The Guardian

UK must be rebuilt as a ‘solidarity union’ to stay together, says Drakeford

Severin Carrell Scotland editor

The UK could break apart unless it is rebuilt as a “solidarity union” where every citizen’s rights to public services and financial security are protected, Mark Drakeford, the first minister of Wales, has claimed.

Drakeford said the social and political bonds that tie the different parts of the UK together have come under “sustained assault” from 40 years of neoliberalism, a trend launched by Margaret Thatcher in 1979 and then reinforced after Brexit by the prime ministers Boris Johnson and Liz Truss.

“In order to persuade people in all parts of the United Kingdom that their futures lie together within a restructured United Kingdom, we have to recreate a solidarity union,” the Welsh Labour leader said in an interview with the Guardian.

That included rebuilding the safety net for those sick or out of work, with citizens having fundamental rights to environment, consumer and trade union protections, to human rights, and to affordable public services.

“We have to rebuild the safety net, so you know that your membership of the United Kingdom entitles you to that collective security that it represents,” Drakeford said, implying that without it, Scotland and Northern Ireland could choose to leave the UK.

“If you move from Scotland to Wales, you know that you will take those fundamental rights with you as part of your citizenship. Those have all been eroded progressively by Tory governments, particularly since 1979.

“The long years of neoliberalism have been a sustained assault on the notion that citizenship means rights, and the next Labour government needs to rebuild those rights, to do it explicitly and to say to people, this is what you get – that’s why it is worth belonging [to the UK].”

Drakeford is expected to expand on that stance at a conference in Edinburgh on 1 June, hosted by the former Labour prime minister Gordon Brown, which will explore Labour’s proposals for significant reform of the UK. Organised by Brown’s Our Scottish Future thinktank, speakers will include Andy Burnham, the mayor of Greater Manchester, and the Scottish Labour leader, Anas Sarwar.

Drakeford is one of Labour’s most prominent advocates of wholesale reform of the UK, arguing that is the most credible response to the demands for independence in Scotland and for Northern Ireland’s reunification with the Irish Republic.

Wales, where Labour has a cooperation agreement with the nationalist party Plaid Cymru, has seen a slow increase in support for independence, though that remains well below the near-50% support independence commands in Scotland. Demand for greater devolution to Wales is, however, entrenched.

Brown’s proposals, which have been endorsed by Keir Starmer, the UK Labour leader, include scrapping the House of Lords and replacing it with an elected second chamber to represent Britain’s nations and regions. Brown’s commission proposes greater political and financial powers for Scotland, Wales and the English regions, and legally binding structures to guarantee that the devolved parliaments in Holyrood, the Senedd and Stormont cannot have their powers overridden by Westminster.

Drakeford said since Brexit, anglocentric Conservatives in London had shown a “fundamental disrespect” for the Welsh and Scottish parliaments by imposing internal trade rules and by failing to recognise Wales and Scotland had autonomy over health policy during the Covid crisis.

Rishi Sunak, Truss’s successor as prime minister, was showing greater respect towards the UK’s devolved nations, he said, “even if it doesn’t translate into very practical effects”.

In his speech on Thursday, Drakeford is likely to challenge the Brown commission’s position that Westminster would still retain sovereignty over the legislatures in Belfast, Cardiff and Edinburgh.

Drakeford said the reality now is that “sovereignty exists in four different places”.

“What we should do is think of a United Kingdom in which sovereignty rests in Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland, and then we choose voluntarily to pool that sovereignty back for certain important key shared purposes,” he said.

That outlook helped Drakeford build a close working relationship with Nicola Sturgeon, Scotland’s former first minister, during their battles with the UK government over Brexit and during the Covid crisis. Drakeford is widely respected by senior Scottish National party politicians.

Drakeford said the crisis in England over privatised water companies “siphoning off ” profits while providing appalling services demonstrated the need for Labour to guarantee that essential services operated in the public interest.

Until Thatcher’s privatisation spree, voters had a stake in public utilities and services. “I am not arguing at all for an old fashioned 1945 nationalisation programme [but] since the public invests huge amounts of money in bus services, train services and water services, it is entitled to a better return on that investment,” he said.

“We have to find new ways that suit the 21st century to make sure that when decisions are made, the voice of the public is at the table to assert those interests – and that you get that by being members of the United Kingdom.

“So my solidarity union [consists] of building up a union based on those rights of citizenship.”

National | Politics

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2023-05-29T07:00:00.0000000Z

2023-05-29T07:00:00.0000000Z

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