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FEATURES
One nation under Her Majesty
Ferdinand Mount says that
the new citizenship ceremony signals the death of multiculturalism,
and should be welcomed by the Tories 
As of last Thursday, multiculturalism was
officially declared dead in this country. The funeral took place
in Brent Town Hall in the presence of the Prince of Wales and the
Home Secretary and was accompanied by the National Anthem and the
theme music from Four Weddings and a Funeral. Although the event
was not billed in these terms, these were symbolic obsequies as
emphatic in their way as the pouring of the ashes of English cricket
into that fragile urn in 1882.
English cricket smouldered on, of course, occasionally flaring into
a brief revival, but its old unquestioned dominance was gone for
good. In the same way, we shall still hear people mouthing the old
platitudes about Britain being a multicultural country, but that
dogma will no longer be driving the debate.
Instead of ‘celebrating diversity’, the ceremony to welcome new
British citizens celebrates in the most flagrant way imaginable
the common culture of these islands. The new Briton takes an oath:
‘I swear by Almighty God (or do solemnly and truly declare and affirm)
that, on becoming a British citizen, I will be faithful and bear
true allegiance to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth the Second, Her Heirs
and Successors according to law.’ The oath in itself is not new
but was previously sworn privately in front of a solicitor. Now
it is to be taken at a public ceremony as in the US, Canada and
Australia. To it is now added the pledge: ‘I will give my loyalty
to the UK and respect its rights and freedoms. I will uphold its
democratic values. I will observe its laws faithfully and fulfil
my duties and obligations as a British citizen.’
Nothing could be plainer or more unabashed in its ambition to cement
national unity by declaring the existence of a single common culture,
within which other minority cultures may happily nest and flourish
but which is itself not to be sidelined or suppressed. Held in the
heart of London’s most polyglot borough — where as it happens Zadie
Smith was brought up and where she sets White Teeth, her gorgeous
comedy of interracial confusions — the ceremony asserts an overarching
uniformity which shelters us all, whether we like it or not. Beneath
that particular sky British citizens may follow their preferred
faiths, speak their own languages, indulge their own tribal quirks,
but that is the sky they live under.
Naturally you would not expect those who are in the multicultural
business to accept the significance of the ceremony. Habib Rahman,
chief executive of the Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants,
grumbled that ‘going to a ceremony to wave a flag and take an oath
to the Queen seems meaningless’. Keith Best, head of the Immigration
Advisory Service and a former Tory MP, denounced it as ‘an attempt
to grab the headlines more than anything else’ — a criticism repeated
by David Davis, who has made a querulous and unconvincing start
as shadow Home Secretary. The BBC news programmes did report the
pledge to uphold our democratic values, but most of them could not
quite bring themselves to mention the oath of allegiance to the
Queen. The language was too raw, too stirring and, for many in the
media, too repugnant to their own mindset.
Yet oaths of this sort are routinely sworn by high public officials,
judges and privy councillors and MPs, and it is in this language
that the Queen extends her Commission to her officers. Far from
being a humiliating subjection for incoming citizens, the taking
of such an oath admits them on equal terms to a community in the
true sense of that much abused word.
What makes it so piquant is that this ceremony has been devised
by a Labour Home Secretary, who was once upon a time the white hope
of the Left. It was David Blunkett who in September 2002 set up
the advisory group on Life in the United Kingdom under his old politics
professor from Sheffield, Sir Bernard Crick. Other stuff is to follow
— language classes, booklets explaining the rights and duties of
citizens — but the Lion and the Unicorn come first.
To see how startling this is, you have to look back to the furore
which greeted Keith Joseph back in the 1980s when he suggested that
the school curriculum should include lessons about our national
heritage. The intelligentsia jumped to denounce any such initiative
as a quasi-fascist conspiracy to impose outmoded jingoistic values
and repress the cultures of ethnic minorities. It was, per contra,
the duty of all public institutions in this country not only to
respect but also to foster those minority cultures and to be extremely
wary of indulging in anything which sounded too overtly British.
