Difference between revisions of "Labour Party (UK)" - New World Encyclopedia

From New World Encyclopedia
(article imported, fixed, credited, and categories updated)
 
 
(102 intermediate revisions by 6 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 +
{{images OK}}{{submitted}}{{approved}}{{Copyedited}}
 +
 
{{Infobox British Political Party
 
{{Infobox British Political Party
 
|party_name        = Labour Party
 
|party_name        = Labour Party
 
|party_articletitle = Labour Party (UK)
 
|party_articletitle = Labour Party (UK)
|party_logo        = [[Image:Labour.svg|193px|Labour logo]]
+
|leader            = [[Keir Starmer]]
|leader            = [[Gordon Brown]]
+
|party_logo        =  
|deputy leader      = [[Harriet Harman]]
+
|deputy leader      =
|preceded by        = [[Tony Blair]]
+
|preceded by        =  
|foundation        = February 27, 1900
+
|foundation        = 1900
|ideology          = [[Democratic socialism]] (Official Position) <br /> [[Social Democracy]] <br /> [[Third Way (centrism)|Third Way]]<br />
+
|ideology          = [[Social democracy]]<br/>[[Democratic socialism]]
|position          = [[Centre-Left]]
+
|position          = Centre-left
 
|international      = [[Socialist International]]  
 
|international      = [[Socialist International]]  
 
|european          = [[Party of European Socialists]]
 
|european          = [[Party of European Socialists]]
 
|europarl          = [[Party of European Socialists]]
 
|europarl          = [[Party of European Socialists]]
|colours           = [[Red]]
+
|colors           = [[Red]]
|headquarters      = 39 Victoria Street<br />[[London]], SW1H 0HA
+
|headquarters      = 105 Victoria Street<br />[[London]]
|website            = [http://www.labour.org.uk/ www.labour.org.uk]
+
|website            = [http://www.labour.org.uk www.labour.org.uk]
 
}}
 
}}
 +
The '''Labour Party''' is a [[political party]] in the [[United Kingdom]]. Founded at the start of the twentieth century, it has been, since the 1920s, the principal party of the [[Left-wing politics|left]] in [[Great Britain]], which comprises [[England]], [[Scotland]] and [[Wales]],  but not [[Northern Ireland]], where the [[Social Democratic and Labour Party]] occupies a roughly similar position on the political spectrum (although people in Northern Ireland are eligible to join the Labour Party). The party is described as centre-left, bringing together an alliance of social democratic, democratic socialist, and [[trade union]]ist outlooks.
  
The '''Labour Party''' is a [[political party]] in the [[United Kingdom]]. Founded in the early 20th century, it has been since the 1920s the principal party of the [[Left-wing politics|left]] in [[England]], [[Scotland]] and [[Wales]] (but not in [[Northern Ireland]], where the [[Social Democratic and Labour Party]] occupies a roughly similar position on the political spectrum). It has formed the national government of the United Kingdom since 1997. It is also the largest party in the [[Welsh Assembly]] Government in Wales and the second largest party in the [[Scottish Parliament]]. It holds [[Mayor of London|the London mayoralty]] and is represented in the [[European Parliament]]. Its current [[leadership|leader]] is [[Gordon Brown]].
+
Labour surpassed the [[Liberal Party (UK)|Liberal Party]] as the main opposition to the [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservatives]] in the early 1920s. It has had several spells in government, first as minority governments under [[Ramsay MacDonald]] in 1924 and 1929-1931, then as a junior partner in the wartime coalition from 1940-1945, and then as a majority government, under [[Clement Attlee]] in 1945-1951 and under [[Harold Wilson]] in 1964-1970. Labour was in government again in 1974-1979 under Wilson and then [[James Callaghan]], though with a precarious and declining majority. The Labour Party was more recently in government from 1997 to 2010 under [[Tony Blair]] and [[Gordon Brown]], during the "New Labour" era.  
 
+
{{toc}}
The Labour Party surpassed the [[Liberal Party (UK)|Liberal Party]] as the main opposition to the [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservatives]] in the early 1920s. It has had several spells in government, first as minority governments under [[Ramsay MacDonald]] in 1924 and 1929-31, then as a junior partner in the wartime coalition from 1940-1945, and then as a majority government, under [[Clement Attlee]] in 1945-51 and under [[Harold Wilson]] in 1964-70. Labour was in government again in 1974-79, under Wilson and then [[James Callaghan]], though with a precarious and declining majority.
+
The party's platform emphasises greater state intervention, social justice and strengthening workers' rights. Labour is a full member of the Party of European Socialists and Progressive Alliance, and holds observer status in the Socialist International.  
 
 
Labour won a [[landslide victory|landslide 179 seat majority]] in the [[United Kingdom general election, 1997|1997 general election]] under the leadership of [[Tony Blair]], its first general election victory since [[United Kingdom general election, 1974 (October)|October 1974]] and the first general election since [[United Kingdom general election, 1970|1970]] in which it had exceeded 40% of the popular vote. The Labour Party's large majority in the [[UK House of Commons|House of Commons]] was slightly reduced to 167 in the [[United Kingdom general election, 2001|2001 general election]] and more substantially reduced to 66 in [[United Kingdom general election, 2005|2005]].
 
  
 
==Party ideology==
 
==Party ideology==
The Labour Party grew out of the [[trade union]] movement and [[socialist]] political parties of the 19th century, and continues to describe itself as a party of [[democratic socialism]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.labour.org.uk/labour_policies|title=www.labour.org.uk/labour_policies<!--INSERT TITLE—>|accessdate=2007-07-21}}</ref>
+
The Labour Party grew out of the [[trade union]] movement and [[Socialism|socialist]] political parties of the nineteenth century, and continues to describe itself as a party of [[democratic socialism]]. Labour was the first political party in Great Britain to stand for the representation of the low-paid [[working class]] and the working class were known as the Labour Party grassroots and members and voters. Historically within the party, differentiation was made between the [[social democratic]] and the [[socialist]] wings of the party, the latter often subscribing to a radical socialist, even [[Marxist]], ideology.
  
The Labour Party traditionally was in favour of socialist policies such as [[public ownership]] of key industries, [[Economic intervention|government intervention]] in the economy, [[Income redistribution|redistribution]] of wealth, increased rights for workers and [[trade union]]s, and a belief in the [[welfare state]] and publicly funded healthcare and education.
+
Traditionally, the party was in favor of socialist policies such as [[public ownership]] of key industries, [[Economic intervention|government intervention]] in the economy, [[Income redistribution|redistribution]] of wealth, increased rights for workers and trade unions, and a belief in the [[welfare state]] and publicly funded healthcare and education:
 +
<blockquote>The Labour Party is a [[democratic socialism|democratic socialist]] party. It believes that by the strength of our common endeavour we achieve more than we achieve alone, so as to create for each of us the means to realise our true potential and for all of us a community in which power, wealth and opportunity are in the hands of the many, not the few, where the rights we enjoy reflect the duties we owe, and where we live together, freely, in a spirit of solidarity, tolerance and respect.
 +
<ref name="constitution">[https://labourlist.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/Rule-Book-2013.pdf Labour Party Rule Book 2013] ''Labour.org.uk''. Retrieved July 16, 2023.</ref></blockquote>
 +
Since the mid-1980s, under the leadership of [[Neil Kinnock]], [[John Smith (UK politician)|John Smith]] and [[Tony Blair]] the party has moved away from its traditional socialist position towards what is often described as the "[[Third Way (centrism)|Third Way]]," adopting some [[free market]] policies.<ref>Helene Mulholland, [https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2011/apr/07/labour-pro-business-ed-miliband Labour will continue to be pro-business, says Ed Miliband] ''The Guardian'' (April 7, 2011). Retrieved July 16, 2023.</ref>
 +
 +
This led many observers to describe the Labour Party as [[social democracy|social democratic]] or even [[neo-liberal]] rather than democratic socialist.<ref>Stuart Hall, [https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2003/aug/06/society.labour New Labour has picked up where Thatcherism left off] ''The Guardian'' (August 6, 2003). Retrieved July 16, 2023.</ref> The Labour government under Blair and then [[Gordon Brown]] brought in policies such as introducing a [[minimum wage]] and increasing the spending on the National Health Service (NHS) and education. It was also credited with reducing the gap between the rich and poor.<ref>Matthew Weaver, [https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2008/oct/21/unemploymentdata Guardian Unlimited, Wealth Gap Narrows faster in UK] ''The Guardian'' (October 21, 2008). Retrieved July 16, 2023.</ref>
  
Since the mid-1980s, under the leadership of [[Neil Kinnock]], [[John Smith (UK politician)|John Smith]] and [[Tony Blair]] the party has moved away from its traditional socialist position towards what is often described as the "[[Third Way (centrism)|Third Way]]" adopting some [[Thatcherite]] and [[free market]] policies after losing in four consecutive general elections.
+
Party electoral manifestos have not contained the term ''socialism'' since 1992. The new version of Clause IV, though affirming a commitment to democratic socialism,<ref name="constitution" /> no longer definitely commits the party to public ownership of industry: in its place it advocates "the enterprise of the market and the rigour of competition" along with "high quality public services ... either owned by the public or accountable to them."<ref name="constitution" />
  
This has led many observers to describe the Labour Party as [[social democracy|social democratic]] or even [[neo-liberal]] rather than democratic socialist.<ref>''New Labour and Thatcherism: Political Change in Britain'', Richard Heffernan, 2001; [http://society.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,7884,1013219,00.html New Labour has picked up where Thatcherism left off], Stuart Hall, [[The Guardian]], August 6, 2003; [http://www.lancs.ac.uk/fss/sociology/papers/jessop-from-thatcherism-to-new-labour.pdf From Thatcherism to New Labour: Neo-Liberalism, Workfarism and Labour Market Regulation], Professor Bob Jessop, [[Lancaster University]]; [http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/j.1467-856X.2006.00227.x?cookieSet=1 New Labour, Economic Reform and the European Social Model], Jonathon Hopkin and Daniel Wincott, [[British Journal of Politics and International Relations]], 2006.</ref> Blair himself has described New Labour's political position as a "[[Third Way (centrism)|Third Way]]."
+
Some commentators have argued that traditional social democratic parties across Europe, including the British Labour Party, have been so deeply transformed in recent years that it is no longer possible to describe them ideologically as "social democratic,"<ref>Ashley Lavelle, ''The Death of Social Democracy: Political Consequences for the 21st Century'' (Routledge, 2008, ISBN 978-0754670148).</ref> and claim that this ideological shift has put new strains on the Labour Party's traditional relationship with the trade unions.<ref>Gary Daniels and John McIlroy (eds.), ''Trade Unions in a Neoliberal World: British Trade Unions under New Labour'' (Routledge, 2009, ISBN 978-0415603096).</ref>
  
 
==Party constitution and structure==
 
==Party constitution and structure==
{{main|Labour Party Rule Book}}
+
The Labour Party is a membership organization consisting of [[Constituency Labour Parties]], [[affiliated trade unions]], [[socialist societies]], and the [[Co-operative Party]], with which it has an electoral agreement. Members who are elected to parliamentary positions take part in the [[Parliamentary Labour Party]] (PLP) and European Parliamentary Labour Party (EPLP). The party's decision-making bodies on a national level formally include the [[National Executive Committee]] (NEC), [[Labour Party Conference]], and [[National Policy Forum]] (NPF)–although in practice the Parliamentary leadership has the final say on policy. Questions of internal party democracy have frequently provoked disputes in the party.
  
The Labour Party is a membership organisation consisting of [[Constituency Labour Parties]], [[affiliated trade unions]], [[socialist societies]], and the [[Co-operative Party]], with which it has an electoral agreement. Members who are elected to parliamentary positions take part in the [[Parliamentary Labour Party]] (PLP) and European Parliamentary Labour Party (EPLP). The party's decision-making bodies on a national level formally include the [[National Executive Committee]] (NEC), [[Labour Party Conference]], and [[National Policy Forum]] (NPF)—although in practice the Parliamentary leadership has the final say on policy. Questions of internal party democracy have frequently provoked disputes in the party.
+
For many years Labour held to a policy of [[United Ireland|uniting]] [[Northern Ireland]] and the [[Republic of Ireland]] by consent, and had not allowed residents of Northern Ireland to apply for membership, instead supporting the [[Irish nationalism|nationalist]] [[Social Democratic and Labour Party]] (SDLP) which informally takes the Labour whip at the [[British House of Commons|House of Commons]].<ref>Antony Alcock, [https://cain.ulster.ac.uk/issues/politics/docs/alcock.htm The Unloved, Unwanted Garrison] ''Understanding Ulster'' (Ulster Society Publications, 1997). Retrieved July 16, 2023.</ref> Yet, Labour has a [[Unionism in Ireland|unionist]] faction in its ranks, many of whom assisted in the foundation in 1995 of the [[UK Unionist Party]] led by [[Robert McCartney (politician)|Robert McCartney]]. The 2003 Labour Party Conference accepted legal advice that the party could not continue to prohibit residents of the province joining.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/northern_ireland/3154222.stm Labour NI ban overturned] ''BBC News'' (October 1, 2003). Retrieved July 16, 2023.</ref>
  
For many years, Labour has held to a policy of [[United Ireland|uniting]] [[Northern Ireland]] and the [[Republic of Ireland]] by consent, and had not allowed residents of Northern Ireland to apply for membership,<ref>{{wayback|www.labour.org.uk/join/form.html|Labour Party membership form}}, ca. 1999. via Internet Archive. Accessed 31 March 2007. "Residents of Northern Ireland are not eligible for membership."</ref> instead supporting the [[Irish nationalism|nationalist]] [[Social Democratic and Labour Party]] (SDLP) which takes the Labour whip at the [[British House of Commons|House of Commons]]. Yet Labour has a [[Unionism in Ireland|unionist]] faction in its ranks, many of whom assisted in the foundation in 1995 of the [[UK Unionist Party]] lead by [[Robert McCartney]]. The 2003 Labour Party Conference accepted legal advice that the party could not continue to prohibit residents of the province joining,<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/northern_ireland/3154222.stm Labour NI ban overturned], BBC News. 1 October 2003. Accessed 31 March 2007.</ref> but the National Executive has decided not to organise or contest elections there.
+
Labour is strictly not a political party, but instead a composition of [[trade union]]s and various political organizations. Labour defines a difference between the leading Parliamentary Labour Party (PLP), Constituency Labour Parties (CLP), Socialist Societies, Trade Union affiliates and various political parties that choose to affiliate to Labour known as [[entryist]] groups, though the [[Communist Party of Britain]] has been refused affiliation on occasion. [[Vladimir Lenin]] argued that socialist parties should affiliate to Labour to influence the PLP.<ref>Tony Cliff and Donny Gluckstein, ''The Labour Party: A Marxist History'' (Bookmarks, 1988, ISBN 978-0906224458).</ref>
  
The party had 198,026 members on 31 December, 2005 according to accounts filed with the [[Electoral Commission]] which was down on the previous year. In that year it had an income of about £35,000,000 (£3,685,000 from membership fees) and expenditure of about £50,000,000. [http://www.electoralcommission.org.uk/files/dms/LabourSOA31-12-2005_22475-16688__E__N__S__W__.PDF]
+
==History==
  
Party electoral manifestos have not contained the term ''socialism'' since 1992, although when [[Clause 4]] was abolished the words "the Labour Party is a democratic socialist party" were added to the party's constitution.
+
===Founding of the party===
 +
The Labour Party's origins lie in the late nineteenth century when it became apparent that there was a need for a political party to represent the interests and needs of the urban [[proletariat]] which had increased in numbers, and of [[working-class]] males who had recently been given [[suffrage|franchise]]. Some members of the [[trade union]] movement became interested in moving into the political field, and after the extensions of the franchise in 1867 and 1885, the [[Liberal Party (UK)|Liberal Party]] endorsed some trade-union sponsored candidates. In addition, several small [[Socialism|socialist groups]] had formed around this time with the intention of linking the movement to political policies. Among these were the [[Independent Labour Party]], the intellectual and largely [[middle-class]] [[Fabian Society]], the [[Social Democratic Federation]] and the [[Scottish Labour Party (1888–1893)|Scottish Labour Party]].
  
