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Nigel Farage and the political power of English grievance

By Mark Mansfield
Reform UK party leader Nigel Farage at the launch of Reform UK's plan to deport asylum seekers, at Oxford Airport in Oxfordshire. Image: Jacob King/PA Wire

Ailsa Henderson, Professor of Political Science, University of Edinburgh

Richard Wyn Jones, Professor of Politics, Cardiff University

One apparent constant in contemporary UK politics is Nigel Farage’s ability to mobilise a sense of grievance among those who regard themselves as English.

By doing so, Farage has, on successive occasions, managed to shift the terms of political debate so that the issues he cares about become the key issues of the day. His ability to drag the other parties onto his terrain is a classic success story of what political scientists call issue salience.

He identifies a problem, proclaims loudly that it will be our collective undoing and proposes a tantalisingly straightforward solution.

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Brexit

The Brexit narrative was, of course, that the loss of British wealth and influence, as well the crisis of post-austerity public services, could best be explained by the undue influence of and resources willed away to ā€œEuropeā€.

In England, this frustration correlated not with British but with English national identity. It alsoĀ correlated with discontent at the internal unionĀ of the UK and a sense that Britain’s political class were distributing resources and influence to other foreigners – in this case Scots.

A decade on from the referendum, English-identifying electors are now being successfully mobilised on the basis of a new bogeyman. Social and economic problems in the UK are still being attributed to the way influence and resources are being ceded to foreigners, but this time it’s not bureaucrats in Brussels who are to blame for these ills, or Scots – it’s the people arriving on small boats.

However, even if Farage’s ability to mobilise grievance to political advantage remains unmatched, ourĀ 15 years of research into English national identityĀ underlines that the proffered solutions to those grievances – the seemingly simple, quick fixes – simply don’t work. Exiting the EU has not stemmed English grievance. Rather, erstwhile Leavers are not happy at the outcome even while preferring not to have to talk about it. There is precious little reason to believe thatĀ five deportation flights a day to Kabul airportĀ will make them any less nostalgic for the past, less aggrieved about the present or more hopeful for the future.

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Unworkable

The proposed solutions to English grievances haven’t worked because those solutions were, from their inception, poorly thought-through and unworkable. A hard, ā€œclean breakā€ Brexit was never compatible with the existence of a land border on the island of Ireland. It was never going to be possible to construct a dedicated democratic political space for England through minor tweaks to the legislative procedures of the House of Commons, as was attempted in the introduction ofĀ English votes for English laws. Similarly, we’re not going save the NHS or universities by making the UK inhospitable to the skilled migrants it needs.

Moreover, the impact of adopting Farage’s framing of problems and associated bogeymen and simply promising to deal with them more effectively has proved disastrous, first, for the Conservative party, and now Labour.

Anyone doubting the impact of issue ownership on electoral success need look no further than Scotland, where years of high constitutional salience rewarded the respective ā€œownersā€ of the ā€œindyā€ and pro-union positions at the expense of electoral support for the political centre ground.

The dip in SNP and Conservative support in Scotland in the 2024 UK general election can be attributed in part to the weakened salience of constitutional politics. The issues we talk about matter.

None of the solutions offered to assuage English grievances have ever sought to address the real problems. Take, for example, theĀ now longstanding evidenceĀ thatĀ the English feel aggrievedĀ at the treatment of England following the devolution of power to Belfast, Cardiff and Edinburgh. Despite this, there has yet to be a serious discussion of post-devolution arrangements in a way that affords English voters the same opportunity to shape a government that seeks to be theirs as enjoyed by voters in the rest of the UK.

A protester holds an England flag which reads 'Get off my land', outside the High Court, central London,. Photo Ben Whitley/PA Wire

No doubt that reluctance to do so in part reflects the dual role of a UK government. It serves as both the government for the whole of the state and for England alone onĀ issues that are devolvedĀ to Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. The distorting impact of this distinctly odd arrangement is compounded by the steadfast refusal of the UK government to explicitly state when it is acting as the UK’s government or when it is responding to English concerns over English policy to make English lives better. Indeed, in the past two decades, no single English MP has referred in the Commons to the ā€œgovernment of Englandā€ as something that actually exists.

