UK political parties- ideology Flashcards
4 conservative strands
- one nation
- butskellite
- traditional values
- Thatcherism
one nation conservatism
belief in the duty of those with power and to unite the nation
Cameron “big society”
Johnson 2019 embrace state protecting vulnerable w/o penalising rich
butskellite
after 1945 labour landslide, party shifted centre and accepted labour reforms
1950s and ’60s areas of consensus.
keen to join EEC- less eurposceptics than labour
tradtional values
traditional family and marriage, firm line immigration policy
e.g. john major back to basics campaign 1993- “traditional teaching and respect for the family”
e.g. section 28 passing 1988- ban promoting homosexuality in schools
Thatcherism
dominated in 1980s and 90s
economic freedom, stop powerful trade unions, denationalise
e.g. 1984-85 miners’ strike: broke power of strongest TU National Union of Mine Workers
how are all 4 conservative strands seen today?
one nation: Brexit and remove ECJ influence
butskellite: NHS funding 50,000 nurses a year
traditional: points system to control immigration
Thatcherism: promise not to raise income tax
divisions within Conservative party
2016 empahsised brexit divisions; factions over deal
also social issues e.g. most of Cameron’s own MPs rejected same sex marriage bill 2013
4 Labour strands
- economic socialism
- trade unionism
- internationalism
- new labour
economic socialism
postwar Attlee gov set up welfare state and following labour govs nationalise more industries- e.g 1977 aerospace industry
Corbyn 2017 and 2019 manifesto- pledge to partially renationalise reflecting historic pledge to put people before private profit
trade unionism
TUs have supplied bulk of funding e.t.c.
however, influence decreased in 80s and 90s due to conservative aims.
blair and brown 1997-2010 didnt reverse these aims.
corbyn increased influence again e.g. Unite’s general sec Len McCluskey was close to Corbyn
internationalism
peace and disarmement- grassroots movement to disarm nuclear weapons.
modern day- support for European integration
weakened by Blair due to relationship with Bush and “war on terror”
swing back to left 2017 Corbyn
New Labour
blair moved centre after Foot’s lurch left and accepted thatcherite econ but labour social policy
won 3 elections based on this
to some it was a betrayal: Corbyn was a frequent rebel backbencher
how are all 4 labour strands seen today?
- econ socialism: raise health budget by 4.3%
- TU: repeal anti TU legislation e.g. Trade Union Act 2016 which allowed financial penalties for TUs breaching rules
Lib Dems
19th century stood for free trade e.t.c- emergence of labour attracted its working class and cons attracted middle class
today- progressive centrist party with committment to EU and voting system reform
key policies from 2019 manifesto
-stop brexit process-most pro-EU party
- defend HRA 1998 and resist attempts to withdraw from ECHR e.g. opposed to compulsory ID cards after labour proposed it after 9/11
- end to wasted votes by proportional rep- STV for electing MPs