==History==
+
In the [[United Kingdom general election, 1895|1895 General Election]] the Independent Labour Party put up 28 candidates, but won only 44,325 votes. [[Keir Hardie]], the leader of the party believed that to obtain success in parliamentary elections, it would be necessary to join with other left-wing groups.  
===Early years===
 
[[Image:ILP 21st anniversary certificate large.jpg|400px|right|thumb|The [[Independent Labour Party]], founded in 1893]]
 
The Labour Party's origins lie in the late 19th century numeric increase of the urban proletariat and the extension of the [[suffrage|franchise]] to [[working-class]] males, when it became apparent that there was a need for a political party to represent the interests and needs of those groups.<ref>See, for instance, the 1899 [[Lyons vs. Wilkins]] judgement, which limited certain types of picketing</ref> Some members of the trade union movement became interested in moving into the political field, and after the extensions of the franchise in 1867 and 1885, the [[Liberal Party (UK)|Liberal Party]] endorsed some trade-union sponsored candidates. In addition, several small socialist groups had formed around this time with the intention of linking the movement to political policies. Among these were the [[Independent Labour Party]], the intellectual and largely [[middle-class]] [[Fabian Society]], the [[Social Democratic Federation]] and the [[Scottish Labour Party (1888–1893)|Scottish Labour Party]].
 
  
[[Image:jameskeirhardie.jpg|thumb|left|[[Keir Hardie]], one of the Labour Party's founders and first leader]]
+
====Labour Representation Committee====
In 1899 a [[Doncaster]] member of the Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants, Thomas R. Steels, proposed in his union branch that the [[Trade Union Congress]] call a special conference to bring together all the left-wing organisations and form them into a single body which would sponsor Parliamentary candidates. The motion was passed at all stages by the TUC, and this special conference was held at the Memorial Hall, Farringdon Street, [[London]] on February 27-28, 1900. The meeting was attended by a broad spectrum of working-class and left-wing organisations; trade unions representing about one third of the membership of the TUC delegates.
+
[[Image:jameskeirhardie.jpg|thumb|300px|[[Keir Hardie]], one of the Labour Party's founders and first leader]]
  
The Conference created an association called the [[Labour Representation Committee]] (LRC), meant to coordinate attempts to support MPs, MPs sponsored by trade unions and representing the working-class population. It had no single leader. In the absence of one, the Independent Labour Party nominee [[Ramsay MacDonald]] was elected as Secretary. He had the difficult task of keeping the various strands of opinions in the LRC united. The October 1900 "Khaki election" came too soon for the new party to effectively campaign. Only 15 candidatures were sponsored, but two were successful: [[Keir Hardie]] in [[Merthyr Tydfil (UK Parliament constituency)|Merthyr Tydfil]] and [[Richard Bell (politician)|Richard Bell]] in [[Derby (UK Parliament constituency)|Derby]].
+
In 1899, a [[Doncaster]] member of the [[Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants]], Thomas R. Steels, proposed in his union branch that the [[Trade Union Congress]] call a special conference to bring together all the left-wing organizations and form them into a single body which would sponsor Parliamentary candidates. The motion was passed at all stages by the TUC, and this special conference was held at the Memorial Hall, Farringdon Street, [[London]] on February 26-27, 1900. The meeting was attended by a broad spectrum of working-class and left-wing organizations; trade unions representing about one third of the membership of the TUC delegates.<ref>Jim Mortimer, [http://www.socialisthistorysociety.co.uk/?page_id=187 The formation of the labour party - Lessons for today] ''Socialist History Society'', 2000. Retrieved July 16, 2023. </ref>
  
Support for the LRC was boosted by the 1901 [[Taff Vale Case]], a dispute between strikers and a railway company that ended with the union ordered to pay £23,000 damages for a [[strike action|strike]]. The judgement effectively made strikes illegal since employers could recoup the cost of lost business from the unions. The apparent acquiescence of the Conservative government of [[Arthur Balfour]] to industrial and business interests (traditionally the allies of the [[Liberal Party (UK)|Liberal Party]] in opposition to the Conservative's landed interests) intensified support for the LRC against a government that appeared to have little concern for the industrial proletariat and its problems. The LRC won two by-elections in 1902–1903.
+
[[Image:LabourPartyPlaque.jpg|400px|thumb|Labour Party Plaque from Caroone House 8 Farringdon Street (demolished 2004)]]
 +
After a debate, the 129 delegates passed Hardie's motion to establish "a distinct Labour group in Parliament, who shall have their own whips, and agree upon their policy, which must embrace a readiness to cooperate with any party which for the time being may be engaged in promoting legislation in the direct interests of labour."<ref>[https://spartacus-educational.com/David_Shackleton.htm David Shackelton] ''Spartacus Educational''. Retrieved July 16, 2023.</ref> This created an association called the '''Labour Representation Committee''' (LRC), meant to coordinate attempts to support MPs—MPs sponsored by trade unions and representing the working-class population.<ref>Ralph Miliband, ''Parliamentary Socialism'' (Merlin Press, 2009, ISBN 978-0850361353).</ref> It had no single leader. In the absence of one, the Independent Labour Party nominee [[Ramsay MacDonald]] was elected as Secretary. He had the difficult task of keeping the various strands of opinions in the LRC united. The [[United Kingdom general election, 1900|October 1900]] "Khaki election" came too soon for the new party to effectively campaign; total expenses for the election only came to £33.<ref> Tony Wright and Matt Carter, ''People's Party: The History of the Labour Party'' (Thames & Hudson Ltd, 1997, ISBN 978-0500279564).</ref> Only 15 candidatures were sponsored, but two were successful: [[Keir Hardie]] in [[Merthyr Tydfil (UK Parliament constituency)|Merthyr Tydfil]] and [[Richard Bell (politician)|Richard Bell]] in [[Derby (UK Parliament constituency)|Derby]].<ref name="A History Of The British Labour Party"> Andrew Thorpe, ''A History Of The British Labour Party'' (Palgrave, 2001, ISBN 978-0333560808).</ref>
  
[[Image:LabourPartyPlaque.jpg|200px|thumb|right|Labour Party Plaque from Caroone House 8 Farringdon Street (demolished 2004)]]
+
Support for the LRC was boosted by the 1901 [[Taff Vale Case]], a dispute between strikers and a railway company that ended with the union ordered to pay £23,000 damages for a [[strike action|strike]]. The judgment effectively made strikes illegal since employers could recoup the cost of lost business from the unions. The apparent acquiescence of the Conservative government of [[Arthur Balfour]] to industrial and business interests (traditionally the allies of the [[Liberal Party (UK)|Liberal Party]] in opposition to the Conservative's landed interests) intensified support for the LRC against a government that appeared to have little concern for the industrial proletariat and its problems.<ref name="A History Of The British Labour Party"/>
In the [[United Kingdom general election, 1906|1906 election]], the LRC won 29 seats—helped by the secret 1903 pact between [[Ramsay Macdonald]] and [[Liberal Party (UK)|Liberal]] Chief Whip [[Herbert John Gladstone(the lib/lab pact), 1st Viscount Gladstone|Herbert Gladstone]], which aimed at avoiding Labour/Liberal contests in the interest of removing the Conservatives from office.
 
  
In their first meeting after the election, the group's Members of Parliament decided adopt the name "The Labour Party" (February 15, 1906). Keir Hardie, who had taken a leading role in getting the party established, was elected as Chairman of the Parliamentary Labour Party (in effect, the Leader), although only by one vote over [[David Shackleton]] after several ballots. In the party's early years, the [[Independent Labour Party]] (ILP) provided much of its activist base as the party did not have an individual membership until 1918 and operated as a conglomerate of affiliated bodies until that date. The [[Fabian Society]] provided much of the intellectual stimulus for the party. One of the first acts of the new Liberal government was to reverse the Taff Vale judgement.
+
In the [[United Kingdom general election, 1906|1906 election]], the LRC won 29 seats—helped by the secret 1903 pact between [[Ramsay Macdonald]] and [[Liberal Party (UK)|Liberal]] Chief Whip [[Herbert John Gladstone(the lib/lab pact), 1st Viscount Gladstone|Herbert Gladstone]], which aimed at avoiding Labour/Liberal contests in the interest of removing the Conservatives from office.<ref name="A History Of The British Labour Party"/>
  
The recession of 1908-09 and subsequent rise in unemployment led to increased industrial unrest and the desire for radical change among the working class. There was increasing support both for [[syndicalism]] and for change through parliament. In the two 1910 elections, Labour gained 40 seats and then 42 seats. Support grew further for during the 1910–1914 period along with an unprecedented level of industrial action with [[National Union of Seamen|Seamen]], [[National Union of Railwaymen|rail workers]], cotton workers, [[National Union of Mineworkers|coal miners]], [[Dockers' Union (UK)|dockers]] and many other groups all organising strikes. This was called the period of "Great Unrest" with many sympathy strikes also occurring. This was no doubt helped by the sometimes heavy-handed measures of the Liberal government (e.g., [[Winston Churchill]]'s sending troops to the [[Rhondda valley]] in 1910 against coal miners, with some fatalities resulting).
+
In their first meeting after the election, the group's Members of Parliament decided adopt the name "The Labour Party" (February 15, 1906). Keir Hardie, who had taken a leading role in getting the party established, was elected as Chairman of the Parliamentary Labour Party (in effect, the Leader), although only by one vote over [[David Shackleton]] after several ballots. In the party's early years, the [[Independent Labour Party]] (ILP) provided much of its activist base as the party did not have an individual membership until 1918 and operated as a conglomerate of affiliated bodies until that date. The [[Fabian Society]] provided much of the intellectual stimulus for the party. One of the first acts of the new Liberal government was to reverse the Taff Vale judgment.<ref name="A History Of The British Labour Party"/>
  
===World War I and the lead up to the first Labour government (1914-1923)===
+
===Early years, and the rise of the Labour Party===
During the [[World War I|First World War]] the Labour Party split between supporters and opponents of the conflict and opposition within the party to the war grew as time went on. [[Ramsay MacDonald]], a notable anti-war campaigner, resigned as leader of the Parliamentary Labour Party and [[Arthur Henderson]] became the main figure of authority within the Party and was soon accepted into [[H. H. Asquith]]'s War Cabinet.
+
The [[United Kingdom general election, December 1910|December 1910 General Election]] saw 42 Labour MPs elected to the House of Commons.
  
Despite mainstream Labour Party's support for the Coalition, the [[Independent Labour Party]] was instrumental in opposing mobilisation through organisations such as the [[Non-Conscription Fellowship]] and a Labour Party affiliate, the [[British Socialist Party]] organised a number of unofficial [[strike action|strikes]].
+
This was a significant victory since a year before the election the House of Lords had passed the [[Osborne judgment]] which ruled that Trades Unions in the United Kingdom could no longer donate money to fund the election campaigns and wages of Labour MPs. The governing Liberals were unwilling to repeal this judicial decision with primary legislation. The height of Liberal compromise was to introduce a wage for Members of Parliament, to remove the need to involve the Trade Unions. By 1913, faced with the opposition of the largest Trade Unions, the Liberal government passed the Trade Disputes Act to once more allow Trade Unions to fund Labour MPs.
  
[[Arthur Henderson]] resigned from the Cabinet in 1917 amidst calls for Party unity, being replaced by [[George Nicoll Barnes|George Barnes]]. The growth in Labour's local activist base and organisation was reflected in the elections following the War, with the [[co-operative]] movement now providing its own resources to the [[Co-operative Party]] after the armistice. The Co-operative Party later reached an electoral agreement with the Labour Party.
+
During the [[World War I|First World War]] the Labour Party split between supporters and opponents of the conflict and opposition within the party to the war grew as time went on. [[Ramsay MacDonald]], a notable anti-war campaigner, resigned as leader of the Parliamentary Labour Party and [[Arthur Henderson]] became the main figure of authority within the Party and was soon accepted into [[H. H. Asquith]]'s War Cabinet, becoming the first Labour Party member to serve in government.
  
The Liberal Party splitting between supporters of leader David Lloyd George and former leader [[H. H. Asquith]] allowed the Labour Party to co-opt some of the Liberals' support, and by the [[United Kingdom general election, 1922|1922 general election]] Labour had supplanted the [[Liberal Party (UK)|Liberal Party]] as the second party in the United Kingdom and as the official opposition to the [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservatives]]. After the election, the now rehabilitated Ramsay MacDonald was voted the first official leader of the Labour Party.
+
Despite mainstream Labour Party's support for the Coalition, the [[Independent Labour Party]] was instrumental in opposing mobilization through organizations such as the [[Non-Conscription Fellowship]] and a Labour Party affiliate, the [[British Socialist Party]], organized a number of unofficial [[strike action|strikes]].
  
