English
'victims of discrimination'
The
former Conservative home secretary Michael Howard has claimed that
the English are becoming victims of discrimination in the wake of
how the government has implemented devolution.
Mr Howard, who warned of a "backlash" unless the
situation was corrected, was speaking after the Home Secretary
Jack Straw described the English as having a "propensity to
violence".
Mr Straw claim that the English had used violence to
"subjugate" their neighbours comes in a BBC documentary
to be broadcast tonight.
But Mr Howard said that the comments exposed "the
anti-English bias" at the heart of the government.
Mr Straw's comments, were he said, historically inaccurate and
politically "very revealing".
Devolution had created an "intolerable situation" where
Scottish MPs could vote on matters affecting English
"hospitals, schools and roads" while their English
counterparts could not vote on devolved matters, said Mr Howard
"The English are being discriminated against as a result of
the way that devolution was implemented," Mr Howard said.
"I think there is a danger of a backlash," he added,
saying that this would increase unless the government brought
forward new policies.
'Under the cosh'
Speaking in the BBC Radio 4 documentary, Brits, Mr Straw will say
that the English used their propensity to violence, "in
Europe and with our empire".
"I think what you have within the UK is three small nations
who've been over the centuries under the cosh of the
English," he tells the programme.
"Those small nations have inevitably sought expression by a
very explicit idea of nationhood."
In the same programme the Conservative leader William Hague noted
an increase in English nationalism post devolution.
He warned: "Once a part of a united country or kingdom that
is so predominant in size becomes nationalistic, then really the
whole thing is under threat."
|