Appearing at a critical juncture in the history of
the Labour Party, ''Speak for Britain!'' provides an
original and challenging interpretation of Labour's
evolution from its sectional trade union origins to its
present status as a national governing party. Making use
of a wide range of primary sources as well as
constituency party records that reveal the dynamics of
membership recruitment and the adoption of candidates,
Martin Pugh challenges many traditional accounts written
from the perspective of the national leadership.
Controversially, he argues that Labour never entirely
succeeded in becoming 'the party of the working class'.
Rather than converting the whole working class to
Socialism, it skilfully adapted itself to the variations
in local and regional political cultures by making use
of Victorian Liberal-Radical traditions in some areas
and employing a populist Tory brand of politics in
others. Moreover, the character of the party was shaped
by the recruitment of many of its influential leaders
from middle and upper-class Conservative backgrounds.
''Speak for Britain!'' charts Labour's rise to power by
re-examining the importance of the First World War, the
General Strike of 1926, Labour's breakthrough at the
1945 general election, the influence of post-war
affluence and consumerism on the fortunes and character
of the party, and its revival after the defeats of the
Thatcher era.Finally, in a fresh assessment of Labour in
government since 1997 Martin Pugh shows how the party
became marginalized and emasculated by Tony Blair's
presidential style of government. He also reveals one of
the party's enduring weaknesses: the tendency to choose
the wrong leaders - and then to hang on to them for too
long. |
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