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NewsMay 10, 2015

LONDON -- Standing outside 10 Downing Street the day after his election victory, Prime Minister David Cameron vowed to govern for "one nation, one United Kingdom." That will be easier said than done, as competing brands of nationalism threaten to pull the country apart...

By JILL LAWLESS ~ Associated Press
David Cameron
David Cameron

LONDON -- Standing outside 10 Downing Street the day after his election victory, Prime Minister David Cameron vowed to govern for "one nation, one United Kingdom."

That will be easier said than done, as competing brands of nationalism threaten to pull the country apart.

Separatists swept the board in Scotland, Wales wants greater autonomy and England saw spreading support for the insular U.K. Independence Party and its demand to leave the European Union.

Newspaper editorial pages Saturday oozed anxiety about Britain's future -- that Cameron could be the last leader of a truly United Kingdom.

The Independent said the election "leaves the prospect of the U.K. still being in one piece at the next general election in 2020 in some doubt." The pro-Conservative Daily Telegraph said "the biggest problem facing Mr. Cameron is the future of the Union," while the liberal Guardian said leaving the EU would be "a catastrophe for Britain economically, politically and socially."

In September, Cameron looked like the leader who had saved the U.K. In a referendum, Scottish voters rejected the idea of becoming independent and ending a 300-year-old union between England and Scotland.

But the pro-independence Scottish National Party, far from being defeated, has thrived. The SNP's leader, Nicola Sturgeon, was the unexpected star of the U.K. election campaign, arguing the party would work with Labour in Parliament to deliver progressive policies distinct from Cameron's budget-cutting Conservatives.

The SNP and the Conservatives used nationalist arguments to winning effect in the election. Sturgeon gained more than half of Scottish votes for her party by saying the SNP would make Scotland's voice heard in London.

Cameron argued a minority Labour government would have to rely for support on the separatist SNP -- and that would destabilize Britain.

Scottish Labour leader Jim Murphy, defeated in the tidal wave that saw the SNP win 56 of Scotland's 59 seats, said his party had been "hit by two nationalisms," Scottish and English.

The four regions of the U.K. -- England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland -- always had distinct identities, but for a long time most citizens also considered themselves British. In recent years, though, rising regional identity has undermined the "united" in United Kingdom.

Like Scotland, Wales has its assembly, nationalist aspirations and few Conservative supporters. Northern Ireland has its legislature and distinctive politics defined by the Catholic-Protestant divide.

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That leaves many in England -- home to 53 million of Britain's 64 million people -- asking: "What about us?"

English discontent has found an outlet in UKIP, which argues Britain has had its identity diluted by immigration and its independence undermined by EU membership.

Its supporters live primarily in northeast and southeast England, and political scientist Rob Ford, co-author of UKIP study "Revolt on the Right," said they feel a strong sense of English -- rather than British -- nationalism.

"It's George crosses as much as Union Jacks, and this perception that the English are getting a raw deal out of the Union -- that the English voice isn't being heard and the Scottish voice is," he said.

UKIP got almost 13 percent of the vote in Thursday's election, but only one seat in Parliament thanks to a British election system that allocates seats based on winner-takes-all races in each of 650 constituencies. That's another spur for members' anger: the SNP, whose support is more concentrated, got just under 5 percent of the vote and 56 seats.

Cameron's challenge is to defuse grievances at home while overcoming a crisis in Britain's relationship with Europe.

The rise of UKIP has emboldened the Euroskeptic wing of Cameron's Conservative Party, and made him promise a referendum on EU membership by 2017. Cameron wants to remain in the EU, provided Britain can extract concessions on the free movement of citizens between member states.

That is far from certain. European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said he was ready "to strike a fair deal for the U.K. in the EU." But European leaders may have little appetite for granting major reforms to Britain after years of griping about Brussels from U.K. politicians.

At home, Cameron says he will give new powers to Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, including new tax-raising powers for the Scottish government, as well as unspecified "fairness" for England. London mayor Boris Johnson, who aspires to lead the Conservatives, went even further and called for the U.K. to adopt a federal structure.

Still, it may be too soon to write the United Kingdom's obituary. It's quite possible a majority of Britons will vote to remain in the EU in 2017. The SNP triumph does not make a new Scottish independence referendum imminent. Sturgeon has said she thinks there is little appetite for it in the short term, and the sagging oil price has made independence look riskier for Scotland, which would rely heavily on North Sea oil revenues.

The day after the election, Cameron told voters: "Together, we can make Great Britain greater still."

But togetherness is in short supply after a Conservative victory that was both decisive and divisive. Cameron didn't need Scottish nationalists or UKIP supporters to get elected, but they are not going away, and their numbers are growing.

"There is a real prospect Britain will now be ripped apart by two opposing nationalist agendas either side of Hadrian's Wall," Brian Reade wrote in Saturday's Daily Mirror. "The independence genie is out of the bottle."

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