Labour's electoral base resided in the industrial areas of [[Northern England]], the [[Midlands]], central [[Scotland]] and [[Wales]]. In these areas Labour Clubs were founded to provide recreation for working men, with many of these clubs becoming affiliated to The Working Men's Club and Institute Union. Because of the concentrated geographical nature of Labour's support, industrial downturns tended to hit Labour voters directly. Anecdotal evidence suggests that party membership was often working-class but also included many middle-class radicals, former liberals and socialists. Accordingly, the more middle-class branches in London and the South of England tended to be more left-wing and radical than those in the primary industrial areas.
+
[[Arthur Henderson]] resigned from the Cabinet in 1917 amidst calls for Party unity, being replaced by [[George Nicoll Barnes|George Barnes]]. The growth in Labour's local activist base and organization was reflected in the elections following the War, with the [[co-operative]] movement now providing its own resources to the [[Co-operative Party]] after the armistice. The Co-operative Party later reached an electoral agreement with the Labour Party.
[[Image:Ramsaymacdonald03.jpg|thumb|left|[[Ramsay MacDonald]], the first Labour Prime Minister, 1924, 1929–35 ([[National Government (United Kingdom)|National from 1931-35]])]]
 
  
=== The first Labour government (1924)===
+
Following the war, the [[Liberal Party (UK)|Liberal Party]] went into rapid decline. With the party suffering a catastrophic split between supporters of leader [[David Lloyd George]] and former leader [[H. H. Asquith]]. This allowed the Labour Party to co-opt much of the Liberals' support.
{{main|First Labour Government (UK)}}
 
  
The [[United Kingdom general election, 1923|1923 general election]] was fought on the Conservatives' [[protectionist]] proposals; although they got the most votes and remained the largest party, they lost their majority in parliament, requiring a government supporting [[free trade]] to be formed. So with the acquiescence of Asquith's Liberals, [[Ramsay MacDonald]] became Prime Minister in January 1924 and formed the first ever Labour government, despite Labour only having 191 MPs (less than a third of the House of Commons).
+
With the Liberals in disarray, Labour won 142 seats at the [[United Kingdom general election, 1922|1922 General Election]] making it the second largest political group in the [[British House of Commons]] and the official opposition to the Conservative Government. After the election, the now rehabilitated Ramsay MacDonald was voted the first official leader of the Labour Party.
  
The government collapsed after only nine months when the Liberals voted for a Select Committee inquiry into the [[Patrick Hastings#Campbell Case|Campbell Case]], a vote which MacDonald had declared to be a vote of confidence. The ensuing [[United Kingdom general election, 1924|general election]] saw the publication, four days before polling day, of the notorious [[Zinoviev letter]], which implicated Labour in a plot for a Communist revolution in Britain, and the Conservatives were returned to power, although Labour increased its vote from 30.7% of the popular vote to a third of the popular vote - most of the Conservative gains were at the expense of the Liberals. The Zinoviev letter is now generally believed to have been a forgery<ref>http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/politics/article1819658.ece Independent.co.uk</ref>.
+
===First Labour governments===
 +
[[Image:Ramsay MacDonald ggbain.29588.jpg|thumb|300px|right|[[Ramsay MacDonald]], the first Labour Prime Minister, 1924, 1929–1931 ([[National Government (United Kingdom)|National from 1931-35]])]]
  
=== The General Strike (1926)===
+
====MacDonald government (1924)====
The new Conservative government led by [[Stanley Baldwin]] faced a number of labour problems most notably the [[UK General Strike of 1926|General Strike of 1926]]. Ramsay MacDonald continued with his policy of opposing [[strike action]], including the [[General Strike]], arguing that the best way to achieve social reforms was through the ballot box, although Labour claimed that the BBC was biased in its reporting against the party over the issue.<ref>[http://century.guardian.co.uk/1920-1929/Story/0,,126664,00.html General strike: House of commons], [[The Guardian]], reproduction of 6 May 1926 article</ref><ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/heritage/in_depth/pressure/strike.shtml The General Strike 1926] [[BBC]]</ref><ref>[http://library-2.lse.ac.uk/archives/handlists/MacDonaldNodin/MacDonaldNodin.html Archive Biography of Ramsay MacDonald], [[British Library of Political and Economic Science]]</ref>
+
The [[United Kingdom general election, 1923|1923 general election]] was fought on the Conservatives' [[protectionist]] proposals; although they got the most votes and remained the largest party, they lost their majority in parliament, requiring a government supporting [[free trade]] to be formed. So with the acquiescence of Asquith's Liberals, [[Ramsay MacDonald]] became Prime Minister in January 1924 and formed the first ever Labour government, despite Labour only having 191 MPs (less than a third of the House of Commons).
  
===The split under MacDonald===
+
Because the government had to rely on the support of the Liberals, it was unable to get any socialist legislation passed by the House of Commons. The only significant measure was the [[Wheatley Housing Act]] which began a building programme of 500,000 homes for rent to working-class families.
[[Image:Oldlabour2.gif|right|thumb|130px|the original "liberty" logo, in use until 1983]]
 
The [[United Kingdom general election, 1929|election of May 1929]] left the Labour Party for the first time as the largest grouping in the House of Commons with 287 seats, and 37.1% of the popular vote (actually slightly less than the Conservatives). However, MacDonald was still reliant on Liberal support to form a minority government.
 
  
The [[Wall Street Crash of 1929]] and eventual [[Great Depression in the United Kingdom|Great Depression]] occurred soon after this election, and the crisis hit Britain hard. By 1930 the unemployment rate had doubled to over two and a half million.<ref>Davies, A.J. ''To Build a New Jerusalem'' (1996) Abacus ISBN 0349 108099</ref>  
+
The government collapsed after only nine months when the Liberals voted for a Select Committee inquiry into the [[Patrick Hastings#Campbell Case|Campbell Case]], a vote which MacDonald had declared to be a vote of confidence. The ensuing [[United Kingdom general election, 1924|general election]] saw the publication, four days before polling day, of the notorious [[Grigory Zinoviev|Zinoviev letter]], which implicated Labour in a plot for a [[Communism|Communist revolution]] in Britain, and the Conservatives were returned to power, although Labour increased its vote from 30.7 percent of the popular vote to a third of the popular vote; most of the Conservative gains were at the expense of the Liberals. The Zinoviev letter is now generally believed to have been a forgery.<ref>Richard Norton-Taylor, [https://www.theguardian.com/politics/1999/feb/04/uk.politicalnews6 Zinoviev letter was dirty trick by MI6] ''The Guardian'' (February 3, 1999). Retrieved July 16, 2023.</ref>
  
The Labour government struggled to cope with the crisis and found itself attempting to reconcile two contradictory aims; achieving a balanced budget in order to maintain the [[pound sterling|pound]] on the [[Gold Standard]], whilst also trying to maintain assistance to the poor and unemployed. All of this whilst tax revenues were falling. The [[Chancellor of the Exchequer]], [[Philip Snowden]] refused to permit deficit spending.  
+
In opposition, Ramsay MacDonald continued with his policy of presenting the Labour Party as a moderate force in politics. During the [[UK General Strike of 1926|General Strike of 1926]] he opposed strike action arguing that the best way to achieve social reforms was through the ballot box.
  
By 1931 the situation had deteriorated further. Under pressure from its Liberal allies as well as the Conservative opposition who feared that the budget was unbalanced, the Labour government appointed a committee headed by Sir [[George May, 1st Baron May|George May]] to review the state of public finances. The [[May Report]] of July 1931 urged public-sector wage cuts and large cuts in public spending (notably in payments to the unemployed) in order to avoid a budget deficit.
+
====MacDonald government (1929-1931)====
 +
At the [[United Kingdom general election, 1929|1929 general election]] the Labour Party for the first time became the largest grouping in the House of Commons with 287 seats, and 37.1 percent of the popular vote (actually slightly less than the Conservatives). However, MacDonald was still reliant on Liberal support to form a minority government.
  
This proposal proved deeply unpopular within the Labour Party grass roots, the [[trade union]]s, which along with several government ministers refused to support any such measures. MacDonald, and Philip Snowden, insisted that the Report's recommendations must be adopted to avoid incurring a budget deficit.
+
The government however, soon found itself engulfed in crisis; The [[Wall Street Crash of 1929]] and eventual [[Great Depression in the United Kingdom|Great Depression]] occurred soon after the government came to power, and the crisis hit Britain hard. By the end of 1930, the [[unemployment]] rate had doubled to over 2.5 million.<ref name="To Build A New Jerusalem"> A.J. Davies, ''To Build A New Jerusalem: The British Labour Party from Keir Hardie to Tony Blair'' (Abacus, 1996, ISBN 0349108099).</ref>
  
One junior minister [[Oswald Moseley]] put forward a memorandum in January 1930, calling for the public control of imports and banking as well as an increase in pensions to boost spending power. When this was turned down, Moseley resigned from the government and went on to form the [[New Party (UK)|New Party]], and later the [[British Union of Fascists]].
+
The government had no effective answers to the crisis. By the summer of 1931, a dispute over whether to introduce large cuts to public spending split the government. With the economic situation worsening, MacDonald agreed to form a "[[National Government (UK)|National Government]]" with the [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservatives]] and the [[The Liberal Party (UK)|Liberals]].
  
The  dispute over spending and wage cuts split the Labour government; as it turned out, fatally. The cabinet repeatedly failed to agree to make cuts to spending or introduce tarrifs. The resulting political deadlock caused investors to take fright, and a flight of capital and gold further de-stabilised the economy. In response, MacDonald, on the urging of [[George V of the United Kingdom|King George V]], decided to form a [[National Government (United Kingdom)|National Government]], with the [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservatives]] and the [[The Liberal Party (UK)|Liberals]].
+
On August 24, 1931, MacDonald submitted the resignation of his ministers and led a small number of his senior colleagues in forming the National Government with the other parties. This move caused great anger within the Labour Party and MacDonald and his supporters were then expelled from the Labour Party and formed the [[National Labour Party (UK)|National Labour Party]]. The remaining Labour Party, now led by [[Arthur Henderson]], and a few Liberals went into opposition.  
  
On August 24 1931 MacDonald submitted the resignation of his ministers and led a small number of his senior colleagues, most notably Snowden and Dominions Secretary [[James Henry Thomas|J. H. Thomas]], in forming the National Government with the other parties. MacDonald and his supporters were then expelled from the Labour Party and formed the [[National Labour Party (UK)|National Labour Party]]. The remaining Labour Party, now led by [[Arthur Henderson]], and a few Liberals went into opposition. The Labour Party denounced MacDonald as a "traitor" and a "rat" for what they saw as his betrayal.
+
Soon after this, a [[General Election]] was called. The [[United Kingdom general election, 1931|1931 election]] resulted in a landslide victory for the National Government, and was a disaster for the Labour Party which won only 52 seats, 225 fewer than in 1929.
  
Soon after this, a [[General Election]] was called. The [[United Kingdom general election, 1931|1931 election]] resulted in a Conservative landslide victory, and was a disaster for the Labour Party which won only 52 seats, 225 fewer than in 1929. MacDonald continued as Prime Minister of the Conservative dominated National Government until 1935.
+
===Opposition during the 1930s===
 
 
===Opposition during the time of the National Government===
 
 
[[Arthur Henderson]], who had been elected in 1931 as Labour leader to succeed MacDonald, lost his seat in the 1931 General Election. The only former Labour cabinet member who survived the landslide was the pacifist [[George Lansbury]], who accordingly became party leader.
 
[[Arthur Henderson]], who had been elected in 1931 as Labour leader to succeed MacDonald, lost his seat in the 1931 General Election. The only former Labour cabinet member who survived the landslide was the pacifist [[George Lansbury]], who accordingly became party leader.
  
The party experienced a further split in 1932 when the [[Independent Labour Party]], which for some years had been increasingly at odds with the Labour leadership, opted to disaffiliate from the Labour Party. The ILP embarked on a long drawn out decline.
+
The party experienced a further split in 1932 when the [[Independent Labour Party]], which for some years had been increasingly at odds with the Labour leadership, opted to disaffiliate from the Labour Party. The ILP embarked on a long drawn out decline.  
  
Public disagreements between Lansbury and many Labour Party members over foreign policy, notably in relation to Lansbury's opposition to applying sanctions against [[Italy]] for its aggression against [[Abyssinia]], caused Lansbury to resign during the 1935 Labour Party Conference. He was succeeded by [[Clement Attlee]], who achieved a revival in Labour's fortunes in the [[United Kingdom general election, 1935|1935 General Election]], winning a similar number of votes to those attained in 1929 and actually, at 38% of the popular vote, the highest percentage that Labour had ever achieved, securing 154 seats. Attlee was innitially regarded as a caretaker leader, however he turned out to be the longest serving party leader to date, and one of its most successful.
+
Lansbury resigned as leader in 1935 after public disagreements over foreign policy. He was replaced as leader by his deputy, [[Clement Attlee]]. The party experienced a revival at the [[United Kingdom general election, 1935|1935 General Election]], winning a similar number of votes to those attained in 1929 and actually, at 38 percent of the popular vote, the highest percentage that Labour had ever achieved, securing 154 seats.
  
With the rising threat from [[Nazi Germany]] in the 1930s. The Labour Party gradually abandoned its earlier [[pacifism|pacifist]] stance, and came out in favour of rearmament. This shift largely came about due to the efforts of [[Ernest Bevin]] and [[Hugh Dalton]] who by 1937 also persuaded the party to oppose [[Neville Chamberlain]]'s policy of [[appeasement]]<ref>Davies, A.J. ''To Build a New Jerusalem'' (1996) Abacus ISBN 0349 108099</ref>.
+
With the rising threat from [[Nazi Germany]] in the 1930s, the Labour Party gradually abandoned its earlier [[pacifism|pacifist]] stance, and came out in favor of rearmament. This shift largely came about due to the efforts of [[Ernest Bevin]] and [[Hugh Dalton]] who by 1937 also persuaded the party to oppose [[Neville Chamberlain]]'s policy of [[appeasement]].<ref name="To Build A New Jerusalem"/>
 
 
Labour achieved a number of by-election upsets in the later part of the 1930s despite the world depression having come to an end and unemployment falling.
 
  
===Wartime Coalition===
+
===Wartime coalition===
When [[Neville Chamberlain]] resigned as Prime Minister after the defeat in Norway in spring 1940, incoming Prime Minister [[Winston Churchill]] decided that it was important to bring the other main parties into the government and have a Wartime Coalition similar to that in the First World War. Clement Attlee became [[Lord Privy Seal]] and a member of the War cabinet, and was effectively (and eventually formally) [[Deputy Prime Minister]] for the remainder of the duration of the War in Europe.  
+
The party was brought back into government in 1940 as part of a wartime coalition government: When [[Neville Chamberlain]] resigned as Prime Minister after the defeat in Norway in spring 1940, and incoming Prime Minister [[Winston Churchill]] decided that it was important to bring the other main parties into the government and have a Wartime Coalition similar to that in the First World War. Clement Attlee became [[Lord Privy Seal]] and a member of the War cabinet, and was effectively (and eventually formally) [[Deputy Prime Minister]] for the remainder of the duration of the War in Europe.  
  
