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From Fleet Street to the world of medicine, from the City of London to the corridors of power in Whitehall, Scots have exerted a determining influence on key areas of British life since the Union of the Parliaments. Now that Scots dominate Westminster and run their own parliament in Edinburgh, is the tartan takeover complete? In this controversial new book, the writer and BBC journalist David Stenhouse asks whether the Scots have enacted nothing less than a Caledonian capture of the British State. Through revealing interviews with some of the most successful Scots in London - including Jim Naughtie, Tam Dalyell, Sheena McDonald, Kirsty Wark, William Dalrymple and Katie Muir - On the Make shows how citizens of the poorest part of the United Kingdom have gained unprecedented influence over British politics, the media the church and commerce But success has not always led to popularity. While ambitious Celts have always encountered resentment from the English, Scots at home also often view their successful brothers and sisters down south as selfish careerists who have abandoned their country for the lure of English gold
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From Fleet Street to the world of medicine, from the City of London to the corridors of power in Whitehall, Scots have exerted a determining influence on key areas of British life since the Union of the Parliaments. Now that Scots dominate Westminster and run their own parliament in Edinburgh, is the tartan takeover complete? In this controversial new book, the writer and BBC journalist David Stenhouse asks whether the Scots have enacted nothing less than a Caledonian capture of the British State. Through revealing interviews with some of the most successful Scots in London - including Jim Naughtie, Tam Dalyell, Sheena McDonald, Kirsty Wark, William Dalrymple and Katie Muir - On the Make shows how citizens of the poorest part of the United Kingdom have gained unprecedented influence over British politics, the media the church and commerce But success has not always led to popularity. While ambitious Celts have always encountered resentment from the English, Scots at home also often view their successful brothers and sisters down south as selfish careerists who have abandoned their country for the lure of English gold