The British Conservative Party and One Nation Politics

The British Conservative Party and One Nation Politics

by David Seawright (Author)

Synopsis

The British Conservative Party and One Nation Politics attempts to reveal the true nature of Conservative Party politics by examining the centrality of the myth of One Nation. The power and longevity of such a concept is crucial to any understanding of the success of the Conservative Party and this analysis of One Nation helps us to lay bare the kernel of Conservative party politics per se. The use of the term One Nation clearly matters for Conservative Party politics, not just in its 'ancestral' use emanating from Disraeli's 1840s novels and his late nineteenth century rhetoric, but also through Baldwin's speeches and to the failure of John Major to replicate such a serene and contented image of the Nation in the 1990s. But as a concept for the Conservatives it means so much more than mere imagery. It has been successfully utilized in their 'palaeontological' approach to their history in order to give the impression that only the Party puts 'Nation' before any sectional interest, that only the Conservative Party, as the national Party, has the ability to assuage and balance the plurality of competing interests on behalf of the Nation. It is because of this long and successful utilization of the term 'One Nation' that so many within the Party are so keen to lay claim to it.

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Quantity

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More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 208
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
Published: 17 Dec 2009

ISBN 10: 0826489745
ISBN 13: 9780826489746

Media Reviews

For nearly 200 years, says Seawright, the Conservative Party has claimed to be the only force that could forge disparate unruly elements of Britain into a single country, and over the past few years, many factions in the party have tried to capture that flag. He examines the competing claims, while emphasizing the centrality of One Nation to any fundamental understanding of Conservative Party politics as a whole. He analyzes both the conceptual use of the term and the formation of the first One Nation faction of Conservative Members of Parliament during the 1950s. That dual theoretical and empirical approach allows him to explore how and why a party that makes such emphatic claims to enduring values has such a proclivity to generational change. -Eithne O'Leyne, BOOK NEWS, Inc.

Author Bio
David Seawright is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Politics and International Studies (POLIS) at the University of Leeds and a co-director of the Members of Parliament Project. His previous works include An Important Matter of Principle and (edited with David Baker) Britain for and Against Europe?