DISUNITED
KINGDOM
Scotland’s EU charm offensive
SNP’s opponents warn relationship building in Brussels
shouldn’t be used to promote independence.
Scotland has been boosting its engagement with the EU
in recent months |
BY LILI
BAYER
April 20,
2021 4:00 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/scotland-eu-lobbying-push/
Scottish
politicians aren’t just engaged in a frantic contest for votes back home —
they’re also waging a long-term battle to win friends in Brussels.
Edinburgh’s
quest to gain influence in the EU receives much less attention than the
campaign for next month’s Scottish parliament election. But politicians across
party lines see those efforts as vital as the country adjusts to Brexit and
faces the question once again of whether to seek independence.
Scottish
politicians and officials are behind two main drives to lobby their EU
counterparts. One, backed by the Scottish government, seeks to reassure the EU that
Scotland — which voted against Brexit — wants to maintain close and friendly
ties to the bloc.
Although
the Scottish government is run by the pro-independence Scottish National Party
(SNP), that campaign — backed by slick videos that pop up in the social media
feeds of members of the Brussels bubble — does not explicitly address
Scotland’s future status.
However, at
the same time, SNP politicians are engaged in an effort dubbed “Project No
Surprises” that seeks to reassure European policymakers that an independent
Scotland would be a reliable and familiar partner, committed to EU and NATO
membership.
The two
campaigns have raised questions about where the line should be drawn between
promoting good relations with the EU and setting the stage for an independent
Scotland’s accession to the bloc.
The SNP’s
opponents, who want Scotland to remain part of the U.K., warn there is a risk
that the boundaries between the two campaigns become blurred — with both being
seen as part of an overall effort to win over EU politicians to the prospect of
Scottish independence.
Brussels
BFFs
Over the
past months, the Scottish government — which already runs international offices
in cities such as Paris, Berlin and Beijing — has been boosting its EU
engagement through the European Friends of Scotland Group.
Founded in
2020 and run with support from the Scottish government’s Brussels office, the
informal grouping brings together 35 MEPs who take a close interest in Europe’s
relationship with Scotland.
The diverse
club’s members range from socialist and liberal MEPs to the exiled Catalan
pro-independence politician, Carles Puigdemont, and the German center-right
chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee, David McAllister, the son of a Scottish
father and German mother.
The group’s
aims include “promoting stronger economic, social and cultural relations
between the EU and Scotland” — as well as “encouraging cooperation and
understanding in key areas” and “helping to maintain links between elected
Members of the Scottish Parliament (MSPs) and MEPs,” according to the Scottish
government’s formal description.
And while
the friendship group is officially neutral on the question of Scotland’s
status, it has become a vehicle for Scottish officials to retain a close
dialogue with EU politicians.
In March,
Scottish Europe Minister Jenny Gilruth and SNP President Michael Russell, who
serves as Cabinet secretary for the constitution, Europe and external affairs,
attended a virtual roundtable with some of the group’s members.
And last
summer, the friendship group co-hosted a virtual event with Scotland House
Brussels — an EU hub for the Scottish government and other authorities — where
Russell discussed the post-pandemic recovery with senior German Social Democrat
MEP Udo Bullmann.
“The
Scottish Government engages regularly with the EU Institutions, Member States
and other organisations and stakeholders based in Brussels to promote
Scotland’s interests and to share and exchange knowledge, best practice and
expertise across a range of policy areas,” a Scottish government spokesperson
said via email.
For some
members of the Friends of Scotland group, however, the club’s role is in part
to ease the process of a return to the EU, whether Scotland rejoins separately
or as part of the U.K.
Swedish MEP
Erik Bergkvist, a member of the friendship group, said it aims to find “better
ways to cooperate” between Scotland and the EU and “also build the necessary
bridges so it will be easy for [the] U.K. one day to come back to the European
Union.”
“If it
happens [that] different parts of the U.K. come in different time periods,
that’s something they have to figure out,” said Bergkvist, a social democrat.
German
Green MEP Terry Reintke, another group member, said: “We want to have close
relationships — no matter whether Scotland is going to be independent, or
whether there’s going to be a referendum, or as part of the U.K.”
Marina
Kaljurand, a former Estonian foreign minister who now serves as an MEP and was
on the March videoconference, said that there was a “pretty general
conversation” touching upon economic ties and student exchanges.
