Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Harper wades in on Scottish referendum says divided UK not in global interest

Murray Brewster, Canadian Press, 04 Sep, 2014 10:49 AM
  • Harper wades in on Scottish referendum says divided UK not in global interest
Breaking up the United Kingdom would not serve the greater global interest, nor the interest of ordinary people throughout the country, says Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
 
A question about the looming referendum on Scottish independence came up Wednesday as Harper took part in a question-and-answer session in front of a business audience in London.
 
Recent public opinion surveys in Britain show the Yes and No sides are almost evenly split with a little more than two weeks left before the Sept. 18 vote.
 
The gap between the two sides has been narrowing for the last month, with some 42 per cent of poll respondents saying they would vote in favour and 48 per cent standing opposed, according to a poll tracker in The Telegraph newspaper.
 
Harper rhymed off a host of global woes — from terrorism and trade to Ebola outbreak and climate change — and questioned how facing those challenges would be better in a fractured country.
 
It is a conundrum that Canadians faced for more than four decades with the separatist movement in Quebec, culminating a period of reflection that followed the close call of the 1995 referendum.
 
"What would the division of a country like Canada — or the division of a country like the United Kingdom — do to advance solutions to any of those issues?" Harper asked in response to a question by Fraser Nelson, the editor of weekly conservative magazine The Spectator.
 
"We like to think in Canada that our country is a strong and positive force in the world. And we think from the Canadian perspective that a strong and United Kingdom is an overwhelmingly positive force in the world."
 
Nelson joked that maybe the Canadian prime minister should stick around and take his message up north, to which Harper conceded the sentiment might not be well received in Scotland.
 
He underlined that ultimately it is "a decision for the Scots," one that should be respected, regardless of the outcome.
 
"This is a vote with immense consequences and those consequences should be thoroughly understood and digested. And the public, particularly the establishment should be more than willing to accept the judgment of that ordinary people, rightly or wrongly, deliver," he said.
 
"I don't think there's any way of softpedalling that. It's momentous and should be treated as such by all sides.
 
Canadians have trouble relating to the notion of a divided Britain because the English and Scottish cultures have been so thoroughly integrated in North America, Harper said.
 
But where they do understand the current dilemma is through the lens of the country's experience with Quebec.
 
"That debate has gone on and it went on intensely for very a long time," he said. "Ultimately that intense debate did not create — for a long, long time — any kind of clear winner. It created a society that was very divided."
 
Harper suggested the notion of Quebec independence has faded from the public discourse because a younger generation has asked itself the question how it relates to "things that actually matter in my life," such as the economy and jobs.

MORE National ARTICLES

Copper no longer only reason for green roofs around Parliament Hill

Copper no longer only reason for green roofs around Parliament Hill
OTTAWA - Oxidized copper is no longer the only cause of green rooftops around Parliament Hill.

Copper no longer only reason for green roofs around Parliament Hill

Harper airborne en route to London and Wales for NATO summit meeting

Harper airborne en route to London and Wales for NATO summit meeting
OTTAWA - Prime Minister Stephen Harper is airborne on his way to a NATO summit in Wales.

Harper airborne en route to London and Wales for NATO summit meeting

Widower, 60, goes back to university to study the cancer that killed his wife

Widower, 60, goes back to university to study the cancer that killed his wife
EDMONTON - Powel Crosley was lost after his wife died of a rare form of ovarian cancer.

Widower, 60, goes back to university to study the cancer that killed his wife

Applications up, approvals slow for Health Canada medical marijuana licences

Applications up, approvals slow for Health Canada medical marijuana licences
OTTAWA - The number of Canadian firms applying for lucrative medical marijuana licences has topped 1,000, as a so-called "greenrush" continues to overwhelm Health Canada.

Applications up, approvals slow for Health Canada medical marijuana licences

Fraud trial of ex-Quebec lieutenant-governor Lise Thibault to resume Oct. 2

Fraud trial of ex-Quebec lieutenant-governor Lise Thibault to resume Oct. 2
QUEBEC - The fraud trial of former Quebec lieutenant-governor Lise Thibault will resume Oct. 2.

Fraud trial of ex-Quebec lieutenant-governor Lise Thibault to resume Oct. 2

Judge allows man charged in beating death in Halifax to fire lawyer

Judge allows man charged in beating death in Halifax to fire lawyer
A man accused in the fatal beating of a gay rights activist in Halifax has been granted his request to fire his lawyer.

Judge allows man charged in beating death in Halifax to fire lawyer