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Abstract

The political origins of the Thatcherite project lie in the postwar history of the Conservative Party. The novelty and shock of Thatcherism as it began to unfold after 1975 was due to the contrast with the style and the policies of postwar conservatism. Some conservatives, such as Sir Ian Gilmour, argued that the Thatcherite wing of the party had repudiated the British conservative tradition of non-ideological politics and pragmatic statecraft that stretched back to Disraeli.1 But the particular quarrel of the Thatcherites was with the attitudes, assumptions and policies to which conservatives had become committed in the 1940s and 1950s.2 It was the acquiescence by conservatives in the social-democratic hegemony over domestic policy that they most wished to challenge. They always claimed that they were the true Tories, restoring the party to its traditional principles. To understand why Thatcherism became so controversial in the 1970s it is necessary to place it in the context of developments in British politics, and in particular in the Conservative Party, since 1945.

The greatest task of the statesman … is to offer his people good myths and to save them from harmful myths.

Enoch Powell

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Notes and references

  1. Ian Gilmour, Inside Right (London: Hutchinson, 1977).

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  2. See Rhodes Boyson, Centre Forward (London: Temple Smith, 1978); and

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  3. Andrew Gamble, The Conservative Nation (London: RKP, 1974), ch. 5.

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  6. See the excellent analysis of why British Fordism was relatively unsuccessful in Henk Overbeek, Global Capitalism and National Decline (London: Unwin Hyman, 1989).

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  7. For the debate on modernisation see Andrew Gamble, Britain in Decline (London: Macmillan, 1985).

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  11. Enoch Powell, Income Tax at 4/3 in the £ (ed. A. Lejeune) (London: Stacey, 1970).

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  12. Nicholas Wapshott and George Brock in their study Thatcher (London: Futura, 1983) note the similarities between Thatcher’s 1968 CPC lecture, ‘What’s Wrong with Politics’, and the ideas Powell was expressing. She was known to admire Powell’s book of speeches Freedom and Reality, she attended meetings at which he spoke and she was the only member of the shadow cabinet to wish him well in the 1970 election.

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  13. For writing on the Heath government see M. Holmes, Political Pressure and Economic Policy: British Government 1970–74 (London: Butterworth, 1982);

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  16. The idea of a U-turn was critically examined by Michael Moran in The Price for Conservatism (Political Studies Association, 1978). See also

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  37. Keith Joseph, ‘Solving the Union problem is the Key to Economic Recovery’ (London: CPS, 1979).

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© 1994 Andrew Gamble

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Gamble, A. (1994). From Butler to Thatcher. In: The Free Economy and the Strong State. Palgrave, London. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-23387-8_4

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