“I think
the most important thing was just to say that … we’re here to support you,”
said Kaljurand, who represents Estonia’s Social Democratic Party. “So of course
it’s up to Scottish people to decide upon their future. But we are here and
happy to welcome them back whenever it’s possible.”
The
Scottish government is not only focusing on relationships with elected
politicians. In 2019-2020, it spent over £700,000 on an advertising campaign to
promote the Scottish brand abroad.
The
campaign “aims to relay the positive contribution that Scotland intends to
continue making in Europe via a fair and green recovery from the COVID-19
pandemic, through investment, innovation and international cooperation, as well
as striving for a fairer, more inclusive society and economy,” the Scottish
government spokesperson said.
It includes
rhetoric emphasizing Scotland’s continued close relationship with Europe.
“Europe.
We’re leaving you, they say. But we won’t be leaving what we have together,”
says one YouTube ad, set to wistful music. “We’ve come too far and we’re far
too fond of you,” says the ad, which has over 163,000 views on YouTube.
Meanwhile,
SNP politicians are campaigning to convince their European counterparts that an
independent Scotland would be a reliable ally, seeking to learn lessons from
the 2014 referendum campaign.
“In 2014
and in the run-up to 2014, I don’t think we did enough to reach out, to
persuade, to contextualize what was going on within Scotland,” said Alyn Smith,
the Scottish National Party’s foreign affairs spokesperson and a member of the
U.K. parliament.
Smith — who
previously spent over 15 years in Brussels as an SNP MEP — has recently teamed
up with a colleague to launch “Project No Surprises.”
“Of course,
it is primarily an internal Scottish debate,” Smith said of the discussion
around independence. “But given that the international aspects of independence
are so important to the case for independence — and we want to be independent
in order to apply for EU membership, in order to apply for NATO membership
— we are … firmly of the view that we
need to do ‘Project No Surprises.'”
Smith said
he plans to spend more time explaining his views in Brussels, once health
conditions allow. “We must make sure that our visibility is there as Scotland,
not as a part of the U.K.,” he said.
‘Different
agenda’
While
Scottish politicians across parties agree that the country should maintain a
good relationship with Brussels, there are questions about how the government’s
advocacy efforts could be interpreted.
“I am
supportive of the Scottish government working to ensure that Scottish interests
are still important within Europe, and building strong relationships,” said
Scottish Labour politician Claire Baker.
But Baker —
who has been serving as deputy convener of the Scottish parliament committee
covering European affairs — said advocacy efforts should not be used for party
goals.
“I think
there is a risk, because we recognize the SNP have a different agenda,” she
said.
“If it’s
about representing Scotland’s best interest and about the Scottish parliament
having a voice within Europe, then I’m supportive of that,” Baker added, noting
that “I do think that more could actually be achieved in Scotland if they were
to work with the U.K. government in trying to achieve this.”
The
Scottish government spokesperson said its work in Brussels “is driven by the
ambitions and plans of Scottish Ministers” but it “also engages constructively
with the U.K. government and the other devolved governments in Brussels across
a range of areas of shared interests.”
Scottish
Liberal Democrats leader Willie Rennie said his party supports “keeping close
and warm connections with our friends and neighbors in Europe.”
But, he
said, “the Scottish government should be careful not to move from working
together in partnership, into a more narrow political campaign, which has just
got their self-interest at heart.”
Stephen
Gethins, a former SNP MP who is now a professor at the University of St
Andrews, noted previous Scottish governments that opposed independence had also
engaged with Brussels.
“The actual
engagement and advocacy within the European institutions is not a new thing,”
said Gethins, the author of a book on Scotland’s place in the world.
He said
engaging with EU policymakers “makes a lot of sense from a Scottish
perspective” and also “fits in with the political objectives of the
government.”
But the
Scottish government’s critics caution that EU institutions are unlikely to
engage in talks about an independent Scotland unless that status has been
clearly and legally established.
“I think
the Scottish government are doing all they can to build the world they want to
live in,” said former MEP Ian Duncan, a Conservative who now serves as a deputy
speaker in the House of Lords. “Their challenges will be that the EU will be
less inclined to speak with them comfortably until such time as clarification is
given on the status of the Scottish government.”
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