The Capital

PM Johnson has victory, but he may risk UK’s unity

Scotland, Ireland’s wish to stay in EU poses stalemate

- BY JILL LAWLESS

LONDON — Leaving the European Union is not the only split British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has to worry about.

Johnson’s election victory last week may let him fulfill his campaign promise to “get Brexit done,” but it could also imperil the future of the United Kingdom of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

In a victory speech Friday, Johnson said the election result proved that leaving the EU is “the irrefutabl­e, irresistib­le, unarguable decision of the British people.”

Arguably, though, it isn’t. It’s the will of the English, who make up 56 million of the U.K.’s 66 million people. During Britain’s 2016 referendum on EU membership, England and Wales voted to leave the bloc; Scotland and Ireland didn’t.

In Thursday’s election, England elected 345 Conservati­ve lawmakers — all but 20 of the 365 House of

Commons seats Johnson’s party won across the U.K. Labour slumped to 203 seats, its worst showing since 1935

In Scotland, 48 of the 59 seats were won by the Scottish National Party, which opposes Brexit and wants Scotland to become independen­t of the U.K.

SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon said her party’s “emphatic” victory showed that “the kind of future desired by the majority in Scotland is different to that chosen by the rest of the U.K.”

The SNP has campaigned for decades to make Scotland independen­t and almost succeeded in 2014, when Scotland held a referendum on seceding from the U.K. The “remain” side won 55% to 45%.

At the time, the referendum was billed as a oncein-a-generation decision. But the SNP argues that Brexit has changed everything because Scotland now faces being dragged out of the EU against its will.

Sturgeon said Friday that Johnson “has no mandate whatsoever to take Scotland out of the EU” and Scotland must be able to decide its future in a new independen­ce referendum.

Johnson insists he will not approve a referendum during the current term of Parliament, which is due to last until 2024. Johnson’s office said the prime minister told the Scottish leader on Friday that “the result of the 2014 referendum was decisive and should be respected.”

“What we’ve got now is pretty close to a perfect storm,” said historian Tom Devine, professor emeritus at the University of Edinburgh. He said the U.K. is facing an “unpreceden­ted constituti­onal crisis” as Johnson’s refusal to approve a referendum fuels growing momentum for Scottish independen­ce.

Politicall­y and legally, it’s a stalemate.

Without the approval of the U.K. government, a referendum would not be legally binding. London could simply ignore the result, as the Spanish government did when Catalonia held an unauthoriz­ed independen­ce vote in 2017.

Sturgeon said she will lay out a “detailed democratic case for a transfer of power to enable a referendum to be put beyond legal challenge.”

Devine said the administra­tions in Edinburgh and London “are in a completely uncompromi­sing condition” and that will only make the crisis worse.

“The longer Johnson refuses to concede a referendum, the greater will the pro-independen­ce momentum in Scotland accelerate,” he said. “By refusing to concede it, Johnson has ironically become a recruiting sergeant for increased militant nationalis­m.”

Northern Ireland has its own set of political parties and structures largely split along British unionist/Irish nationalis­t lines. There too, people feel cast adrift by Brexit.

For the first time, Northern Ireland elected more lawmakers who favor union with Ireland than want to remain part of the U.K.

The island of Ireland, which holds the U.K.’s only land border with the EU, has proved the most difficult issue in Brexit negotiatio­ns. Any customs checks or other obstacles along the currently invisible frontier between Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland would undermine both the local economy and Northern Ireland’s peace process.

The divorce deal struck between Johnson and the EU seeks to avoid a hard border by keeping Northern Ireland closely aligned to EU rules, which means new checks on goods moving between Northern Ireland and the rest of the U.K.

“Once you put a border between Northern Ireland and the rest of the United Kingdom, Northern Ireland’s going to be part of a united Ireland for economic purposes,” Jonathan Powell, who helped negotiate Northern Ireland’s 1998 peace accord, said. “That will increase the tendency toward a united Ireland for political reasons too.

In Scotland, Devine also thinks the days of the Union may be numbered.

“Anything can happen,” he said. “But I think it’s more likely than not that the U.K. will come to an end over the next 20 to 30 years.”

 ?? LINDSEY PARNABY/AP ?? Prime Minister Boris Johnson said his victory proved that leaving the EU is an “unarguable decision of the British people,” but that doesn’t include the Scottish and Irish population.
LINDSEY PARNABY/AP Prime Minister Boris Johnson said his victory proved that leaving the EU is an “unarguable decision of the British people,” but that doesn’t include the Scottish and Irish population.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States