A number of other senior Labour figure took up senior positions: the trade union leader [[Ernest Bevin]] as [[Secretary of State for Employment|Minister of Labour]] directed Britain's wartime economy and allocation of manpower; the veteran Labour statesman [[Herbert Morrison]] became [[Home Secretary]]; [[Hugh Dalton]] was [[Minister of Economic Warfare]] and later [[President of the Board of Trade]]; and [[A. V. Alexander, 1st Earl Alexander of Hillsborough|A. V. Alexander]] resumed the role of [[First Lord of the Admiralty]] he had held in the previous Labour government. The party generally performed well in government, and its experience there may have been partly responsible for its post-war success.
+
A number of other senior Labour figures took up senior positions: the trade union leader [[Ernest Bevin]] as [[Secretary of State for Employment|Minister of Labour]] directed Britain's wartime economy and allocation of manpower; the veteran Labour statesman [[Herbert Morrison]] became [[Home Secretary]]; [[Hugh Dalton]] was [[Minister of Economic Warfare]] and later [[President of the Board of Trade]]; and [[A. V. Alexander, 1st Earl Alexander of Hillsborough|A. V. Alexander]] resumed the role of [[First Lord of the Admiralty]] he had held in the previous Labour government. The party generally performed well in government, and its experience there may have been partly responsible for its post-war success.
  
 
===Post-War victory under Attlee===
 
===Post-War victory under Attlee===
 +
With the end of the war in Europe in May 1945, Labour resolved not to repeat the Liberals' error of 1918, and withdrew from the government to contest the [[United Kingdom general election, 1945|1945 general election]] (July 5) in opposition to Churchill's Conservatives. Surprising many observers, Labour won a landslide victory, winning just under 50 percent of the vote with a majority of 145 seats.
  
 +
[[Image:Attlee BW cropped.jpg|thumb|300px|[[Clement Attlee]]: Labour Prime Minister 1945-1951]]
  
With the end of the war in Europe in May 1945, Labour resolved not to repeat the Liberals' error of 1918, and withdrew from the government to contest the [[United Kingdom general election, 1945|1945 general election]] (July 5) in opposition to Churchill's Conservatives. Surprising many observers, Labour won a landslide victory, winning just under 50% of the vote with a majority of 145 seats.
+
Clement Attlee's government proved to be one of the most radical British governments of the twentieth century. It presided over a policy of selective [[nationalization]] of major industries and utilities, including the [[Bank of England]], [[National Coal Board|coal mining]], the [[Iron and Steel Corporation of Great Britain|steel industry]], electricity, gas, telephones, and inland transport (including the [[British Railways|railways]], road haulage and canals). It developed the "cradle to grave" [[welfare state]] conceived by the Liberal economist [[William Beveridge]]. To this day, the party still considers the creation in 1948 of Britain's [[Publicly-funded health care|publicly funded]] [[National Health Service]] under health minister [[Aneurin Bevan]] its proudest achievement.
 
 
Although the exact reasons for the victory are still debated. During the war, public opinion surveys showed public opinion moving to the [[left wing|left]] and in favour of radical social reform<ref>Davies, A.J. ''To Build a New Jerusalem'' (1996) Abacus ISBN 0349 108099</ref>. There was little public appetite for a return to the poverty and mass unemployment of the interwar years which had become associated with the Conservatives.
 
[[Image:Attlee cropped.jpg|thumb|[[Clement Attlee]]: Labour Prime Minister 1945-51]]
 
Clement Attlee's government proved to be one of the most radical British governments of the 20th century. It presided over a policy of selective [[nationalisation]] of major industries and utillities, including the [[Bank of England]], [[National Coal Board|coal mining]], the [[British Steel|steel industry]], electricity, water, gas, telephones, and inland transport (including the [[British Railways|railways]], road haulage and canals). It developed the "cradle to grave" [[welfare state]] conceived by the Liberal economist [[William Beveridge]]. To this day, the party still considers the creation in 1948 of Britain's tax-funded [[National Health Service]] under health minister [[Aneurin Bevan]] its proudest achievement.
 
  
 
Attlee's government also began the process of dismantling the [[British Empire]] when it granted independence to [[India]] in 1947. This was followed by Burma ([[Myanmar]]) and Ceylon ([[Sri Lanka]]) the following year.
 
Attlee's government also began the process of dismantling the [[British Empire]] when it granted independence to [[India]] in 1947. This was followed by Burma ([[Myanmar]]) and Ceylon ([[Sri Lanka]]) the following year.
  
With the onset of the [[Cold War]], at a secret meeting in January 1947, Attlee, and six cabinet ministers including foreign minister [[Ernest Bevin]], secretly decided to proceed with the development of Britain's [[nuclear deterrent]]<ref>Davies, A.J. To Build a New Jerusalem (1996) Abacus ISBN 0349 108099</ref>, in opposition to the pacifist and anti-nuclear stances of a large element inside the Labour Party.  
+
With the onset of the [[Cold War]], at a secret meeting in January 1947, Attlee, and six cabinet ministers including foreign minister [[Ernest Bevin]], secretly decided to proceed with the development of Britain's [[nuclear deterrent]],<ref name="To Build A New Jerusalem"/> in opposition to the pacifist and anti-nuclear stances of a large element inside the Labour Party.  
  
Labour won the [[United Kingdom general election, 1950|1950 general election]] but with a much reduced majority of five seats. Soon after the 1950 election, things started to go badly wrong for the Labour government. Defence became one of the divisive issues for Labour itself, especially defence spending (which reached 14% of GDP in 1951 during the [[Korean War]]<ref>Clark, Sir George, ''Illustrated History Of Great Britain'', (1987) Octupus Books</ref>). These costs put enormous strain on public finances, forcing savings to be found elsewhere. The [[Chancellor of the Exchequer]], [[Hugh Gaitskell]] introduced [[prescription charges]] for NHS [[prescription drug|prescriptions]], causing Bevan, along with [[Harold Wilson]] ([[President of the Board of Trade]]) to resign over the dillution of the principle of free treatment.
+
Labour won the [[United Kingdom general election, 1950|1950 general election]] but with a much reduced majority of five seats. Soon after the 1950 election, things started to go badly for the Labour government. Defense became one of the divisive issues for Labour itself, especially defense spending (which reached 14 percent of [[Gross Domestic Product|GDP]] in 1951 during the [[Korean War]]).<ref>Sir George Clark, ''Illustrated History Of Great Britain'' (Octopus Books, 1982, ISBN 978-0706416664).</ref> These costs put enormous strain on public finances, forcing savings to be found elsewhere. The [[Chancellor of the Exchequer]], [[Hugh Gaitskell]] introduced [[prescription charges]] for NHS [[prescription drug|prescriptions]], causing Bevan, along with [[Harold Wilson]] ([[President of the Board of Trade]]) to resign over the dilution of the principle of free treatment.
  
 
Soon after this, another election was called. Labour narrowly lost the [[United Kingdom general election, 1951|October 1951 election]] to the Conservatives, despite their receiving a larger share of the popular vote and, in fact, their highest vote ever numerically.
 
Soon after this, another election was called. Labour narrowly lost the [[United Kingdom general election, 1951|October 1951 election]] to the Conservatives, despite their receiving a larger share of the popular vote and, in fact, their highest vote ever numerically.
  
Most of the changes introduced by the 1945-51 Labour government however were accepted by the Conservatives and became part of the "[[post war consensus]]," which lasted until the 1970s.
+
Most of the changes introduced by the 1945-1951 Labour government however were accepted by the Conservatives and became part of the "[[post war consensus]]," which lasted until the 1970s.
  
 
===The "Thirteen Wasted Years"===
 
===The "Thirteen Wasted Years"===
Following the defeat in 1951, the party became split over the future direction of socialism. The "Gaitskellite" right of the party led by [[Hugh Gaitskell]] and associated with thinkers such as [[Anthony Crosland]] wanted the party to adopt a moderate [[Social Democracy|social democratic]] position. Whereas the "Bevanite" left, led by [[Anuerin Bevan]] wanted the party to adopt a more radical socialist position. This split, and the fact that the 1950s saw economic recovery and general public contentment with the Conservative governments of the time, helped keep the party out of power for thirteen years
 
 
After being defeated at the [[UK general election, 1955|1955 general election]], Attlee resigned as leader and was replaced by Gaitskell. The trade union [[block vote]], which generally voted with the leadership, ensured that the bevanites were eventually defeated.
 
 
The three key divisive issues that were to split the Labour party in successive decades emerged first during this period; [[nuclear disarmament]], the famous [[Clause IV]] of the party's constitution, which called for the ultimate nationalisation of all means of production in the British economy, and Britain's entry into the [[European Economic Community]] (EEC). Tensions between the two opposing sides were exacerbated after Attlee resigned as leader in 1955 and Gaitskell defeated Bevan in the leadership election that followed. The party was briefly revived and unified during the [[Suez Crisis]] of 1956. The Conservative party was badly damaged by the incident while Labour was rejuvenated by its opposition to the policy of prime minister [[Anthony Eden]]. But Eden was replaced by [[Harold Macmillan]], while the economy continued to improve.
 
 
In the [[UK general election, 1959|1959 election]] the Conservatives fought under the slogan "Life is better with the Conservatives, don't let Labour ruin it" and the result saw the government majority increase. Following the election bitter internecine disputes resumed. Gaitskell blamed the Left for the defeat and attempted unsuccessfully to amend Clause IV. At a hostile party conference in 1960 he failed to prevent a vote adopting unilateral nuclear disarmament as a party policy, declaring in response that he would "fight, fight and fight again to save the party I love." The decision was reversed the following year, but it remained a divisive issue, and many in the left continued to call for a change of leadership.
 
 
===The Wilson Years===
 
[[Image:Dodwilson.JPG|thumb|200px|right|[[Harold Wilson]], Labour Prime Minister 1964–1970 and 1974-1976]]
 
Following Gaitskell's sudden death in 1963, [[Harold Wilson]] took over leadership of the party.
 
 
A downturn in the economy, along with a series of scandals in the early 1960s (the most notorious being the [[Profumo affair]]), engulfed the Conservative government by 1963. The Labour party returned to government with a wafer-thin 4 seat majority under Wilson in the [[United Kingdom general election, 1964|1964 election]], and increased their majority to 96 in [[United Kingdom general election, 1966|1966 election]] remaining in power until the [[United Kingdom general election, 1970|1970 election]] which, contrary to expectations during the campaign, they lost.
 
 
The 1960s Labour government had a different emphasis from its 1940s predecessor. [[Harold Wilson]]  put faith in [[economic planning]] as a way to solve Britain's economic problems. Wilson famously referred to the "white heat of technology," referring to the modernisation of British industry. This was to be achieved through the swift adoption of new technology, aided by government-funded infrastructure improvements and the creation of large high-tech public sector corporations guided by a Ministry of Technology. Economic planning through the new [[Secretary of State for Economic Affairs|Department of Economic Affairs]] was to improve the [[trade balance]], whilst Labour carefully targeted taxation aimed at "luxury" goods and services. As a gesture towards Labour's left wing supporters. Wilson's government renationalised the steel industry in 1967 (which had been denationalised by the Conservatives in the 1950s) creating [[British Steel]]. 
 
  
Labour had difficulty managing the economy under the "Keynesian consensus" and the international markets instinctively mistrusted the party. Events derailed much of the initial optimism, especially a [[currency crisis]] which mounted until 1967 when the government was forced into [[devaluation]] of the pound and pressure on sterling was intensified by disagreements over US foreign policy. [[Harold Wilson]] publicly supported America's [[Vietnam War|engagement in Vietnam]] but refused to provide British assistance. This infuriated [[Lyndon B. Johnson|President Johnson]] who in response felt little obligation to support the pound. For much of the remaining Parliament the government followed stricter controls in public spending and the necessary austerity measures caused consternation amongst the Party membership and the trade unions, unions which by this time were gaining ever greater political power.
+
Following their defeat in 1951 the party underwent a long period in opposition lasting 13 years. The party suffered an ideological split during the 1950s, and the postwar economic recovery meant that the public was broadly contented with the Conservative governments of the time. Attlee remained as leader until his retirement in 1955.  
  
Labour in the 1960s under [[Home Secretary]] [[Roy Jenkins]] introduced a number of [[liberal]] social reforms, notably the legalisation of [[homosexuality]] and [[abortion]], reform of [[divorce]] laws, the abolition of theatre [[censorship]], and [[capital punishment]] (except for a small number of offences - notably [[High treason in the United Kingdom|high treason]]) and various legislation addressing [[race relations]] and [[racial discrimination]]. Another significant achievement was the creation of the [[Open University]]. In Wilson's defence, his supporters also emphasise the easing of [[means testing]] for non-contributory welfare benefits, the linking of pensions to earnings, and the provision of industrial-injury benefits.
+
His replacement [[Hugh Gaitskell]] struggled with internal divisions within the party in the late 1950s and early 1960s, and Labour lost the [[United Kingdom general election, 1959|1959 general election]]. Gaitskell's sudden death in 1963 made way for [[Harold Wilson]] to lead the party.
  
Wilson's government in 1969 proposed a series of reforms to the legal basis for [[industrial relations]] (labour law) in the UK, which were outlined in a [[White Paper]] entitled "[[In Place of Strife]]," which proposed to give trade unions statutory rights, but also to limit their power. The White Paper was championed by Wilson and [[Barbara Castle]]. The proposals however faced stiff opposition from the [[Trades Union Congress]], and some key cabinet ministers such as [[James Callaghan]]. The opponents won the day and the proposals were shelved.
+
===The 1960s and 1970s===
 +
====Wilson government (1964-1970)====
 +
[[Image:Dodwilson.JPG|thumb|300px|right|[[Harold Wilson]], Labour Prime Minister 1964–1970 and 1974-1976]]
 +
A downturn in the economy, along with a series of scandals in the early 1960s (the most notorious being the [[Profumo affair]]), engulfed the Conservative government by 1963. The Labour party returned to government with a razor-thin four-seat majority under Wilson in the [[United Kingdom general election, 1964|1964 election]], and increased their majority to 96 in [[United Kingdom general election, 1966|1966 election]].
  
===The 1970s===
+
Events derailed the wave of optimism which swept Labour to power in 1964. Wilson's government inherited a large [[trade deficit]], which led to a [[currency crisis]] and an ultimately doomed attempt to stave off devaluation of the [[pound sterling|pound]].
In the [[United Kingdom general election, 1970|1970 general election]], [[Edward Heath]]'s Conservatives narrowly defeated Harold Wilson's government reflecting some disillusionment amongst many who had voted Labour in 1966. The Conservatives quickly ran into difficulties, alienating [[Unionism in Ireland|Ulster Unionists]] and many Unionists in their own party after signing the [[Sunningdale Agreement]] in Ulster. Heath's government also faced the [[1973 miners strike]] which forced the government to adopt a "[[Three-Day Week]]." The 1970s proved to be a very difficult time for the Heath, Wilson and Callaghan administrations. Faced with a mishandled oil crisis, a consequent world-wide economic downturn, and a badly suffering British economy.
 
