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In this book, Adrian Williamson investigates the processes by which
Thatcherism became established in Tory thinking, and questions to
what extent the politician herself is responsible for Thatcherism
within the Conservative Party.
This book explores Britain's gradual disenchantment with both
social democracy and the EEC/EU, culminating in the 2016 vote for
Brexit. It offers a much-needed historical perspective to the
current political crisis in Britain. 2020 CHOICE Outstanding
Academic Title Award Winner Between about 1957 and 1979, British
governments pursued policies loosely based on social democracy,
with a strong commitment to full employment and egalitarianism. At
this time, there was almost unlimited enthusiasm on the Rightof
British politics for membership of the EEC. The real debate was
within the British Left, and the dividing line was between
socialists and social democrats. The former wished to march on
towards the promised land of real socialism; the latter were
broadly content with the status quo. 1975, when the nation voted by
2 to 1 to stay in the EEC, was a triumph for those who had always
been passionate supporters of the European project. It was also the
high water mark of the UK's commitment to social democracy. Full
employment remained the central goal of macro-economic strategy,
and the nation's income and wealth were more evenly distributed
than ever before or since. Since thelate 1970s, social democracy in
the UK has been in continuous retreat. For the Conservatives, this
retreat has been headlong since the rise of Thatcherism in the
mid-1970s. Under New Labour, a viable alternative model to
Thatcherism was never identified. This mixture of metropolitan
social liberalism and freewheeling, finance-based capitalism came
unstuck in the crisis of 2007-9. The ostensibly pro-European forces
thus came into the 2016 referendum campaign in a very weak state.
Tories were, at best, unenthusiastic and many were hostile.
Eurosceptic socialists had taken back control of Labour. The forces
of social democracy, triumphant in 1975, were beleaguered. It is
perhaps notsurprising that Remain lost. This book explores the
nation's gradual disenchantment with both social democracy and the
EEC/EU, culminating in the 2016 vote for Brexit. It tells the story
of the declining fortunes of these two intertwined concepts, for
which no one has yet devised any plausible successor project.
ADRIAN WILLIAMSON is a QC and practicing barrister at Keating
Chambers, London, an Elected Fellow of the Royal Historical Society
andthe author of Conservative Economic Policymaking and the Birth
of Thatcherism, 1964-1979 (Palgrave, 2015).
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