Local authorities, state schools, libraries, the Arts Council, parts
of the BBC felt themselves under unremitting pressure.
The Church of England and the monarchy — being the two most prominent
aspects of the traditional culture — were especially marshy areas.
All over Britain, headteachers, head librarians and council leaders
fretted over whether it was correct to display Christmas trees,
union flags or photographs of the Queen on their premises. In vain
mullahs and rabbis would explain that they took no offence at the
display of such religious and national emblems. On the contrary,
they often expressed polite surprise that the national Church should
be so hesitant about proclaiming itself.
But there was more behind the multicultural movement than a desire
not to give offence. If it had been only an admirable impulse to
show courtesy to new arrivals, there would never have been such
a fierce urgency about it.
Multiculturalism had and has other motives of a more negative kind.
It is the loathing that dare not speak its name. For it is not the
desire to respect minority cultures that has fuelled such a crusade
to reform our traditional practices. It is the unuttered desire
to blot out and where possible erase all visible traces of the majority
culture. The multiculturalist’s interest in Chanukkah or Diwali
seldom goes beyond the mild and patronising curiosity of the tourist;
it is the hatred of Christmas that stirs his juices.
Britishness in all its embarrassing traditional manifestations is
the enemy — or rather Englishness, for you do not on the whole catch
the Scots or the Welsh or the Irish wishing to shrug off their native
cultures. If they find their ancestral glens and valleys too narrow,
they can always go into exile — not such a bitter alternative when
they need only hop over Hadrian’s Wall or Offa’s Dyke.
The English intelligentsia’s dislike of its own shadow is unusual.
You do not often encounter the same revulsion in Paris or Berlin
or Rome. But it is not a novelty. Bernard Crick’s life of George
Orwell has been criticised for its interpretation of Orwell’s political
stances. But on Orwell’s patriotism and hatred of anti-patriotic
intellectuals Crick is very sound. In The Lion and the Unicorn,
Orwell argues that ‘England is perhaps the only great country whose
intellectuals are ashamed of their own nationality’. All through
the critical years of the war, many left-wingers were chipping away
at English morale, trying, he says, to spread an outlook that was
sometimes squashily pacifist, sometimes violently pro-Russian, but
always anti-British.
These feelings were confined to the intelligentsia. In the nation
as a whole, ‘patriotism takes different forms in different classes,
but it runs like a connecting thread through nearly all of them’.
Rightly Crick emphasises Orwell’s eagerness to demonstrate the radical
roots of English patriotism, the tradition of William Cobbett and
Michael Foot. For long-established cultures are twined and complex.
Blake’s radical hymn was adopted by the Women’s Institute and by
dozens of public schools. An old negro spiritual has become the
anthem of Barbour-clad Englishmen at Twickenham. Cricket and warm
beer were just as much the heritage of Merrie England socialists
as of Tory squires. England, in Orwell’s most famous phrase, was
a family but with the wrong members in control.
Orwell claimed that the Bloomsbury highbrow with his mechanical
snigger at the expense of anything typically English was as out
of date as the cavalry colonel. It was time for patriotism and intelligence
to come together again.
This hope was premature. Half a century later patriotism and the
intelligentsia seemed to have moved further apart. As the spirit
went out of socialism in the ordinary sense, radical discontent
groped for another means of expressing itself. If it was no longer
possible to purify the nation by abolishing capitalism and seizing
the commanding heights of the economy, then at least one could purify
the atmosphere. The national culture could be bleached and leached,
leaving a more or less blank space in which every citizen was able
to express his or her own preferences. The nation would become one
giant cultural mall, in which we would all wander, free to choose
from a variety of equally valuable lifestyles, to take back and
exchange purchases which had not given satisfaction, or simply to
windowshop.
But why has the heyday of multiculturalism been so short? You would
expect to see the Left drift even further away from its national
moorings. This would only be a logical extension of its scheme of
historical development. The Communist Manifesto is the first great
tract on globalisation. Marx is far less interested in what communism
would be like than in how the bourgeoisie destroys all the old feudal,
religious and traditional bonds. Under the relentless pressure of
capitalism national prejudices become unsustainable. Local literatures
dissolve into a world literature. Nationalism is but a fleeting
phase, already past its peak. According to Eric Hobsbawm in 1990,
nations and nationalism had become ‘historically less important’.
