TY - JOUR
T1 - England’s Dissatisfactions and the Conservative Dilemma
AU - Jeffery, Charlie
AU - Henderson, Ailsa
AU - Scully, Roger
AU - Wyn Jones, Richard
N1 - Funding information:
The author disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: Economic and Social Research Council.
Footnote:
1The Future of England Survey (FoES) was funded under the Future of the UK and Scotland programme of the Economic and Social Research Council. Fieldwork was conducted by YouGov between 11 and 22 April 2014. The online survey included a sample of 3705 adults (aged 18+ years) in England. For the first time, we added samples of 1014 Scottish and 1027 Welsh respondents to allow us to identify whether views in England were similar to those held by Scottish and Welsh residents.
Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2016.
PY - 2016/8
Y1 - 2016/8
N2 - In the immediate aftermath of the Scottish independence referendum, Prime Minister David Cameron raised the ‘English Question’ by advocating English Votes for English Laws in the House of Commons. This article explains why. It uses findings from the 2014 Future of England Survey of attitudes to constitutional issues in England. It reveals a group of interlinked concerns in England: about the advantages Scotland is perceived to have in the UK Union, about the absence of institutional recognition of England in the UK political system, and about the European Union and immigration. It shows that these concerns are distinctively English, held in a broadly uniform way across England and held most strongly by people in England who identify themselves as English, and not British. These concerns, and their linkage to and by English identity, differentiate the supporters of different political parties. They are held least strongly by Labour and Liberal Democrat supporters, and more strongly by Conservative and, especially, UKIP supporters. Cameron’s move on the English Question – and subsequent profiling of English issues in the 2015 UK general election – recognised a territorially distinctive electoral battleground in England on which the Conservatives are now competing with UKIP to articulate a new English nationalism, perhaps at the expense of the Conservative Party’s unionist heritage.
AB - In the immediate aftermath of the Scottish independence referendum, Prime Minister David Cameron raised the ‘English Question’ by advocating English Votes for English Laws in the House of Commons. This article explains why. It uses findings from the 2014 Future of England Survey of attitudes to constitutional issues in England. It reveals a group of interlinked concerns in England: about the advantages Scotland is perceived to have in the UK Union, about the absence of institutional recognition of England in the UK political system, and about the European Union and immigration. It shows that these concerns are distinctively English, held in a broadly uniform way across England and held most strongly by people in England who identify themselves as English, and not British. These concerns, and their linkage to and by English identity, differentiate the supporters of different political parties. They are held least strongly by Labour and Liberal Democrat supporters, and more strongly by Conservative and, especially, UKIP supporters. Cameron’s move on the English Question – and subsequent profiling of English issues in the 2015 UK general election – recognised a territorially distinctive electoral battleground in England on which the Conservatives are now competing with UKIP to articulate a new English nationalism, perhaps at the expense of the Conservative Party’s unionist heritage.
KW - Conservative Party
KW - devolution
KW - England
KW - identity
KW - UK Independence Party (UKIP)
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84979299508&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/1478929916649617
DO - 10.1177/1478929916649617
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:84979299508
SN - 1478-9299
VL - 14
SP - 335
EP - 348
JO - Political Studies Review
JF - Political Studies Review
IS - 3
ER -