  
Following the perceived disappointments of the 1960s Labour government, the party moved to the [[left wing|left]] during the early 1970s<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=tnvHk8g1crUC&pg=PA91&lpg=PA91&dq=%22labour's+programme+1973%22&source=web&ots=-2D0gtR3B1&sig=cZYysngSHKbDPMtZaIDI427QUR0 Remaking the Labour Party: From Gaitskell to Blair By Tudor Jones]</ref> "Labour's Programme 1973," pledged to bring about a "fundamental and irreversible shift in the balance of power and wealth in favour of working people and their families." This programme referred to a "far reaching [[Social Contract]] between workers and the Government." Wilson publicly accepted many of the policies of the Programme but the condition of the economy allowed little room for manoeuvre.
+
Despite the crisis, Wilson's government was responsible for a number of social and educational reforms such as legalization of [[abortion]] and [[homosexuality]], and the abolition of the [[death penalty]] for murder. The 1960s Labour government also expanded [[comprehensive education]] and created the [[Open University]].  
  
====Return to power in 1974====
+
Labour unexpectedly lost the [[United Kingdom general election, 1970|1970 general election]] to the Conservatives under [[Edward Heath]]. Heath's government however soon ran into trouble over [[Northern Ireland]] and a dispute with miners in 1973 which led to the "[[three-day week]]."
Labour returned to power again under Wilson a few weeks after the [[United Kingdom general election, 1974 (February)|February 1974 general election]], forming a minority government with Ulster Unionist support. The Conservatives were unable to form a government as they had fewer seats, even though they had received more votes. It was the first General Election since 1924 in which both main parties received less than 40% of the popular vote, and was the first of six successive General Elections in which Labour failed to reach 40% of the popular vote. In a bid for Labour to gain a majority, a second election was soon called for [[United Kingdom general election, 1974 (October)|October 1974]] in which Labour, still with Harold Wilson as leader, scraped a majority of three, gaining just 18 seats and taking their total to 319.
 
  
=====European referendum=====
+
The 1970s proved to be a very difficult time to be in government for both the Conservatives and Labour due to the [[1973 oil crisis]] which caused high [[inflation]] and a global recession.
Britain had entered the [[European Economic Community|EEC]] in 1973 while Edward Heath was Prime Minister. Although Harold Wilson and the Labour party had opposed this, in government Wilson switched to backing membership, but was defeated in a special one day Labour conference on the issue<ref>{{cite web|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/april/26/newsid_2503000/2503155.stm|title=26 April 1975: Labour votes to leave the EEC |accessdate=2007-06-25}}</ref> leading to a national referendum on which the yes and no campaigns were both cross-party - [[United Kingdom European Communities membership referendum, 1975|the referendum]] voted in 1975 to continue Britain's membership by two thirds to one third. This issue later caused catastrophic splits in the Labour Party in the 1980s, leading to the formation of the [[SDP]].
 
  
In the initial legislation during the Heath Government, the Bill affirming Britain's entry was only passed because of a rebellion of 72 Labour MPs led by [[Roy Jenkins]] and including future leader [[John Smith (UK politician)|John Smith]], who voted against the Labour whip and along with Liberal MPs more than countered the effects of Conservative rebels who had voted against the Conservative Whip.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ampltd.co.uk/digital_guides/cabinet_papers_series_3_part_7/Brief-Chronology-1970-to-1974.aspx|title=www.ampltd.co.uk/digital_guides/cabinet_papers_series_3_part_7/Brief-Chronology-1970-to-1974.aspx<!--INSERT TITLE—>|accessdate=2007-06-25}}</ref>
+
Labour returned to power again under Wilson a few weeks after the [[United Kingdom general election, 1974 (February)|February 1974 general election]], forming a minority government with Ulster Unionist support. The Conservatives were unable to form a government as they had fewer seats, even though they had received more votes. It was the first General Election since 1924 in which both main parties received less than 40 percent of the popular vote, and was the first of six successive General Elections in which Labour failed to reach 40 percent of the popular vote. In a bid for Labour to gain a majority, a second election was soon called for [[United Kingdom general election, 1974 (October)|October 1974]] in which Labour, still with Harold Wilson as leader, scraped a majority of three, gaining just 18 seats and taking their total to 319.
  
[[Image:James Callaghan.JPG|thumb|[[James Callaghan]]: Labour Prime Minster 1976-79]]
+
====Labour in power 1974-1979====
=====Wilson steps down=====
+
In government, the Labour Party's internal splits over Britain's membership of the [[European Economic Community]] (EEC) which Britain had entered under Edward Heath in 1972, led to a [[United Kingdom European Communities membership referendum, 1975|national referendum]] on the issue in 1975, in which two thirds of the public supported continued membership.
 +
[[Image:James Callaghan.JPG|thumb|300px|[[James Callaghan]]: Labour Prime Minister from 1976 to 1979.]]
 +
The Labour Government struggled for much of its time in office with serious economic problems and a precarious and declining majority in the commons. Fear of advances by the nationalist parties, particularly in Scotland, led to the suppression of a report from Scottish Office economist Gavin McCrone which suggested that an independent Scotland would be 'chronically in surplus' and to secret collusion with [[Margaret Thatcher]]'s Conservatives. Harold Wilson unexpectedly resigned as prime minister in 1976. He was replaced by [[James Callaghan]].
  
In April 1976 Wilson surprisingly stood down as Labour Party leader and Prime Minister claiming a long-standing desire to retire on his sixtieth birthday. There was immense suspicion of his reason for his resignation but it is now known that he was in the early stages of [[Alzheimer's disease|Alzheimer's]]. He feared following his mother's path who had been a towering, impressive personality but who did not accept her failing abilities and carried on for too long spoiling her reputation. He was replaced by [[James Callaghan]] who immediately removed a number of left-wingers (such as [[Barbara Castle]]) from the cabinet.
+
The Wilson and Callaghan governments were hampered by their lack of a workable majority in the commons. At the October 1974 election, Labour won a majority of only three seats. Several by election losses and defections to the breakaway [[Scottish Labour Party (1976)|Scottish Labour Party]] meant that by 1977, Callaghan was heading a minority government, and was forced to do deals with other parties to survive. An arrangement was negotiated in 1977 with the [[Liberal Party (UK)|Liberal]] leader [[David Steel]] known as the [[Lib-Lab pact]], but this ended after one year. After this, deals were made with various small parties, including the [[Scottish National Party]] and the [[Wales|Welsh]] nationalist [[Plaid Cymru]], which prolonged the life of the government slightly longer.  
  
In the same year as Callaghan became leader, the party in [[Scotland]] suffered the breakaway of two MPs into the [[Scottish Labour Party (1976–1981)|Scottish Labour Party]] (SLP). Whilst ultimately the SLP proved no real threat to the Labour Party's strong Scottish electoral base it did show that the issue of Scottish [[devolution]] was becoming increasingly contentious, especially after the discovery of [[North Sea Oil]].
+
The [[nationalism|nationalist]] parties demanded [[devolution]] to their respective countries in return for their support for the government. When [[referendum]]s for Scottish and Welsh devolution were held in March 1979, the [[Welsh devolution referendum, 1979|Welsh referendum]] was rejected outright, and the [[Scottish devolution referendum, 1979|Scottish referendum]] had a narrow majority in favor but did not reach the threshold of 40 percent support of the electorate, a requirement of the legislation. When the Labour Government refused to push ahead with setting up the Scottish Assembly, the SNP withdrew its support for the government, causing the government to collapse on a vote of no confidence.
  
=====Economic and political troubles=====
+
The Wilson and Callaghan governments in the 1970s tried to control [[inflation]] (which had reached 26.9 percent in 1975) by instituting a policy of [[wage restraint]]. This policy was initially fairly successful at controlling inflation, which had been reduced to 7.4 percent by 1978.<ref name="A History Of The British Labour Party"/> However, it led to increasingly strained relations between the government and the trade unions.
The 1970s Labour government faced enormous economic problems and a precarious political situation. Faced with a global recession and spiralling [[inflation]]. Many of Britain's traditional manufacturing industries were collapsing in the face of foreign competition. Unemployment, and industrial unrest were rising.  
 
  
In the autumn of 1976 the Labour Government was forced to ask the [[International Monetary Fund]] (IMF) for a loan to ease the economy through its financial troubles. The conditions attached to the loan included harsh [[austerity]] measures such as sharp cuts in public spending, which were highly unpopular with party supporters. This forced the government to abandon much of the radical program which it had adopted in the early 1970s, much to the anger of left wingers such as [[Tony Benn]].
+
Callaghan had been widely expected to call a general election in the autumn of 1978, when most opinion polls showed Labour to have a narrow lead.<ref name="A History Of The British Labour Party"/> However instead, he decided to extend the wage restraint policy for another year in the hope that the economy would be in a better shape in time for a 1979 election. This proved to be a big mistake.
  
The 1970s Labour government adopted an [[economic interventionism|interventionist]] approach to the economy, setting up the [[National Enterprise Board]] to channel public investment into industry, and giving state support to ailing industries. Struggling companies such as [[British Aerospace]] and [[British Leyland]] were [[nationalisation|nationalised]]. The Government succeeded in replacing the ''Family Allowance'' with the more generous [[child benefit]], and introduced [[redundancy pay]].
+
During the winter of 1978-1979 there were widespread [[Strike action|strikes]] in favor of higher pay rises which caused significant disruption to everyday life. The strikes affected lorry drivers, railway workers, car workers and local government and hospital workers. These came to be dubbed as the "[[Winter of Discontent]]."
  
The Wilson and Callaghan governments were hampered by their lack of a workable majority in the commons. At the October 1974 election, Labour won a majority of only three seats. Several by-election losses meant that by 1977, Callaghan was heading a minority government, and was forced to do deals with other parties to survive. An arrangement was negotiated in 1977 with the Liberals known as the [[Lib-Lab pact]], but this ended after one year. After this, deals were made with the [[Scotish National Party]] and the [[Wales|Welsh]] nationalist [[Plaid Cymru]], which prolonged the life of the government slightly longer.
+
The strikes made Callaghan's government unpopular. After the withdrawal of SNP support for the government, the Conservatives put down a [[vote of no confidence]], which was held and passed by one vote on March 28, 1979, forcing a general election.
 
 
====The "Winter of Discontent" and defeat by Margaret Thatcher====
 
The [[1973 oil crisis]] had caused a legacy of high [[inflation]] in the British economy which peaked at 26.9% in 1975. The Wilson and Callaghan governments attempted to combat this by entering into a [[social contract]] with the trade unions, which introduced [[wage restraint]] and limited pay rises to limits set by the government. This policy was initially fairly successful at controlling inflation, which had been reduced to under 10% by 1978.
 
 
 
Callaghan had been widely expected to call a general election in the autumn of 1978, when most opinion polls showed Labour to have a narrow lead. However instead, he decided to extend the wage restraint policy for another year in the hope that the economy would be in a better shape in time for a 1979 election. This proved to be a big mistake. The extension of wage restraint was unpopular with the trade unions, and the government's attempt to impose a "5% limit" on pay rises caused resentment amongst workers and trade unions, with whom relations broke down.
 
 
 
During the winter of 1978-79 there were widespread [[Strike action|strikes]] in favour of higher pay rises which caused significant disruption to everyday life. The strikes affected lorry drivers, railway workers, car workers and local government and hospital workers. These came to be dubbed as the "[[Winter of Discontent]]."
 
 
 
The perceived relaxed attitude of Callaghan to the crisis reflected badly upon public opinion of the government's ability to run the country. A [[vote of no confidence]] on the government was held and passed on 28 March 1979, forcing a general election.
 
  
 
In the [[United Kingdom general election, 1979|1979 general election]], Labour suffered electoral defeat to the [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservatives]] led by [[Margaret Thatcher]]. The numbers voting Labour hardly changed between February 1974 and 1979, but in 1979 the Conservative Party achieved big increases in support in the Midlands and South of England, mainly from the ailing Liberals, and benefited from a surge in turnout.
 
In the [[United Kingdom general election, 1979|1979 general election]], Labour suffered electoral defeat to the [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservatives]] led by [[Margaret Thatcher]]. The numbers voting Labour hardly changed between February 1974 and 1979, but in 1979 the Conservative Party achieved big increases in support in the Midlands and South of England, mainly from the ailing Liberals, and benefited from a surge in turnout.
  
The actions of the trade unions during the Winter of Discontent were used by Margaret Thatcher's government to justify anti-trade union legislation during the 1980s.
+
===The 'Wilderness Years' (1979-1997)===
 
 
===The 1980s===
 
====Michael Foot era====
 
The aftermath of the 1979 election defeat saw a period of bitter internal rivalry in the Labour Party which had become increasingly divided between the ever more dominant left wingers under [[Michael Foot]] and [[Tony Benn]] (whose supporters dominated the party organisation at the grassroots level), and the right under [[Denis Healey]]. It was widely considered that Healey would win the [[Labour Party (UK) leadership election, 1980|leadership election]], but he was narrowly defeated by Foot.
 
 
 
The Thatcher government was determined not to be deflected from its agenda as the Heath government had been. A [[deflationary]] budget in 1980 led to substantial cuts in welfare spending and an initial short-term sharp rise in unemployment. The Conservatives reduced or eliminated state assistance for struggling private industries, leading to large redundancies in many regions of the country, notably in Labour's heartlands. However, Conservative legislation extending the right for residents to buy council houses from the state proved very attractive to many Labour voters. (Labour had previously suggested this idea in their 1970 election manifesto, but had never acted on it.)
 
 
 
The election of [[Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament]] (CND) veteran Michael Foot to the leadership disturbed many Atlanticists in the Party. Other changes increased their concern; the constituencies were given the ability to easily deselect sitting MPs, and a new voting system in leadership elections was introduced that gave party activists and affiliated trade unions a vote in different parts of an electoral college.
 
 
 
The party's move to the left in the early 80s led to the decision by a number of centrist party members led by the [[Gang of Four (disambiguation)|Gang of Four]] of former cabinet ministers ([[Shirley Williams]], [[William Rodgers]], [[Roy Jenkins]], and [[David Owen]]. ) to issue the "[[Limehouse Declaration]]" on January 26, 1981, and to form the breakaway [[Social Democratic Party (UK)|Social Democratic Party]]. The departure of even more members from the centre and right further swung the party to the left, but not quite enough to allow Tony Benn to be elected as Deputy Leader when he challenged for the job at the September 1981 party conference.
 
 
 
Under Foot's leadership, the party's agenda became increasingly dominated by the politics of the [[hard left]]. Accordingly, the party went into the [[United Kingdom general election, 1983|1983 general election]] with the most left wing manifesto that Labour ever stood upon. The manifesto contained pledges for abolition of the [[House of Lords]], unilateral nuclear disarmament, withdrawal from the [[European Community]], withdrawal from [[NATO]] and a radical and extensive extension of state control over the economy.
 
