Ed Miliband: The future of the UK is ‘too important’ to be decided only by Scotland

On Scottish independence, Ed Miliband argues that being Scottish and British is something to be proud of.

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Ed Miliband will today argue that the future of the United Kingdom is too important a subject to be discussed and decided only in Scotland.

ed milibandAttacking what he will dub a “narrow view of nationalism” which, he will argue has seen the SNP make a false case that Scots can be Scottish or British but not both, the Labour leader will use a speech at the Royal Festival Hall in London this morning to say:

“A narrow view of identity would mean concern for the young unemployed in Scotland does not reach Newcastle or that we in England would care less for the pensioner in Edinburgh.

“What a deeply pessimistic vision. It’s a mistake wherever you find it. Having to say: Scottish or British, Welsh or British, English or British. I don’t accept any of that. It’s always a false choice.”

The speech comes at a crunch moment for the union. Following the launch of the Yes to Independence campaign in Edinburgh last month and with the shape of the campaign to keep Scotland within the UK now becoming clearer, polling persistently shows support for Scotland going it alone far higher south of the border.

In January, in its report entitled “The Dog that Finally Barked”, the Institute for Public Policy Research found that:

35% of English voters felt Scottish devolution has made the way Britain is governed worse; a figure that has doubled since 2007.
• 45% of voters in England believe that Scotland gets ‘more than its fair share of public spending’, a figure which has almost doubled since 2000. 40% meanwhile agreed that England gets ‘less than its fair share’ of public money.
• 52% of English respondents believed that Scotland’s economy benefits more than England’s from being in the UK, while less than one in four said England and Scotland’s economies benefit equally.

 


See also:

Jubilee celebrations offered a “legacy of hope” for Scotland and Northern Ireland 6 Jun 2012

Lamont teams up with Treasury to reel in Salmond 1 Jun 2012

Momentum builds for Scotland’s ‘Yes to Independence’ campaign 28 May 2012


 

In admitting that the Labour Party has been “too reluctant to talk about England in recent years” Miliband will tell the gathering:

“For too long people have believed that to express English identity is to undermine the Union. At the same time we have rightly helped express Scottish identity within the Union. This does not make sense. You can be proudly Scottish and British. And you can be proudly English and British, as I am.

“Now more than ever, as we make the case for the United Kingdom throughout the United Kingdom, we must talk about England. There may be a temptation on the part of others to conjure a view of Englishness which does not represent our nation, a mirror image of the worst aspects of Scottish nationalism: hostile to outsiders; anti-Scottish; England somehow cut off from the rest of Britain, cut off from the outside world; fearful what is beyond our borders; our best days behind us. I don’t think like that. I love the nation that we have.”

The Labour leader is expected to continue by using his own personal experience to argue that 21st century Britain is one in which people can be proud to have more than one identity, explaining:

“I am the son of a Jewish refugee. A Leeds supporter, from North London. A baseball fan. I am proud to lead the Labour Party. I am proud to represent the people of Doncaster North. I am proud to be English. And I am proud to be British too.

To me, Britain is a country where it is always possible to have more than one identity. More than one place in mind when you talk of home.

Miliband’s comments follow the government’s move earlier this year to commission a study of the “West Lothian Question” whilst Wales’ Labour first minister Carwyn Jones has previously declared that “the UK’s future is a matter for all of us, and it shouldn’t be led by constant reactions to events in Scotland.”

 


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37 Responses to “Ed Miliband: The future of the UK is ‘too important’ to be decided only by Scotland”

  1. Lord Blagger

    Yep. England should also get a vote.

    Kick Scotland out, or allow them to stay.

    Would be rather funny if Scotland voted no to Scottish independence, and England voted to say bugger off.

  2. Jaikiranmaram

    Ed Miliband: The future of the UK is 'too important' to be decided only by Scotland http://t.co/LzPzmgk7 by @EdJacobs1985

  3. JoolsB

    As is the norm with our self-serving politicians, Miliband concluded with “there’s no appetite for an English Parliament” ignoring all the polls suggesting otherwise, instead advocating Labour’s policy to devolve locally, in other words, regionalisation and break up of England.

    Ever the opportunist, Miliband doesn’t give a stuff about England but at least by mentioning the ‘E’ word he thinks he’s covering his options just in case Scotland votes for independence which of course those of us south of the border know they will never do. Miliband is worrying about Labour losing their much needed Scottish clout to govern England if it should so he’s pretending he’s a politician ‘ready to stand up and talk about Englishness’ just in case. Of course when Scotland votes NO, he’ll promptly drop any mention of the subject.

  4. Durotrigan

    I absolutely agree Toque. This has Cruddas and his ‘Blue Labour’ concept written all over it. It is plainly a cynical exercise to unfurl the flag of St George, put up a bit of bunting and feign concern for England and the English. I’m afraid that they’ll have to come up with some appealing and viable policies if they wish to have any hope of winning back the English working class, rather than relying upon some contentless appeal to an English identity that they seem reluctant to acknowledge and accept.

  5. Peter Johnson

    Faultless analysis of Miliband’s cynical self-interest. He’s just a piece of Anglophobic racist filth.

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