DCSIMG
SWTS.news.image.e

Colin Kidd: Popular sovereignty not just for nationalists

Both unionism and nationalism are commitments deep-rooted in the Scottish past

It has become painfully obvious in the last week that David Cameron does not understand the Union which he is - supposedly - trying to defend. The Prime Minister seems to be unaware that Scotland possesses its own constitutional tradition which diverges significantly from the English notion of parliamentary sovereignty. Cameron studied PPE at Brasenose College, Oxford, under the tutelage of the fine constitutional scholar, Vernon Bogdanor, an expert on devolution, and was one of Bogdanor’s most able pupils; but it would not be too surprising if the Politics curriculum at Oxford in Cameron’s day omitted some of the nuances of the Anglo-Scottish relationship. Back in the mid-1980s the SNP seemed a spent force,and was reeling from internal divisions. Indeed, Alex Salmond’s membership of the SNP was briefly suspended in the early 1980s when he engaged in factionalism.

Cameron has an excellent grounding in the British constitution, or rather what we might with more precision term the Anglo-British constitution. For, when the two kingdoms of Scotland and England united in 1707 the new union of hitherto sovereign equals adopted the constitutional principles of the larger partner. Great Britain was founded in practice on 1688 principles, namely the doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty enshrined in the Glorious Revolution. The doctrine was later spelt out with greater clarity in the constitutional writings of A.V. Dicey. In other words, the British parliament is the supreme decision-making body in the realm, and nothing constrains it, not even the Union agreement itself.

In Scotland, however, a consensus has emergedwithin the intelligentsia and the political classes that since the Declaration of Arbroath in 1320 the indigenous constitutional tradition in Scotland – though largely submerged for a long period following the Union of 1707 until rediscovered by the eminent Scottish judge and legal historian Lord Cooperin the 1950s – is one of popular sovereignty. In other words, before 1707, sovereignty resided in the people – and it has never ceased to do so, notwithstanding the assumptions of English Diceyan orthodoxy. Moreover, the Union of 1707 was not simply regarded as an Act of the English Parliament, but was a Treaty between two sovereign states; so, many Scots contend, there was no compelling reason why the new state should be a mere continuation of England and of England’s constitution.

Behind the aggressive posturing of Cameron and Salmond this week was a clash of substance – of conflicting constitutional principles. When Salmond invoked the right of the Scottish people to decide on the date and the character of a referendum, he was not only challenging the authority of Westminster or invoking a general right to self-determination, he was also espousing a doctrine very particular to Scottish constitutional theory, the popular sovereignty principles of 1320. These principles also surfaced in 1988 in the Claim of Right for Scotland, the document which underpinned the workings of the Lib-Lab Constitutional Convention whose blueprint for devolution was largely adopted by the New Labour government in 1997. There are plenty of unionist politicians in Scotland - from Labour and the Liberals - who subscribe to the idea of Scottish popular sovereignty. Divergence from Westminster orthodoxy is not simply a nationalist shibboleth.

Indeed, Cameron is making a major category error if he thinks that his aggressive jockeying with Salmond will win the approval of unionists in Scotland. Scottish unionists obviously do not carry as much ‘nationalist’ baggage as their more ostensibly nationalist opponents in the SNP, but they do not like to see Scotland - or even Alex Salmond - bullied. Nationalism is a neglected - but crucial – ingredient in Scottish unionism. The irony of the current situation is that Cameron’s manoeuvring seems as likely to provoke Scottish unionist voters into venting their nationalism.

Salmond is, of course, only too happy to allow Cameron to blunder. Indeed, it would not suit Salmond’s interest were Cameron to see a reliable map of Scottish constitutional politics. For it would reveal a scene of compromise, a land where both Scottish unionism and Scottish nationalism turn out to be hybrids, each containing elements of the other.

It would certainly help Cameron understand Salmond if he saw him in his true colours. Salmond strikes Cameron - and most English observers – plausibly enough as an uncompromising nationalist ideologue, whereas he appears to the rank and file of his own party as something of a trimmer. The SNP has always contained faultlines between fundamentalists and gradualists, and Salmond has long seemed happier with an unfolding process of Scottish disengagement from the Union with England than with a sudden bolt into the blue unknown of full independence. The journey for Salmond seems as important as the destination.

Nor is the Bannockburn factor as clear cut as Salmond pretends. Salmond wants to hold his referendum in 2014 which is the seven hundredth anniversary of the battle of Bannockburn. This is because the Scottish War of Independence of the late thirteenth and early fourteenth century - the era of William Wallace and Robert Bruce - remains of vital significance in modern Scotland. However, while the SNP interprets this era in terms of the Braveheart factor, as an historic focus for nationalist rallying, it conveniently forgets that throughout the nineteenth and into the twentieth century Wallace and Bruce served as popular icons of Scottish unionism. The magnificent nineteenth-century Wallace Monument which overlooks Stirling is a visible commemoration not only of the Scottish War of Independence, but also of the Union of 1707. Nineteenth-century North Britons realised that it was Bruce’s defeat of Edward II’s imperialist project at Bannockburn in 1314 which had thwarted the plans of the Plantagenet dynasty for a pan-British empire. Indeed, bullying English imperialism – not Scottish nationalism, as Cameron seems to misunderstand – is the true opposite of Scottish unionism. Thus, nineteenth-century Scottish unionists were able to celebrate Wallace and Bruce as for having preserved medieval Scotland’s independence, which had later enabled Scotland to join England in a genuine partnership of equals secured by a Treaty of Union.