Invisible England

One of the stranger consequences of the UK’s asymmetrical governance arrangements is thatĀ England is rendered invisible, even though it is by far the largest part of the state. If UK governments of various hues are unwilling ever to name England and, indeed, behave as if the very existence of its English electorate is something to be ashamed of, it’s perhaps little wonder that English identifiers don’t feel they matter or have a voice. There is, in short, an English efficacy problem.

Rather than engage seriously with the reality of English sentiment and, yes, resentment, both Conservative and Labour governments have engaged in the serial ad hocery of constitutional change. They’ve played a never-ending game of constitutional Tetris in which plans for so-called English devolution are constantly made and remade. This process has, in turn, become a substitute for serious thinking about political voice and democratic influence within the state.

Least disruptive

Successive UK governments have preferred to give England the structures that are least disruptive to the central institutions of the state. Thus, England is carved into a series of Scotland-sized pieces underĀ regional devolution. What is never spoken of is the fact that this is preciselyĀ the least popular solution among England’s electorate. They instead doggedly favour an outcome that dare not speak its name – a political space for England as England.

Perhaps, then, the English are aggrieved and angry, not because foreigners have undermined their influence and stolen their resources but, in part at least, because they and their views are a perpetual afterthought in the UK’s governance arrangements. And maybe that’s another constant in UK politics – UK governments find it easier to address Farage’s successive foreigner problems than to look at their own role in stoking English grievance.

This article was first published on The Conversation
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13 comments

TheWoodForTheTrees

What do people here think Nigel Farage's end game is? I honestly don't know. He seems to move from one contentious issue to another, finding different bodies to blame for the country's sometimes fabricated ills. When will it be job done for him?

Reply
Adam

Civil War seems like the only outcome he wants.

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Mawkernewek

The promised regional devolution in the Blair years, may not have really represented devolution, instead it could have done more of siphoning powers upward from local government and only getting a few token powers actually devolved from central government. It would also mean that there is another intermediary in the way of local government, which would no longer be able to talk to central government, instead having to go through the regional tier. I don't know whether these reasons were why the idea of a regional assembly in the North East fell flat in a referendum in 2004.

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Basil

2004 was an early victim of Dominic Cummings. https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/nov/12/dominic-cummings-honed-strategy-2004-vote-north-east

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Frank

This man is dangerous.

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Jeff

He has been allowed to lie in the press with no push back or checks (e.g claiming recent court case was ECHR based, the judges didn't go near the ECHR). He is in the US now lying to the gop about someone who wanted to burn hundreds of people alive. And seen what his recently ejected MP that beat up a woman has been posting?

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Pete 90

Just tighten up on immigration a little and you take the fuel for his fire. It's pretty simple.

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Basil

What changes do you propose?

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Martin Palmer

Excellent article and analysis (as usual) except an English MP DID talk about the English Parliament:- ā€œI’m not convinced there is a case for an England-only parliament,ā€ he said in comments reported by the National. ā€œWe have an England-only parliament. It’s Westminster.ā€ - Boris Johnson, 29/6/2019. https://nation.cymru/news/boris-johnson-westminster-is-an-england-only-parliament/ https://www.thenational.scot/news/17739039.johnson-we-england-only-parliament-westminster/

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Nia James

Johnson's words are echoed 50 million times across England. Watch English politicians on TV when they use the terms "the country" or "the nation". They are interchangeable between England and Britain. Welsh, Scottish and Northern Irish politicians (not even the Unionists) never do this. Devolution is completely meaningless in the case of England and this is one of the reasons why English people look amazed when we argue for further devolution or, how dare we, talk about independence.

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Rob

I agree with a lot of this analysis. For me, the core of the problem is that England’s distinct national identity is never properly acknowledged. Both Labour and the Conservatives are guilty of rejecting or downplaying it, either by folding it into a vague Britishness or by treating it as toxic. Until England’s identity is recognised and given proper political expression, grievance politics will keep thriving.

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Tucker

And what identity is that?

Reply
Bram

The Mercians, the Kents, the West Saxons (Wessex), the East Saxons (Essex), the South Saxons (Sussex), the East Anglians and of course the Northumbrians.

Reply

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Excellent article and analysis (as usual) except an English MP DID talk about the English Parliament:- ā€œI’m not convinced there is a case for an England-only parliament,ā€ he said in comments reported by the National. ā€œWe have an England-...

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