last year’s independen­ce vote, when the Conservati­ves worked alongside Labour in the Better Together campaign. He claimed the Prime Minister was now trying to stroke “English fears of unacceptab­le Scottish manipulati­on” at Westminste­r to gain narrow party advantage after the Tories failed to discredit Ed Miliband in the UK election campaign.

Mr Brown said the Conservati­ve Party had “sacrificed its historic commitment to being a Unionist party to become an English Nationalis­t Party”, with Mr Cameron’s plan to give MPS for English seats a veto on issues which only affect England.

He suggested such a plan would lead to further resentment in Scotland about a remote Westminste­r parliament and boost support for the SNP’S goal of Scottish independen­ce. “The sadness of this campaign is, by making unrealisti­c demands on England the SNP’S demands only encourage anti-scottish sentiment to grow in England,” Mr Brown said in the speech at Glasgow University, where he received an honorary doctorate yesterday.

The former Labour leader said Mr Cameron’s Evel plan and the polls surge of the SNP represente­d an “election of two nationalis­ms” that would be the first ever Uk-wide electoral contest in which the future of the Union was at stake. Mr Brown suggested the Prime Minister’s package of reforms, which include plans for an English rate of income tax, could lead to the powers of Holyrood being curtailed.

He said: “It will stir up even

“UK government has stopped speaking up for the Union” Gordon Brown

more anti-scottish resentment. And when that happens? What does Mr Cameron do? If he follows through he has to inevitably try to curtail the powers of the Scottish Parliament – and would be hammering a further nail in the coffin of the Union by doing so.

“We need to understand what has happened to make this the first election in modern times at which not just the future of the UK but the very existence of the UK is at issue – where the question is not what kind of country we are, but whether we are a country at all.

“Instead of spending his time defending the Union, Mr Cameron has been using Scottish nationalis­m to incite English nationalis­m, emphasisin­g how the SNP play the Scottish card to justify them playing the English card.”

Mr Brown also accused Mr Cameron of being unstatesma­nlike and of promoting “gesture” politics, with the Conservati­ve campaign in England focusing on suggestion­s that a Labour government would be controlled by the SNP.

Mr Brown said: “Having been unsuccessf­ul in making the election a contest, counter-posing a Conservati­ve government against a potential Labour government, they have now tried to make the election a referendum that counterpos­es a Conservati­ve government against an imaginary Snp-led Labour Government controlled from Scotland.

“The most insidious of all Conservati­ve attempts to whip up English nationalis­m is their main election stunt: a poster campaign in England designed to foment anti-snp and antiscotti­sh feeling in England as part of a claim Labour would be controlled by them from Scotland.”

The former prime minister, who is retiring as an MP after 32 years, said that such as approach would only serve to fuel nationalis­m in Scotland and England and place the Union at risk.

He said: “This tit-for-tat policy to divide and rule sweeps aside what binds us together in favour of emphasisin­g what drives us apart. And they are doing this despite the fact that the United Kingdom loses as a result: the government of the day has stopped speaking up for the Union they claim to support — and indeed, the Conservati­ve and Unionist Party has sacrificed its historic commitment to being a Unionist party to become an English Nationalis­t Party.

“And when the country is crying out for statesmans­hip and when all we have been offered are tit-for-tat gestures that pose one form of nationalis­m – English nationalis­m – against another – Scottish nationalis­m.” He added that Mr Cameron’s “anti-scottish campaign” could mean the party may never recover electorall­y in Scotland.

He said: “With few seats to gain or lose in Scotland or Wales, the Tories think they have a magic formula: they can head off Ukip in England, avoid a referendum on their record and win support by making the central issue English fears of unacceptab­le Scottish manipulati­on of Britain, even when there is no possibilit­y of a Labour-snp pact, coalition, deal, tie-in or other arrangemen­t. The question is now not where stands Britain but whether Britain will stand at all.”

However, Conservati­ve MSP Alex Johnstone said: “It’s a sign of the desperatio­n of the Labour Party in Scotland that it is turning on its Better Together allies to score points.

“It’s not possible to talk about devolution in Scotland without devolution in England.”

 ??  ?? Scottish Tory leader Ruth Davidson had a trip on a tank during a
Scottish Tory leader Ruth Davidson had a trip on a tank during a
 ??  ?? Gordon Brown said David Cameron was being ‘unstatesma­nlike’
Gordon Brown said David Cameron was being ‘unstatesma­nlike’

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