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What about the workers?

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This book explores the long-term relationship between the Conservative Party, trade unions, and the organised working class. It focuses on the question of why the Conservative Party for much of its...
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  • 20 April 2021
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The relationship between the Conservative Party and the organised working class is fundamental to the making of modern British politics. Industrialisation and urbanisation saw the emergence of democracy and class politics, symbolised, by the development of trade unions, which assumed growing political significance. The organised working class, though always a minority, was perceived by Conservatives as a challenge; condemned as threatening property, and as harbingers of socialism. Many trade union members dismissed the Conservatives as the bosses’ party, ever-ready to restrict the unions’ freedom in the interests of profit.

However, at the book’s core is a puzzle: why, throughout its history, was the Conservative Party seemingly accommodating towards the organised working class that it ideology, social composition, and the preferences of most Conservatives would seem to permit? And why, in the space of a relatively few years in the 1970s and 1980s, did it abandon this heritage? Taylor argues that throughout its history, the Conservative Party has faced a broad strategic choice with respect to the organised working class: either inclusion or exclusion.

The portrayal of the character on the front cover encapsulates the concept of the ‘bloody-minded’ British worker - an attitude that encapsulates a determinedly ‘conservative’ attitude to defending rights and influence
gained during the twentieth century and which led to the reaction against ‘union power’ in the 1960s and 70s.

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Price: £85.00
Pages: 280
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Series: New Perspectives on the Right
Publication Date: 20 April 2021
ISBN: 9781526103604
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Ideologies / Conservatism & Liberalism, Politics and government, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Social Classes & Economic Disparity, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Comparative Politics, Right-of-centre democratic ideologies, Social classes

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Introduction
1 A strong taste for the despotism of numbers?
2 Peace and good will?
3 We shall get their help
4 War, conservatism and union power
5 Milk and water socialism?
6 The smack of firm government?
7 Confronting the British disease?
8 The enemy within
Conclusions

Bibliography
Index