Alphen, Netherlands. 16
October. When crossing the Rubicon to
begin the civil war that led to the destruction of the Roman Republic Julius
Caesar said, “the die is cast”. Roman
law had it that any Roman army that crossed the small river near Bologna en
route to Rome without the permission of the Senate was an act of treachery and
must be seen as irreversible.
Yesterday’s ‘historic’
agreement between British Prime Minister David Cameron and Scottish First Minister
Alec Salmond to hold a “legally-binding” referendum on Scotland’s possible
independence from the United Kingdom cast the die. Whatever happens the United Kingdom will
never be the same again, not least because of changes to the electoral law in
the agreement that extends the suffrage without any say by Parliament. Some would say that is illegal.
Certainly, a precedent
has been established whereby a minority is given superior status over the rest
of the UK, although as an Englishman I have long understood that we are second
class citizens. Indeed, the most
fundamental change to my country for three hundred years could take place and I
am to be denied a voice…again.
And yet for all that I
support the Scots right to decide and will honour and respect their decision. As an avowed democrat I am bound to the logic
of my own argument. What angers me most
(and yes I am angry) is that Prime Minister Cameron seems to think it perfectly
OK for the Scots to have a referendum that could lead to the dismemberment of
my country and yet denies me a referendum on that other Rubicon – the place of
the UK in an integrated Europe and the effective end of my state. The two are clearly linked. It is breath-taking hypocrisy.
Cameron is taking one
hell of a political risk. Some would say
that for once he is leading but any glance at the agreement one can again see
that this most lightweight of prime ministers has again been comprehensively out-manoeuvred.
Others say that the Scots will never vote for independence as all the
mainstream political parties will now join the unionist campaign. First, that is to pay no respect to the great
Scottish people. Second, there is a long
way to go before the end of 2014 when the vote is likely to take place. Third, expect a lot of other states to start
interfering that would love to see London humiliated, not least those on the
near-Continent who would like to see the crushing impact this will undoubtedly have
on the people of England, Wales and Northern Ireland translated into submission
to the future diktat of Brussels DC.
The greatest impact
will be on England which represents over 90% of the population of the United
Kingdom and where the sense of injustice and a feeling that politicians NEVER
listen to their concerns about anything that really matters is growing
palpably. Of course, the London political
elite say that the English can vote for Parliament once every five years.
Sadly, both government and Parliament are debased currency in England these
days and widely seen by the population to have sold the English out left, right
and Brussels.
If Scotland votes for
independence it must mean independence.
Salmond says that the Bank of England will remain the lender of last
resort post-independence and that Scotland would retain the pound. As an Englishman with Scottish blood in his
veins I utterly reject that because what Salmond is in effect saying is that he
wants to destroy the UK and get the English to pay for it. Cameron is so weak that he will likely agree
to such nonsense but the simple fact is that if Scotland votes to go then it
must pay its own way and the enormous subsidies paid to the Scots by taxpayers in
the rest of the UK must end.
Whatever happens Scotland
will have to live with an angry, dominant, let-down, resentful and utterly
fed-up England and Edinburgh must never forget that even if London too often
does. If Scotland does vote to destroy
the United Kingdom (for that is what is implicit in this vote) then I will wish
the Scottish people well even if I passionately believe the UK is stronger with
Scotland within it and that Scotland does very well out of the UK.
The die has indeed been
cast. How on Earth have we come to this?
Julian Lindley-French
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