 
 
This alienated many of the party's more right-wing supporters. The Bennites were in the ascendency and there was very little that the right could do to resist or water down the manifesto, many also hoped that a landslide defeat would discredit Michael Foot and the hard left of the party moving Labour away from explicit Socialism and towards weaker social-democracy. Labour MP and former minister [[Gerald Kaufman]] famously described the 1983 election manifesto as "the longest suicide note in history." Michael Foot has countered, with typical wit, that it is telling about Gerald Kaufman that it is likely that his one oft quoted remark will be all that he is remembered for.
 
 
 
[[Image:Labour Party.png|right|thumb|160px|Labour's logo 1983-2007]]
 
Much of the press attacked both the Labour party's manifesto and its style of campaigning, which tended to rely upon public meetings and canvassing rather than media. By contrast, the Conservatives ran a professional campaign which played on the voters' fears of a repeat of the Winter of Discontent. To add to this, the Thatcher government's popularity rose sharply on a wave of patriotic feeling following victory in the [[Falklands War]], allowing it to recover from it initial unpopularity over unemployment and economic difficulty.
 
 
 
At the 1983 election, Labour suffered a landslide defeat, winning only 27.6% of the vote, their lowest share since [[United Kingdom general election, 1918|1918]]. Labour won only half a million votes more than the [[SDP-Liberal Alliance]] which had attracted the votes of many moderate Labour supporters.
 
 
 
====Neil Kinnock====
 
 
 
Michael Foot immediately resigned and was replaced by [[Neil Kinnock]], initially considered a firebrand left-winger, he proved to be more pragmatic than Foot and progressively moved the party towards the centre; banning left-wing groups such as the [[Militant tendency]] and reversing party policy on EEC membership and withdrawal from NATO, bringing in [[Peter Mandelson]] as Director of Communications to modernise the party's image, and embarking on a policy review which reported back in 1985.
 
 
 
At the [[United Kingdom general election, 1987|1987 general election]], the party was again defeated in a landslide, but had at least re-established itself as the clear challengers to the Conservatives and gained 20 seats reducing the Conservative majority to 102 from 143 in 1983, despite a sharp rise in turnout. Challenged for the leadership by [[Tony Benn]] in 1988, Neil Kinnock easily retained the leadership claiming a mandate for his reforms of the party. Re-organisation resulted in the dissolution of the [[Labour Party Young Socialists]], which was thought to be harbouring [[entryist]] [[Militant Tendency|Militant]] groups. It also resulted in a more centralised communication structure, enabling a greater degree of flexibility for the leadership to determine policy, react to events, and direct resources.
 
 
 
During this time the Labour Party emphasised the abandonment of its links to high taxation and old-style nationalisation, which aimed to show that the party was moving away from the left of the political spectrum and towards the centre. It also became actively pro-European, supporting further moves to [[European integration]].
 
 
 
===John Major and a fourth successive defeat===
 
Margaret Thatcher who had led the Conservative Party to three successive victories resigned as Conservative leader in November 1990 following a [[Conservative Party (UK) leadership election, 1990|leadership challenge]] from Conservative MP and former cabinet minister [[Michael Heseltine]], eventually leaving Labour facing a new Conservative Prime Minister in [[John Major]].
 
 
 
By the time of the [[United Kingdom general election, 1992|1992 general election campaign]], the party had reformed to such an extent that it was perceived as a credible government-in-waiting. Most opinion polls showed the party to have a slight lead over the Conservatives, although rarely sufficient for a majority. However, the party ended up 8% behind the Conservatives in the popular vote in one of the biggest surprises in British electoral history. Although Labour's support was comparable to the February and October 1974 and May 1979 General Elections, the overall turnout was much larger.
 
 
 
In the party's post mortem on why it had lost, it was considered that the "Shadow Budget" announced by [[John Smith (UK politician)|John Smith]] had opened the way for Conservatives to attack the party for wanting to raise taxes{{Fact|date=June 2007}}. In addition, a triumphalist party [[Sheffield Rally|rally held in Sheffield]] eight days before the election, was generally considered to have backfired. The party had also suffered from a powerfully co-ordinated campaign from the right-wing press, particularly [[Rupert Murdoch]]'s ''[[The Sun (newspaper)|The Sun]]''. Kinnock resigned after the defeat, blaming the Conservative-supporting newspapers for Labour's failure and John Smith, despite his involvement with the Shadow Budget, was elected to succeed him.
 
 
 
===John Smith===
 
Smith's leadership once again saw the re-emergence of tension between those on the party's left and those identified as "modernisers," both of whom advocated radical revisions of the party's stance albeit in different ways. At the 1993 conference, Smith successfully changed the party rules and lessened the influence of the trade unions on the selection of candidates to stand for Parliament by introducing a [[one member, one vote]] system called OMOV—but only barely, after a barnstorming speech by [[John Prescott]] which required Smith to compromise on other individual negotiations. However, they benefitted from an increasingly unpopular and divided Conservative government, and soon began leading in opinion polls.
 
 
 
John Smith died suddenly in May 1994 from a heart attack, prompting a [[Labour Party leadership election, 1994|leadership election]] for his successor, likely to be the next Prime Minister. With 57% of the vote, [[Tony Blair]] won a resounding victory in a three-way contest with John Prescott and [[Margaret Beckett]]. Prescott became deputy leader, coming second in the poll whose results were announced on 21 July 1994.
 
 
 
==New Labour==
 
{{dablink|"New Labour" redirects here. For other meanings, see [[New Labour (disambiguation)]].}}
 
===Origins===
 
<!-- Commented out because image was deleted: [[Image:BBC Education - AS Guru - Blair devil eyes.png|thumb|right|The infamous "New Labour, New Danger" poster, which backfired on the Conservatives]] —>
 
"New Labour" is an alternative branding for the Labour Party dating from a conference slogan first used by the Labour Party in 1994 which was later seen in a draft [[manifesto]] published by the party in 1996, called ''New Labour, New Life For Britain'' and presented by Labour as being the brand of the new reformed party that had in 1995 altered [[Clause IV]] and reduced the Trade Union vote in the electoral college used to elect the leader and deputy leader to have equal weighting with individual other parts of the electoral college.
 
 
 
[[Peter Mandelson]] was a senior figure in this process, and exercised a great deal of authority in the party following the death of [[John Smith (UK politician)|John Smith]] and the subsequent election of [[Tony Blair]] as party leader.
 
 
 
The name is primarily used by the party itself in its literature but is also sometimes used by political commentators and the wider [[mass media|media]]; it was also the basis of a [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservative Party]] poster campaign of 1997, headlined "New Labour, New Danger." The rise of the name coincided with a rightwards shift of the British political spectrum; for Labour, this was a continuation of the trend that had begun under the leadership of [[Neil Kinnock]]. "Old Labour" is sometimes used by commentators to describe the older, more left-wing members of the party, or those with strong Trade Union connections.
 
 
 
[[Tony Blair]], [[Gordon Brown]], [[Peter Mandelson]], [[Anthony Giddens]] and [[Alastair Campbell]] are most commonly cited as the creators and architects of "New Labour." They were among the most prominent advocates of the shift in European [[social democracy]] during the 1990s, known as the "[[Third Way (centrism)|Third Way]]." Although this policy was advantageous to the Labour Party in the eyes of the British electorate, it alienated many grass roots members by distancing itself from the ideals of socialism in favour of free market policy decisions.
 
 
 
The "modernisation" of Labour party policy and the unpopularity of [[John Major]]'s Conservative government, along with a well co-ordinated use PR, greatly increased Labour's appeal to "[[middle England]]." The party was concerned not to put off potential voters who had previously supported the Conservatives, and pledged to keep to the spending plans of the previous government, and not to increase the basic rate of income tax. The party won the [[United Kingdom general election, 1997|1997 election]] with a landslide majority of 179. Following a second and third election victory in the [[United Kingdom general election, 2001|2001 election]] and the [[United Kingdom general election, 2005|2005 election]], the name has diminished in significance. "New Labour" as a name has no official status but remains in common use to distinguish modernisers from those holding to more traditional positions who normally are referred to as "Old Labour."
 
  
===In government===
+
Following their defeat at the 1979 election, the Labour Party underwent a period of bitter internal rivalry in the Labour Party which had become increasingly divided between the ever more dominant left-wingers under [[Michael Foot]] and [[Tony Benn]] (whose supporters dominated the party organization at the grassroots level), and the right under [[Denis Healey]].
[[Image:Labour manifesto 97.jpg|thumb|The cover of Labour's [[United Kingdom general election, 1997|1997 general election]] [[manifesto]].]]
 
One of the first acts of the 1997 Labour government was to give the [[Bank of England]] operational independence in its setting of interest rates, a move mentioned neither in the manifesto nor during the election campaign. Labour held to its pledges to keep to the spending plans set by the Conservatives, causing strain with those members of the party who had hoped that the landslide would lead to more radical and increased spending. It also started its introduction of a major educational reform programme, in which Labour would introduce new ways of teaching, as well as later on introducing new forms of schools.
 
  
Since 1997 Labour's economic policies have sought to take a middle way between the more centralised [[socialist]] approach of past Labour governments and the [[free market]] approach of the Conservative government from 1979 to 1997. One of the most popular policies introduced was Britain's first [[National Minimum Wage Act 1998|National Minimum Wage Act]]. There have also been various programmes targeted at specific sections of the population; the target for reducing [[homelessness]] was achieved by 2000. Chancellor [[Gordon Brown]] oversaw the SureStart scheme intended for young families, a new system of [[tax credits]] for those working with below-average incomes and an energy allowance provided to pensioners during the winter. By most statistical measures, unemployment has fallen from just over 1.5 million in 1997 to around the one million mark.
+
The election of Michael Foot as leader in 1980, dismayed many on the right of the party, who believed that Labour was becoming too [[left-wing]]. In 1981 a group of four former cabinet ministers from the right and center of the Labour Party ([[Shirley Williams]], [[William Rodgers]], [[Roy Jenkins]], and [[David Owen]]) issued the "[[Limehouse Declaration]]" and formed the breakaway [[Social Democratic Party (UK)|Social Democratic Party]].  
  
The government has also been accused of being too far to the right in a number of policies. For example in December 1997, 47 left-wing Labour MPs rebelled when the government carried through the previous administration's plans to cut the benefits paid to new single-parents. Tuition fees for university students were also introduced with no debate within the Labour Party itself. The government also promoted wider use of [[Public Private Partnerships]] and the [[Private Finance Initiative]], which were opposed particularly by trade unions as a form of [[privatisation]].
+
Margaret Thatcher's government was initially deeply unpopular due to high unemployment and inflation but the success of the [[Falklands War]] in 1982, her success in controlling [[inflation]] and the [[right to buy]] revived her popularity, while the formation of the SDP split the opposition vote. The Labour Party was defeated by a landslide in the [[United Kingdom general election, 1983|1983 general election]] winning only 27.6 percent of the vote, their lowest share since [[United Kingdom general election, 1918|1918]]. Labour won only half-a-million votes more than the [[SDP-Liberal Alliance]] which had attracted the votes of many moderate Labour supporters.
  
The New Labour government has been closer to corporate business interests than any previous Labour government. Several Policy Taskforces in 1997 and 1998 included industrialists and business leaders such as [[David Simon, Baron Simon of Highbury|Lord Simon]], a former chairman of [[BP]], [[Lord Sainsbury]] of the supermarket dynasty, and ''Alec Reed'' of [[Reed (Company)|Reed Employment]]. There have been various reports regarding the effect of such close links, in policies such as the [[Public-Private Partnership]]s, the deregulation of utilities, privatisation, and the tendency to [[outsource]] government services.
+
Michael Foot resigned as leader and was replaced by [[Neil Kinnock]], who progressively moved the party towards the center. Labour improved its performance at the [[United Kingdom general election, 1987|1987 general election]], gaining 20 seats reducing the Conservative majority to 102 from 143 in 1983, despite a sharp rise in turnout.  
  
Labour's second term saw substantial increases in public spending, especially on the [[National Health Service]], which the government insisted must be linked to the reforms it was proposing. Spending on education was likewise increased, with schools encouraged to adopt "specialisms." Teachers and their trade unions strongly criticised the Prime Minister's spokesman [[Alastair Campbell]] when he stated that this policy meant the end of "the bog-standard [[Comprehensive Schools|comprehensive]]."
+
Neil Kinnock was seen as too right-wing for much of the Labour Left—especially the [[Militant Tendency]] that Kinnock later forced them out of the party; they would later become the [[Socialist Party of England and Wales]].
  
In terms of foreign policy Labour aspired to put Britain "at the heart of Europe" whilst attempting to maintain military and diplomatic links to the [[United States]]. Initially, [[Robin Cook]], as Foreign Secretary of the first Blair Cabinet, attempted to instigate an "ethical foreign policy." Whilst the next Foreign Secretary [[Jack Straw (politician)|Jack Straw]] somewhat downplayed this, the Party has sought to put the promotion of human rights and democracy, and latterly the war against terrorism, at the core of British foreign policy. This was first evidenced when Blair and Cook initiated [[Operation Palliser]], in which British troops intervened to stop massacres in [[Sierra Leone]]. This has led to a new emphasis on the [[Department for International Development]], with ministers [[Clare Short]] and [[Hilary Benn]] holding some influence within the administration. Tony Blair managed to persuade [[Bill Clinton]] to take a more active role in [[Kosovo]] in 1999, and British forces took part in the international coalition which attacked the [[Taliban]] regime in [[Afghanistan]] in 2001 after the regime refused to hand over [[Osama Bin Laden]] and expel [[Al Qaeda]] from the country in the aftermath of the [[September 11, 2001 attacks|11 September, 2001 attacks]].
+
[[Margaret Thatcher]] was replaced as prime minister by [[John Major]] in 1990. By the time of the [[United Kingdom general election, 1992|1992 general election]], the economy was in recession and, despite the personal unpopularity of Neil Kinnock, Labour looked as if it could win. The party had dropped its policy of [[Nuclear disarmament#Organizations|Unilateral Nuclear Disarmament]], and had tried to present itself as a credible government-in-waiting. Most opinion polls showed the party to have a slight lead over the Conservatives, although rarely sufficient for a majority. The Conservatives were returned to power but with a much reduced majority of 20. Although Labour's support was comparable to the February and October 1974 and May 1979 General Elections, the overall turnout was much larger.
  
Blair decided to send British troops to fight alongside the United States and a number of forces in smaller numbers from around the world in the [[2003 invasion of Iraq]]. The Government's involvement in the invasion caused much public disapproval in the UK and within the Labour party, with many calling Tony Blair's credibility into question when questions were raised as to the veracity of intelligence concerning Iraq's [[Weapons of Mass Destruction]], and the alleged political pressure on the Foreign Office. This loss of support contributed to the substantial reduction of Labour's majority in the [[United Kingdom general election, 2005|2005 general election]].
+
Kinnock resigned as leader and was replaced by [[John Smith (UK politician)|John Smith]]. Soon after the 1992 election, the Conservative government ran into trouble, when on ''[[Black Wednesday]]'' it was forced to leave the [[European Exchange Rate Mechanism]]. After this, Labour moved ahead in the opinion polls as the Conservatives declined in popularity. John Smith's sudden death from a heart attack in May 1994 made way for [[Tony Blair]] to lead the Party.
  