They were in the process of retreating before ‘the new supranational
restructuring of the globe’.
New Labour is conspicuously contemptuous of Queen and Country, much
more so than the Labour party of Attlee and Bevin which took such
things for granted, having other fish to fry. Today’s Labour MPs
may be less left-wing on most things, but they are much more likely
to be republicans. And the government is still appeasing this tendency
by such pointless gestures as taking the Crown out of Crown Prosecution
Service. Yet I have not heard a peep of protest out of Labour MPs
about the new citizenship ceremony. Even the Guardian, which has
pushed hard for a British republic, merely commented ‘Hmm’ on the
pledge of allegiance to the Queen and, somewhat plaintively, reminded
new citizens that they were now free to campaign for a republic
if they so wished.
So why the volte-face? There are, I think, two reasons for the change
of heart. First, globalisation can be a frightening thing, for much
the reasons that Marx gave. It sweeps through the remotest corners
of the earth with unpredictable rapidity and force, making arguments
for the long-term benefits of free trade seem cold and theoretical.
Economists point out that in many respects the world is less globalised
than before 1914. We are still recovering from nearly a century
of war, protectionism and government controls. Yet that is not how
it feels to those whose jobs are suddenly outsourced to India or
China. If there is no effective protection against such gales of
creative destruction, national culture can at least provide a few
comfort blankets until the weather improves.
At the same time, even left-wing intellectuals have become dimly
conscious that immigration in all its forms — economic, illegal,
asylum-seeking — has had unnerving reverberations. To put it bluntly,
working-class whites in run-down towns like Burnley have come to
feel that everything is done for incomers who constitute, at most,
9 per cent of the population. The reappearance of the BNP is on
a tiny scale compared with the massive inroads made by Le Pen or
the heirs of Pim Fortuyn. Much more widespread is a sour disenchantment
or alienation which so far expresses itself in political terms only
by a refusal to vote at all. And we have seen too the long-term
effects of a failure to entrench a single overarching national culture,
in Palestine and Northern Ireland to name but two of the worst:
intercommunal conflict, rule by ruthless vigilantes, peace walls.
David Goodhart in his essay in last month’s Prospect recognises
that, contrary to the long-standing wishful thinking of the liberal
Left, there may be limits to diversity. The squawks of protest he
has provoked suggest that he has hit a nerve. But I am unconvinced
by his attempt to make some connection between racial homogeneity
and willingness to support generous levels of welfare. I also think
he is too defeatist.
‘Relative to the other big European nations,’ Goodhart claims, ‘the
British sense of national culture and solidarity has been rather
weak’ — undermined, he thinks, by class, empire and the four different
nations within the United Kingdom among other things. Yet other
European nations have their dividing factors too. In any case, the
evidence of our reactions to great national events — wars, jubilees
and world cups — would surely indicate that underlying feelings
of solidarity are at least as vigorous here as anywhere else.
We do not need to attempt the unrewarding task of actually defining
Britishness (Sense of humour? Reverence for Parliament? Love of
fish and chips? — I can think of exceptions to all these). Enough
to say that an unmistakable, even pungent quality of Britishness
exists and can be recognised a hundred yards off by natives and
foreigners alike.
Blunkett is simply setting out to restore public credit to our national
culture in a way that is taken for granted in every other nation.
And the Tories would be wise to give him credit for it. I agree
that national culture is a repellent phrase. Many of its manifestations,
here as elsewhere, are liable to be bombastic or comic or both.
But something of the sort is indispensable if even the worst-off
— in fact particularly the worst-off — are fully to enjoy a sense
of belonging. For once we can use ‘Orwellian’ as a term of praise.
Ferdinand Mount is a columnist for the Sunday Times.

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© 2004 The Spectator.co.uk
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