There is plenty of scope for compromise and adjustment in the relationship between the Scottish nation and the British state, but only if the politicians realise – or, in the case of Salmond, acknowledge – that both unionism and nationalism are historic commitments deep-rooted in the Scottish past; that nationalism is no more authentic or indigenous than unionism (whose roots stretch back to the sixteenth century, before even the Union of the Crowns); that most Scots are susceptible to both unionist and nationalist sentiments; and that – as Cameron might soon learn – unionism can very swiftly mutate into nationalism when English politicians are seen to behave towards Scotland in an imperial manner.

• Colin Kidd is Professor of Intellectual History and the History of Political Thought at Queen’s University, Belfast, and a member of the History & Policy Network: www.historyandpolicy.org


Comments

There are 8 comments to this article

Page 1 of 1


8

footdee

Monday, January 23, 2012 at 10:40 AM

Me thinks this is for unionists with a guilty conscience



7

Alexander D Lindsay

Saturday, January 21, 2012 at 11:45 PM

Kidd was professor of Scottish history at Glasgow prior to his present appointment. In fact, it is perfectly predictable that he should end up in Belfast because his Unionism and his obsession with his own personal Britishness completely dominate everything he has ever written. Which is not to say that he is an inadequate historian, of course, just a slightly more cyclopean one than many.



6

oorwulliesma

Saturday, January 21, 2012 at 07:53 PM

Very good article. However one views the Union of 1707 (and, by modern standards, it can be classed as nothing if not completely undemocratic), Scotland (as North Britain) indulged in imperialism every bit as much as England did. Taking all talk of past glories and great battles out of the equation is very difficult, if only because Scotland, as a nation, is, even today, defined by those ancient battles and their results. Even a modern Nationalist may concede that, for a time, Scotland did reasonably well out of the Union, albeit in a way that was, at best, morally-dubious and, at worst, downright immoral - slavery and the sugar plantations being the epitome of this immorality. The problem arises today that the SNP, in particular, and Nationalists, in general, find the Union very uncomfortable and view Scotland's future as being outwith the present set-up. Scotland's economy, they would argue, diverges from England's now to such an extent that they are, to all intents and purposes, separate, with only the supporting structure of taxation, welfare, benefits, etc. lacking. Not only does Mr Cameron not really understand Scotland and the Scots, or devolution as it is practiced by the Scots, many Unionists have no conception of the repugnance the vast majority of Nationalists feel for the Union: it is not simply a case of 'things are no longer as good' so we'll get out'; it is the case that they abhor many of the aspects of British policy, and feel no sympathy with them because, in the main, those policies are repugnant to any self-respecting, small, 21st century nation. The interference in the affairs of other sovereign states, the fact that weapons of mass destruction exist on Scottish soil, that nuclear submarines inhabit Scottish waters, that Scotland can be hindered vis-a-vis her own energy policy because Westminster deems it inappropriate...the list is very long. If the Unionists insist in keeping the Union against all the evidence that it is bad for Scotland, then let them make their case, but some day, and some day soon, they are going to have to choose between Scotland and Britain. One can run with the hounds and with the hares for a time, but not forever. It causes a peculiarly Scottish ailment recognised by Burns, Scott, Stevenson, et al, and Stevenson wrote on it with great insight and understanding of his native land, and to great effect, in Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.



5

HIDDEN 1

Saturday, January 21, 2012 at 02:54 PM

I am well aware of the position of 1320 and the Declaration of Arbroath,but I am not satisfied with what I find on the ground.It is correct to say Cameron does not understand the Scottish dimension.Neither does Salmond.The 1320 Declaration,and a DRAGON matter.Black,Blue White and Red Dragon;thus the Union Flag 4U!



4

Dennis Smith

Saturday, January 21, 2012 at 12:25 PM

The first few paragraphs are spot on but the argument goes astray towards the end. Scottish unionist nationalism of the19th and early 20th centuries was integrally tied up with British imperialism, with an ideology of progress and and some distinctly undemocratic assumptions.Whatever view you take of the European Union, that game has ended and Scottish politics has moved into a new era.



3

samcoldstream

Saturday, January 21, 2012 at 11:44 AM

Unfortunately, Thatcher destroyed "a genuine partnership of equals secured by the Treaty [Act] of Union."



2

maisiedotts

Saturday, January 21, 2012 at 11:43 AM

The 2014 date is the 80th anniversary of the founding of the SNP, it has nothing to do with some romantic notion of a battle long ago,, though unionists would like to paint that picture. Scotland is a vibrant modern nation. Unionism is abhorrent to any sane person when one side is 10 times the size and seeks to subvert the will of the people of the smaller nation, a netion whose interests are deeply diverged from the union's "mother state".



1

Gallowglass

Saturday, January 21, 2012 at 04:27 AM

Thus, by working with the Tories to impliment an English theory of Westminster absolute auhtority they are anti-Scottish for subverting our democracy. End London Rule.



Page 1 of 1


Logged in as:


Please adhere to our Community guidelines

Your view

Please to be able to comment on this story.

Find It

"Business owner? - Claim your business and Advertise with us"

In association with qype logo

Looking for...

Featured advertisers

Jobs

Search for a job

Motors

Search for a car

Property

Search for a house

Weather for Edinburgh

Thursday 23 February 2012

5 day forecast

Today

Light rain

Light rain

Temperature: 7 C to 14 C

Wind Speed: 26 mph

Wind direction: South west

Tomorrow

Sunny spells

Sunny spells

Temperature: 5 C to 10 C

Wind Speed: 29 mph

Wind direction: West

Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.