===New Labour in the media===
+
=== New Labour ===
[[Image:Labour Party Victoria Street 3.jpg|thumb|right|The Labour Party Headquarters at 39 [[Victoria Street, London|Victoria Street]], [[London]]]]
+
[[Image:Tony Blair WEF 2008 cropped.jpg|thumb|300px|[[Tony Blair]], Labour Prime Minister 1997-2007]]
 +
[[Tony Blair]] moved the party further to the right, adopting policies which broke with Labour's socialist heritage at the 1995 mini-conference in a strategy to increase the party's appeal to "[[middle England]]."
  
New Labour (as a series of values) is often characterised as a belief in "no rights without responsibilities"—that a citizen should recognise that one possesses responsibilities linked with any legal rights they hold{{Fact|date=February 2007}}. The concept of a "stakeholder society" is quite prominent in New Labour thinking. As noted above, New Labour thought also embraces the notion of the "Third Way," although critics point to the lack of any concise statement of its meaning. The term "Third Way" has since fallen from use.
+
"New Labour" was first termed as an alternative branding for the Labour Party, dating from a conference slogan first used by the Labour Party in 1994 which was later seen in a draft [[manifesto]] published by the party in 1996, called ''[[New Labour, New Life For Britain]]''. The rise of the name coincided with a rightwards shift of the British political spectrum; for Labour, this was a continuation of the trend that had begun under the leadership of [[Neil Kinnock]]. "New Labour" as a name has no official status but remains in common use to distinguish modernizers from those holding to more traditional positions who normally are referred to as "Old Labour." New Labour has been used a derogative term by some to separate the "Thatcherite" policies adopted by Tony Blair and Gordon Brown to that of Old Labour and the old [[Clause 4]].
  
The name "New Labour" has also been widely satirised. Critics associate the new name with an unprecedented use of [[spin doctor|spin doctoring]] in the party's relationship with media. The [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservative Party]] attempted to tarnish the new Labour tag during the 1997 election campaign using the slogan "New Labour, New Danger." After [[Gordon Brown]]'s budgets became more and more [[Keynesian]], ''[[Private Eye]]'' magazine began to call the party "New" Labour.
+
[[New Labour]]'s apparent abandoning of [[working class]] supporters has resulted, some argue, in the [[Campaign for a New Workers' Party]], the [[Respect Coalition]], the rise in the [[Scottish National Party]] and the [[British National Party]], revival of the [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservative Party]], questioning of [[capitalism]] and [[trade union]] activity that has not been seen since the 1980s.
  
===Criticism===
+
====In government====  
In left-wing circles, the name "New Labour" or Neo Labour is used [[pejorative]]ly to refer to the perceived domination of the Labour Party by its right-wing. Indeed, some argue that Labour has become so fond of [[neo-liberal]] policies that it is [[Thatcherism|Thatcherite]] rather than [[Democratic socialism|democratic socialist]] or even [[Social democracy|social-democratic]] (cf. "[[Blatcherism]]"). Some signs of dissatisfaction among working-class voters has seen the Liberal Democrats have been making electoral inroads into Labour areas, as well as support further to the left fragmenting away from the Labour Party i.e. [[Respect - The Unity Coalition]], [[Forward Wales]] and a number of other small parties and Independents. In the [[London Borough of Newham]] there has been particular outrage over New Labour policies with regard to Queen's Market, Upton Park. Questions emerged regarding the centralised and highly personalised style of Tony Blair's leadership, with some critics seeing this as a sign of creeping [[presidentialism]].<ref>For instance [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/vote_2005/frontpage/4492463.stm ''Blair's leadership a core issue''] BBC website accessed 7 April 2007 </ref>
+
{{main|Current Labour government (UK)|Premiership of Tony Blair|Premiership of Gordon Brown}}
  
==Labour's third successive term from 2005==
+
With the unpopularity of John Major's government, the Labour party won the [[United Kingdom general election, 1997|1997 election]] with a landslide majority of 179.  
[[Image:Popular vote.jpg|thumb|200px|left|A graph showing the percentage of the popular vote received by major parties in general elections, 1832-2005. The rapid rise of the Labour party after its founding during the Victorian era is clear, and the party is now considered as one of the dominant forces in British politics.]]
 
The party's popularity and membership have steadily declined since 2003. [http://politics.guardian.co.uk/labour/story/0,9061,1274855,00.html]. Labour won the [[United Kingdom general election, 2005|2005 general election]] with only 35.3% of the total vote and a majority of 66. Their majority fell to 62 following a [[Dunfermline and West Fife by-election, 2006|by-election]] loss to the [[Liberal Democrats]] and [[Claire Short]]'s decision to sit as an [[Independent (politician)|Independent]] MP.
 
  
Tony Blair's third term was dominated even more than the second by the issue of [[terrorism]]. Shortly after the General Election, in incidents in July 2005 referred to as [[7 July 2005 London bombings|7-7]], a number of bombs were detonated on buses and tube trains in London. A fortnight later, further attempts were made by alleged terrorists to launch bombings, although failed. As a result, relations between Labour and [[Muslims]] have become more important.
+
Among the early acts of Tony Blair's government were the establishment of the [[National minimum wage]], the [[devolution]] of power to [[Scotland]], [[Wales]] and [[Northern Ireland]], and the re-creation of a city-wide government body for [[London]]; the [[Greater London Authority]].
  
The Blair government has also attempted to crack down on the perceived threat of terrorism since the [[September 11, 2001 attacks]] in the [[United States|U.S.]], eliciting claims that they are undermining civil liberties and the rule of law. Dissent within the parliamentary party substantially increased. The Labour government were defeated in a [[British House of Commons|House of Commons]] vote over the length of time suspected terrorists could be detained without trial although most of the [[Terrorism Act 2006|Terrorism Bill]] passed into law, the 90 day limit the government wanted was rejected when 48 Labour MPs rebelled, with a compromise limit of 28 days agreed by the House of Commons, receiving [[Royal Assent]] on 30 March 2006 passing into law.
+
Labour went on to win the [[United Kingdom general election, 2001|2001 election]] with a similar majority to 1997. [[Tony Blair]] controversially allied himself with President [[George W. Bush]] in supporting the [[Iraq War]], which lost his government much support.<ref>[https://www.dw.com/en/european-opposition-to-iraq-war-grows/a-745536 European Opposition To Iraq War Grows] ''DW'' (January 13, 2003). Retrieved July 16, 2023.</ref>
  
The introduction of [[identity cards]] presents political and logistical difficulties as [[civil liberties]] groups increasingly oppose the creation of a biometric identity database. Despite opposition from the Conservatives, Liberal Democrats and some Labour MPs, the Bill has passed through all of its readings in the Commons so far. However, recent leaked Home Office memos have condemned the scheme as originally devised.
+
At the [[United Kingdom general election, 2005|2005 election]], Labour was returned to power with a much reduced majority.
  
The government faces continued controversy over the Education Reform Bill. This provides for greater financial autonomy for state schools, whilst reducing [[local authority|local government]] control, and has provoked a large parliamentary rebellion, forcing the leadership to depend on support from the opposition Conservative Party. The Bill has also resulted in outspoken criticism from those formerly in the mainstream of the Party, such as former leader [[Neil Kinnock]].
+
The party lost power in Scotland after losing the [[Scottish Parliament election, 2007|2007 Scottish Parliament election]]. In the same year, Tony Blair stood down as prime minister and was replaced by [[Gordon Brown]]. Although the party experienced a brief rise in the polls, the party's popularity soon slumped to its lowest level since under Michael Foot. During May 2008, Labour suffered heavy defeats in the [[London mayoral election, 2008|London mayoral election]], [[United Kingdom local elections, 2008|local elections]] and the [[Crewe and Nantwich by-election, 2008|Crewe and Nantwich by-election]], culminating in the party registering its worst ever opinion poll result since records began in 1943, of 23 percent.<ref>[https://www.reuters.com/article/us-britain-politics/uk-poll-gives-browns-labour-lowest-ever-rating-idUSL0942982620080509 Brown hit by worst party rating] ''Reuters'' (May 9, 2008). Retrieved July 16, 2023.</ref>
  
===Party finances===
+
Finance proved a major problem for the Labour Party at the beginning of the twenty-first century. A "cash for peerages" scandal under Tony Blair resulted in the drying up of many major sources of donations. Declining party membership, partially due to the reduction of activists' influence upon policymaking under the reforms of Neil Kinnock and Tony Blair, has also contributed to financial woes.  
The party has suffered from the recent [[Cash for Peerages|peerages for cash]] scandal involving a number of people from a number of parties, where donors could lend large sums of money for undefined periods (effectively giving money). [[Scotland Yard]] began investigating allegations in April 2006, and continues to do so as of December 2006. There were suggestions that major donors had been encouraged to describe the money they were giving as loans rather than donations. As a consequence, the Labour Party has run up large debts (some sources put this as much as £40 million), and is having difficulty raising further money. Some of their creditors are calling in their loans, leaving the [[trade unions]] in a far more powerful position than before as a vital source of revenue for the party.
 
  
This is not exclusively a problem of the Labour Party and other parliamentary parties are facing similar difficulties. Private individuals are less willing to provide donations, and party memberships are falling, leaving all the major parties more heavily reliant on a few rich donors. Both the Labour and Conservative frontbenches are openly considering extending state funding of political parties in the UK.
+
Gordon Brown's Labour government suffered its first significant defeat in the [[House Of Lords]] on  October 15, 2008, when the Lords rejected proposals to allow police to hold terror suspects for 42 days without charge. Gordon Brown was accused of a "tax bombshell" by opposition leader [[David Cameron]], who argued that the "tax cut" of [[VAT]] by 2.5 percent and the overall tax cut package was funded by debt which would lead to future tax increases.<ref>Andrew Grice, [https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/cameron-predicts-163-1-500-tax-bombshell-1023101.html Cameron predicts £1,500 'tax bombshell'] ''The Independent'' (November 18, 2008). Retrieved July 2023.</ref>
  
===Resignation of Tony Blair===
+
In the 2010 general election, Labour with 29.0 percent of the vote won the second largest number of seats (258). The Conservatives with 36.5 percent of the vote won the largest number of seats (307), but no party had an overall majority, meaning that Labour could still remain in power if they managed to form a coalition with more than one other smaller party to gain an overall majority; anything less would result in a minority government. On 10 May 2010, after talks to form a coalition with the Liberal Democrats broke down, Brown announced his intention to stand down as Leader before the Labour Party Conference, and a day later resigned as both Prime Minister and party leader.
In the 4 May [[United Kingdom local elections, 2006|2006 local elections]], the Labour Party lost over 300 councillors across England. The gains went largely to the [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservative Party]], who saw their best results since 1992. Elsewhere, the [[British National Party]] and the [[Green Party of England and Wales|Green Party]] increased their numbers of councillors by 33 and 20 respectively, there were also gains for the left-wing Respect Unity party.<ref>http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/bsp/hi/vote2006/locals/html/region_99999.stm </ref> The election followed the release by the [[Home Office]] of 1,043 foreign prisoners who had been slated for deportation, nurses being made redundant due to deficits within the [[National Health Service]] resulting in the Health Secretary being heckled at the annual conference of the [[Royal College of Nursing]], and revelations about the two year extra-marital affair of [[Deputy Prime Minister]] [[John Prescott]] and his assistant private secretary [[Tracey Temple]].
 
  
Following the poor election results, Tony Blair was forced into a planned cabinet reshuffle. Speculation about the date of his departure as leader and Prime Minister intensified. Blair had announced in 2004 that he would not fight a fourth general election as Labour leader but stated that he would serve a full third term. However as his term progressed, dissent within the party increased.He failed to pass three bills restricting civil liberties through parliament in 2005-2006. His refusal to call for an Israeli ceasefire during the [[2006 Lebanon War]] increased his unpopularity within the party, and he was repeatedly undermined by failures in Iraq and the cash for peerages scandal. Following an apparent attempted coup to force him out, in which a number a junior government members resigned in protest at his continued leadership, he announced that the September 2006 TUC and Labour Party Conferences would be his last as leader and Prime Minister.
+
====In opposition====
 +
[[File:Ed Miliband on August 27, 2010 cropped-an less red-2.jpg|thumb|300px|[[Ed Miliband]], leader of the party, 2010–2015]]
 +
[[Harriet Harman]] became the [[Leader of the Opposition (United Kingdom)|Leader of the Opposition]] and acting Leader of the Labour Party following the resignation of [[Gordon Brown]], pending a leadership election subsequently won by [[Ed Miliband]]. Miliband emphasised "responsible capitalism" and greater state intervention to change the balance of the economy away from financial services. Tackling vested interests<ref>[https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-16624805 Ed Miliband: Surcharge culture is fleecing customers] ''BBC News'' (January 19, 2012). Retrieved July 16, 2023.</ref> and opening up closed circles in British society were themes he returned to a number of times. Miliband also argued for greater regulation of banks and energy companies.<ref name="New Statesman">[https://www.newstatesman.com/politics/2014/01/ed-milibands-banking-reform-speech-full-details Ed Miliband's Banking Reform Speech: The Full Details] ''New Statesman'' (January 16, 2014). Retrieved July 16, 2023.</ref>
  
On 10 May 2007, he announced that he would stand down as Prime Minister on 27 June 2007. [[Gordon Brown]], the long serving [[Chancellor of the Exchequer]], had long been widely expected to succeed Blair. He duly launched his campaign on 11 May 2007, and a few days later was the only candidate with sufficient nominations to stand. He therefore [[2007 Labour Party leadership election|took over]] as Labour leader on 24 June 2007 and took over as Prime Minister on 27 June 2007.
+
The [[Parliamentary Labour Party]] voted to abolish Shadow Cabinet elections in 2011,<ref>Barry Neild, [https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2011/jul/06/labour-abolish-shadow-cabinet-elections Labour MPs vote to abolish shadow cabinet elections] ''The Guardian'' (July 6, 2011). Retrieved July 16, 2023.</ref> ratified by the National Executive Committee and Party Conference.  
  
