Tories Hope to Lure North of England

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/12/world/europe/tories-hope-to-lure-north-of-england.html

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LONDON — They were among Britain’s most durable stereotypes and, for some, they still are: the flat-voweled northerner in an equally flat cloth cap, denizen of dark and distant mill towns; and the silver-tongued southerner, the City gent with bowler hat and furled umbrella, emblem of the capital’s bright lights and prosperity, the magnet of the nation.

In recent days, the urge to close that unbridgeable gap has seemed to underlie the government’s promise to turn a string of cities athwart the Pennine Hills into what George Osborne, the Conservative chancellor of the Exchequer, has termed a “northern powerhouse” to spread prosperity far beyond London.

Months before a national election in May, some have interpreted the pledge as a none-too-subtle maneuver to harvest political gain from northern constituencies that were once the exclusive preserve of the Conservatives’ adversaries. Others have depicted the idea as utopian and improbable, a patronizing nod to a blue-collar region weakened by postindustrial decline.

But perhaps the main point is that the outlines of the north-south divide have shifted.

Long the draw for ambitious young people from Leeds or Manchester or Newcastle, London now casts a much wider net, a global lure to American bankers and Russian oligarchs, Latvian builders and Polish plumbers, Chinese investors and French tycoons. Just this week, it emerged that a firm from Abu Dhabi was buying Scotland Yard — the building in London that houses the Metropolitan Police Service, which is moving to smaller headquarters.

And the notion of a northern powerhouse, girded by new highways and railroads and investment in theater and science, plays into the stirrings of a broader devolution of power from the central government that could be the harbinger of Britain’s fragmentation or even its Balkanization.

In a referendum in September, Scottish voters rejected independence by a greater-than-expected majority. But the outcome was widely ascribed to promises by Prime Minister David Cameron of a “new and fair settlement” enhancing Scottish autonomy and heralding a reform in other parts of the United Kingdom: England, Wales and Northern Ireland.

“Whilst in Scotland, the referendum and post-referendum debates continue to fill column inches,” said Alex Nurse, a researcher at the University of Liverpool. “These debates aren’t limited to north of the border.”

With the economic gap widening, in tandem with a divide between rich and poor, the discussion has some urgency.

After the economic meltdown of 2008, the north — once the engine of Britain’s industrial revolution — endured a sharper decline than the south, while austerity measures could well hurt the north more than the south because northern institutions and cities are more dependent on public spending.

From Birmingham to the Scottish border, moreover, there is an uneasy competition over access to Mr. Osborne’s munificence, blending a degree of hubris with rival claims to the northern soul.

“Mr. Osborne says he wants to create a northern powerhouse to complement the strength of the capital,” the columnist Todd Fitzgerald wrote in The Manchester Evening News. “We already have one. It’s called Manchester.”

But, as Paul Linford, a columnist for The Newcastle Journal in the northeast observed, Mr. Osborne’s proposal seemed to center on a “so-called Golden Triangle” linking Manchester and other cities, to the exclusion of other places.

That sentiment was mirrored in the depressed Midlands city of Stoke-on-Trent, where Tristram Hunt, a historian and opposition lawmaker, mused in The Sentinel on longstanding distinctions in northern identity.

“Manchester and Liverpool enjoy a fierce rivalry dating back to trade and tax disputes when they were the emerging megalopolises of the 19th century,” he said. “Then there is the even older trans-Pennine feud, which, of course, helped fuel a long and bloody civil war in the 15th-century Wars of the Roses.”

No one suggested, of course, that history might repeat itself, that glimmers of Balkanization might flare into Balkan-style wars. Indeed, Mr. Linford said, if Mr. Osborne’s promises go unredeemed, “the much-vaunted Northern Powerhouse will remain so much hot air.”