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Eight - The SNP and ‘Five Continuing Unions’

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2020

David Torrance
Affiliation:
House of Commons Library
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Summary

In July 2013, the then SNP leader and First Minister Alex Salmond told workers at the Nigg Fabrication Yard that Scotland's ‘political and economic union’ with England had to be changed ‘as a matter of urgency’. He continued:

But this union is one of SIX UNIONS that govern our lives today in Scotland. My contention is that we can choose to keep five of these six unions – with some differences certainly but still basically intact. Indeed we can embrace them in that spirit of interdependence that Saltoun recognised all those years ago, while using the powers of independence to renew and improve them.

Salmond listed these ‘five unions’ as:

The European Union

The Defence Union through NATO The

Currency Union

The union of the crowns

And finally the Social Union between the peoples of these islands. (Salmond 2013)

As the journalist Alf Young joked, Salmond's willingness to preserve five out of these six unions meant that, by his own admission, he was ‘five-sixths a unionist’ (Scotsman, 27 July 2013). Just as nationalism was not the exclusive preserve of those who advocated full independence for Scotland, nor was unionism restricted to opponents of that independence. ‘Home Rule’ had always been, as Kidd observed, ‘an ambiguous formulation, capable of encompassing devolution, devo-max, federalism and independence’ (Kidd 2019: 224).

Rudolph and Thompson identified a range of options for territorially motivated groups, with only the most radical seeking ‘a new independent state’ (Rudolph and Thompson 1985: 224–5), while Brown Swan and McEwen identified two ‘ideal types’, ‘independence as separation’ and ‘embedded independence’, the latter being ‘a form of self-government which aspires to statehood, but sees that state embedded in transnational economic, political and institutional networks, including with the state from which independence is sought’ (Brown Swan and McEwen forthcoming).

Strikingly, as the SNP grew electorally, so too did its unionism. Just as supporters of the Union co-opted nationalist rhetoric in order to harness Scottish sentiment, the SNP borrowed from unionist discourse in order to win over those opposed to independence, embracing ‘the language of union, partly as a form of reassurance against accusations of separatism, but also to place their project in a broader context’ (Keating 2009: 99).

Type
Chapter
Information
Standing Up for Scotland
Nationalist Unionism and Scottish Party Politics, 1884–2014
, pp. 148 - 167
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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