NY Times, May 8 2015
Cameron’s Victory Sets Stage for Fights Over Europe, Scotland and Austerity
By STEVEN ERLANGER

LONDON — Prime Minister David Cameron, having achieved a smashing and 
unexpected outright victory in Britain’s general election, heads into 
his second term facing severe — even existential — challenges to his 
nation’s identity and place in the world: how to keep the United Kingdom 
in the European Union and Scotland in the United Kingdom.

In vanquishing the opposition Labour Party and winning an absolute 
majority in Parliament, Mr. Cameron gained the right to govern without a 
coalition partner, allowing him to claim a mandate on Friday to pursue 
his own agenda. But his majority is so narrow that it will force him to 
tread carefully with his own fractious legislators to pass legislation 
and address issues that could fundamentally redefine 21st-century Britain.

Those start with his pledge to hold a referendum by the end of 2017 on 
Britain’s continued membership in the European Union. He will also be 
under increased pressure from the other big winners of the election, the 
Scottish National Party, to revisit the question of independence for 
Scotland.

“A small majority can quickly turn into a bed of nails,” said Fraser 
Nelson, editor of the Spectator magazine. Backbenchers in Mr. Cameron’s 
own party, many of them farther to the right than he is on questions of 
immigration and Britain’s membership in the European Union, “will be his 
real opposition,” Mr. Nelson said.

More than in his first-term coalition with the centrist Liberal 
Democrats, which gave the government a large majority, Mr. Cameron will 
have to keep his own troops in line. His parliamentary managers, known 
as “whips” for good reason, will get plenty of exercise.

Complicating Mr. Cameron’s life is the fact that this election was also 
a huge victory for the Scottish National Party, which won 56 of 
Scotland’s 59 seats, giving them a strong voice in Westminster and 
making Scotland essentially a one-party state. The party wants an 
independent Scotland and is already considering putting a new referendum 
on independence into its party program for regional elections a year 
from now. Scotland voted against independence last September, but 
Thursday’s vote made clear that the dream remains very much alive among 
Scottish separatists.

On Friday, in front of 10 Downing Street, Mr. Cameron promised to 
“govern with respect,” to govern “as a party of one nation, one United 
Kingdom.”

But it will be easier said than done, especially after demonizing the 
Scottish National Party during the campaign. In essence, England and 
Scotland are today not one nation, but two, each dominated by a single 
party.

How far Mr. Cameron manages to satisfy Scotland and keep Britain 
together will be crucial to his legacy. One prominent party member, 
Boris Johnson, the mayor of London who won his own seat in Parliament, 
was already suggesting on Friday that it was time to adopt some form of 
federalism.

That task will require a delicacy of touch and generosity of spirit that 
the Conservatives, once labeled “the nasty party,” are not thought to 
possess in large amounts.

But the fate of Scotland will also be tied to Mr. Cameron’s other main 
challenge: Britain’s relationship with Europe. He has promised 
repeatedly that, if re-elected, he would hold a referendum on continued 
British membership in the European Union by the end of 2017, after 
efforts to negotiate a “better deal” with Brussels.

If he fails, and Britain votes to leave the European Union — not likely, 
but still a significant risk, and higher under a majority Conservative 
government — then pro-Europe Scotland would almost surely bring forward 
another referendum on independence, one that might very well pass.

Mr. Cameron’s task in Brussels will not be simple, because he wants 
alterations in the system of free movement of people and labor that 
could require a treaty change, a complicated and lengthy process. Even 
nontreaty changes would have to be approved unanimously by all 28 member 
states. Still, with this mandate — and the considerable showing in the 
popular vote of the anti-Europe U.K. Independence Party — European 
colleagues, including Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, will have 
little choice but to work with Mr. Cameron to keep Britain a member.

Nonetheless, Mr. Cameron faces considerable opposition to continued 
British membership, no matter what the terms, from within his own party. 
In the last Parliament, about a third of Conservative members were 
considered to be firmly anti-European, and that is unlikely to have 
changed very much.

And angry or disappointed party legislators are a great danger for small 
parliamentary majorities. In 1992, for example, Prime Minister John 
Major, also a Conservative, had a larger majority than Mr. Cameron does 
now, but saw it shrink steadily as the party fought over Europe and the 
Maastricht Treaty on further integration.

Times are different, argued Alan Duncan, a Conservative legislator, 
saying that his colleagues would be careful not to undermine the victory 
Mr. Cameron has brought them. Still, if Mr. Cameron, as expected after 
negotiations with Brussels, decides to support Britain staying in the 
European Union, it is very likely that a sizable number of Tory 
backbenchers will oppose him and campaign to leave Europe.

Some might even defect to UKIP, which took nearly 13 percent of the 
popular vote nationwide on Thursday, even though the party only won one 
seat and its leader, Nigel Farage, resigned.

Mujtaba Rahman of Eurasia Group, a consulting firm, put it bluntly in a 
note to clients in which he argued that the risk of Britain leaving the 
European Union “will jolt European politics for the next two years.”

“The U.K. will hold a referendum on its E.U. membership in 2017 
following a renegotiation of membership terms,” he wrote. “The result 
will be uncertain, as Cameron grapples with the impossible demands of 
Euroskeptics in his party and the unwillingness of other E.U. capitals 
to offer significant concessions.”

There will be other tensions. Mr. Cameron and his chancellor of the 
Exchequer, George Osborne, have also laid out plans for continued 
spending cuts to bring down the big budget deficit and the national 
debt, promising a fully balanced budget by the end of the next 
Parliament in 2020. Without a formal coalition partner, the party can do 
roughly what it pleases, so long as it does not suffer any backbench revolt.

As laid out in the Conservative manifesto, the cuts would be deep 
outside certain protected areas like the National Health Service, and 
might be about 30 billion pounds, or about $49 billion. Mr. Osborne is 
driven by a Thatcherite belief in the value of a smaller state, to free 
up individual and corporate enterprise and encourage those able to work 
to do so, and such cuts could create political tensions in the country 
and even unrest.

Mr. Osborne is respected, but his economic theology is not shared by 
every Tory, which could also lead to defections and close votes.

Mr. Cameron has never been very popular with some of his backbenchers. 
They are sure to have been shocked and overjoyed at the victory he has 
just brought them, even as they were fearing that Labour would manage, 
with the Scots, to create a majority to throw the Tories out of power. 
Even the most optimistic Conservatives were talking about winning 300 
seats, which all the pollsters thought was hallucinatory.

In the end, Mr. Cameron and his campaign brought them at least 330. That 
will buy him considerable credibility for a time. But not forever.
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