Previous to Gordon Brown's unopposed victory, his potential competitors included:
+
On March 1, 2014, at a special conference the party reformed internal Labour election procedures, including replacing the electoral college system for selecting new leaders with a "one member, one vote" system following the recommendation of a review by former general-secretary [[Ray Collins, Baron Collins of Highbury|Ray Collins]]. Mass membership would be encouraged by allowing "registered supporters" to join at a low cost, as well as full membership. Members from the trade unions would also have to explicitly "opt in" rather than "opt out" of paying a political levy to Labour.<ref>Andrew Grice, [https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/tony-blair-backs-ed-miliband-s-internal-labour-reforms-9161291.html Tony Blair backs Ed Miliband's internal Labour reforms] ''The Independent'' (February 28, 2014). Retrieved July 16, 2023.</ref>
* [[Work and Pensions Secretary]] [[John Hutton (politician)|John Hutton]]—he had announced that there should be a serious contender;
 
* [[John McDonnell (politician)|John McDonnell]]—he, Gordon Brown and Michael Meacher are so far the only declared candidates for the Labour leadership, although he may not be able to get the signatures of the 12.5% of Labour MPs required to proceed as a candidate. He has been a sitting MP since 1997 and is Chair of the [[Socialist Campaign Group]], although [[Alan John Simpson|Alan Simpson]] is annoyed that he did not consult with other members before putting himself forward as a candidate.
 
* [[Michael Meacher]] - On February 22nd 2007 declared his intention to stand for the leadership of the Labour Party claiming he had the support of a large number of MPs, many members of the Socialist Campaign Group are accusing Michael Meacher of trying to split the nominations and keep John McDonnell off the ballot paper.<ref>[http://politics.guardian.co.uk/labourleadership/story/0,,1935398,00.html Meacher denies he has been pressed to stand], [[The Guardian]], 30 October 2006</ref><ref>[http://observer.guardian.co.uk/leaders/story/0,,2020858,00.html This battle over the political crumbs is pathetic], [[The Observer]], 25 February 2007</ref>
 
  
Two potential candidates were touted in the media, but made it clear they would not stand:
+
In September 2014, Shadow Chancellor [[Ed Balls]] outlined his plans to cut the government's [[current account]] deficit, and the party carried these plans into the [[United Kingdom general election, 2015|2015 general election]]. Whereas Conservatives campaigned for a surplus on all government spending, including investment, by 2018-19, Labour stated it would [[balanced budget|balance the budget]], excluding investment, by 2020.<ref>Robert Preston, [https://www.bbc.com/news/business-29409022 Is Osborne right that a smaller state means a richer UK?] ''BBC News'' (September 29, 2014). Retrieved July 16, 2023.</ref>
*[[Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs]] [[David Miliband]] ruled himself out of both the leadership and deputy leadership contests and backed Gordon Brown for the leadership.
 
* [[Home Secretary]] [[John Reid (politician)|John Reid]] announced he was not planning to run for any other job than Home Secretary, and a few days before Blair's resignation announcement said that he would leave the cabinet at the same time as Blair, and not serve in a Brown government.
 
  
Blair's deputy leader [[John Prescott]] faced pressure over marital affairs and friendship with [[Philip Anschutz]]. John Prescott confirmed that he would stand down as deputy leader at the same time as Tony Blair left Downing Street.
+
The [[United Kingdom general election, 2015|2015 general election]] unexpectedly resulted in a net loss of seats, with Labour representation falling to 232 seats in the House of Commons.<ref>Sophie McIntyre, [https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/generalelection/how-many-seats-did-labour-win-10233557.html How many seats did Labour win?] ''The Independent'' (May 7, 2015). Retrieved July 16, 2023.</ref> The party lost 40 of its 41 seats in Scotland in the face of record swings to the Scottish National Party. Though Labour gained more than 20 seats in England and Wales, mostly from the [[Liberal Democrats (UK)|Liberal Democrats]] but also from the [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservative Party]], it lost more seats to the Conservatives, for net losses overall.<ref>[https://www.bbc.com/news/health-32633388 Labour election results: Ed Miliband resigns as leader] ''BBC News'' (May 8, 2015). Retrieved July 16, 2023</ref>
  
Some Labour MPs and members of the [[National Executive Committee]] attempted to get an election for the position of deputy leader abandoned in order to save the £2,000,000 it is estimated that the contest would cost.<ref>[http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/politics/article2060040.ece Labour may call off deputy leader race] [[The Independent]]</ref><ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/politics/6165671.stm Axe Labour deputy post, MP says] [[BBC News]]</ref> However, the nominations process has now been undergone, and the election proceeded, announcing its successful candidate on 24 June 2007.
+
The day after May 7, 2015 election, Miliband resigned as party leader. Harriet Harman again became acting leader. The Labour Party held a leadership election, in which [[Jeremy Corbyn]], then a member of the [[Socialist Campaign Group]],  was elected leader by a landslide. <ref>Rowena Mason, [https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2015/sep/12/jeremy-corbyn-wins-labour-party-leadership-election Labour leadership: Jeremy Corbyn elected with huge mandate] ''The Guardian'' (September 12, 2015). Retrieved July 16, 2023.</ref>
  
[[Hilary Benn]],<ref>[http://newsvote.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/6090384.stm Benn to run for deputy position] [[BBC News]]</ref> [[Hazel Blears]],<ref>[http://politics.guardian.co.uk/deputyleader/story/0,,2019516,00.html?gusrc=rss&feed=1 Blears to run for Labour deputy and admits party 'disengaged'] [[The Guardian]], Friday 23 February 2007</ref> [[Jon Cruddas]],<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/5385636.stm Ex-No 10 aide Cruddas will stand] [[BBC News]]</ref><ref>[http://politics.guardian.co.uk/labourleadership/story/0,,1925117,00.html Leftwinger launches deputy leadership campaign] [[The Guardian]]</ref> [[Peter Hain]],<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/5337604.stm Labour deputy race gathers pace] [[BBC News]]</ref> [[Harriet Harman]]<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/5350360.stm Harman intends Labour deputy bid] [[BBC News]]</ref> and [[Alan Johnson]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601085&sid=aFavvAbQK8gc&refer=europe|title=UK's Johnson Abandons Labour Party Leadership Race (Update2)|accessdate=2007-06-25}}</ref> all stood for the Deputy Leadership and obtained the necessary 45 nominations from Labour MPs. Harriet Harman won the deputy leadership narrowly defeating Alan Johnson with 50.43% of the final redistributed vote.
+
On April 18, 2017, [[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|Prime Minister]] [[Theresa May]] announced she would seek an unexpected [[snap election]] on June 8, 2017. Corbyn said he welcomed May's proposal and said his party would support the government's move in the parliamentary vote announced for 19 April.<ref>Jon Stone, [https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/jeremy-corbyn-early-general-election-2017-theresa-may-response-statement-june-8-date-a7688566.html Jeremy Corbyn welcomes Theresa May's announcement of an early election] ''The Independent'' (April 18, 2017). Retrieved July 16, 2023.</ref> Some of the [[opinion poll]]s had shown a 20-point Conservative lead over Labour before the election was called, but this lead had narrowed by the day of the general election, which resulted in a [[hung parliament]]. Despite remaining in opposition for its third election in a row, Labour at 40.0 percent won its greatest share of the vote since 2001, made a net gain of 30 seats to reach 262 total MPs, and, with a swing of 9.6 percent, achieved the biggest percentage-point increase in its vote share in a single general election since 1945.<ref>Harriet Agerholm and Louis Dore, [https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/jeremy-corbyn-election-result-vote-share-increased-1945-clement-attlee-a7781706.html Jeremy Corbyn increased Labour's vote share more than any of the party's leaders since 1945] ''The Independent'' (June 9, 2017). Retrieved July 16, 2023.</ref>
  
===Government difficulties with public opinion===
+
Following Labour's heavy defeat in the 2019 general election, Jeremy Corbyn announced that he would stand down as Leader of the Labour Party. Keir Starmer announced his candidacy in the ensuing leadership election on January 4, 2020, winning multiple endorsements from MPs as well as from the trade union [[Unison (trade union)|Unison]].<ref>[https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-50995782 Keir Starmer enters Labour leadership contest] ''BBC News'' (January 4, 2020). Retrieved July 15, 2023. </ref> He went on to win the leadership contest on April 4, 2020, beating rivals [[Rebecca Long-Bailey]] and [[Lisa Nandy]], and therefore also became [[Leader of the Opposition (United Kingdom)|Leader of the Opposition]].<ref>[https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-52164589 Keir Starmer Elected as new Labour leader] ''BBC News'' (April 4, 2020). Retrieved July 15, 2023. </ref> In his acceptance speech, he said would refrain from "scoring party political points" and that he planned to "engage constructively with the government", having become Opposition Leader amid the [[COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom|COVID-19 pandemic]].<ref>Nick Duffy, [https://inews.co.uk/news/uk/sir-keir-starmer-full-statement-new-labour-leader-engage-constructively-government-coronavirus-415523 Sir Keir Starmer statement in full: New Labour leader vows to 'engage constructively' with government on coronavirus] ''iNews'' (July 13, 2020). Retrieved July 15, 2023. </ref> He appointed his [[Shadow Cabinet of Keir Starmer|Shadow Cabinet]] the following day, which included former leader [[Ed Miliband]], as well as both of the candidates he defeated in the leadership contest. He also appointed [[Anneliese Dodds]] as [[Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer]], making her the first woman to serve in that position in either a ministerial or shadow ministerial position.<ref>[https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-52187354 Ed Miliband returns to Labour top team]  ''BBC News'' (April 6, 2020). Retrieved July 15, 2023.</ref>
  
Many Labour supporters remain unhappy with the Labour government's policies regarding [[Iraq]], [[Afghanistan]], the pensions crisis, and treatment of [[public-sector]] workers. Others have been critical of increased tax (especially [[stealth tax]]es) and increased government spending on education and health with limited results and falling [[productivity]].<ref> [[Alexander Lee]] and [[Timothy Stanley]], "Rebuilding Labour's Majority" (Compass Thinkpiece #17), http://www.compassonline.org.uk/publications/thinkpieces/item.asp?d=203 ; [[Alexander Lee]] and [[Timothy Stanley]], [[The End of Politics]], Triangulation, Realignment and the Battle for the Centre Ground, (London: Politico's, 2006)</ref>
+
In the 2023 United Kingdom local elections, Labour saw a net gain of 536 councillors and 22 councils, becoming the largest party of local government for the first time since 2002.<ref>Jennifer Scott, Faye Brown, and Alexandra Rogers, [https://news.sky.com/story/local-elections-2023-tories-lose-control-of-three-councils-as-labour-gains-key-authority-and-wins-mayoral-race-in-early-results-12873352 Local elections 2023: Labour overtakes Conservatives as largest party of local government] ''Sky News'' (May 6, 2023). Retrieved July 15, 2023. </ref>
  
The Labour party suffered significant defeats in devolved elections in [[Scotland]], [[Wales]] and local elections [[England]] on May 3 2007.<ref>[http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/story.html?id=9bd9a32e-968c-423b-9bde-9fc8ce319d6a&k=29728 Labour bracing for defeat] Peter Goodspeed, 'Labour bracing for defeat'</ref>
+
== Notes ==
 
 
In Scotland, Labour was reduced to the second largest Party after the [[Scottish National Party]] (SNP). In Wales, although still the largest party, it lost its already minority control of the Welsh Assembly. In England it lost so many local Councillors that it was reduced from second to third place in local Government, being overtaken by the [[Liberal Democrats]].
 
 
 
=== Party Funding through illegal means ===
 
 
 
The [[Donorgate]] scandal emerged on 26 November 2007 that the Labour party had received funding from [[David Abrahams]] via illegal means, the party's General Secretary immediately resigned. He took full responsibility, and the initial response from the party was that nobody knew who Abrahams was. The donations had been made via intermediaries in order to hide the original source. It later emerged that several contenders for the deputy leadership race - [[Harriet Harman]] and [[Hilary Benn]] - had both received donations from Abrahams. In Harman's case, the money had actually been received '''after''' the race had concluded. However, in an interview on the BBC's Newsnight, Abrahams claimed that he had only supported Hilary Benn in the contest, and when pressed on the issue of donating to Harman's campaign, he refused to give a decisive answer. Brown declared that the donations from Abrahams had been "unlawful"<ref>{{cite web | title="BBC - Brown admits donations 'unlawful'" | url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/7114327.stm | accessdate= November 27 | accessyear= 2007 }}</ref> and all monies would be returned. The issue has yet to be quelled, however, as many questions still remain unanswered. The biggest of these surrounds who knew about Abrahams' donations. In his Newsnight interview, Abrahams quoted from a letter he had received from the party's chief fundraiser, Jon Mendelsohn, which said "The party is of course very happy about all the help you have given to the party... As one of the party's strongest supporters I would like to meet you."<ref>{{cite web | title="The Telegraph - Gordon Brown says Labour donations 'illegal'" | url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/11/28/nbrown128.xml | accessdate= November 28 | accessyear= 2007 }}</ref> This casts serious doubt on the party's assertions that Abrahams' donations - and indeed Abrahams himself - was largely unknown.
 
 
 
==Leaders of the Labour Party since 1906==
 
{| class="sortable wikitable"
 
!
 
!
 
! Portrait
 
! Entered office
 
! Left office
 
! Length of Leadership
 
! Date of Birth and Death
 
|-
 
! 1
 
| [[James Keir Hardie|Keir Hardie]]
 
| [[Image:Jameskeirhardie.jpg|60px]]
 
| 17 February 1906
 
| 22 January 1908
 
| 1 year, 11 months
 
| 15 August 1856 - 26 September, 1915
 
|-
 
! 2
 
| [[Arthur Henderson]]
 
| [[Image:Arthurhenderson.jpg|60px]]
 
| 22 January 1908
 
| 14 February 1910
 
| 2 years
 
| 13 September 1863 - 20 October, 1935
 
|-
 
! 3
 
| [[George Nicoll Barnes]]
 
|
 
| 14 February, 1910
 
| 6 February 1911
 
| 11 months
 
| 2 January, 1859 - 21 April, 1940
 
|-
 
! 4
 
| [[James Ramsay MacDonald]]
 
| [[Image:Ramsaymacdonald03.jpg|60px]]
 
| 6 February, 1911
 
| 5 August 1914
 
| 3 years, 5 months
 
| 12 October 1866 - 9 November 1937
 
|-
 
! 5
 
| [[Arthur Henderson]]
 
| [[Image:Arthurhenderson.jpg|60px]]
 
| 5 August 1914
 
| 24 October 1917
 
| 3 years, 2 months
 
| (See Box No.2)
 
|-
 
! 6
 
| [[William Adamson]]
 
| [[Image:WilliamAdamson.jpg|60px]]
 
| 24 October 1917
 
| 14 February 1921
 
| 3 years, 3 months
 
| 2 April 1863 - 23 February, 1936
 
|-
 
! 7
 
| [[John Robert Clynes]]
 
| [[Image:Jrclynes.jpg|60px]]
 
| 14 February 1921
 
| 21 November 1922
 
| 1 year, 9 months
 
| 27 March 1869 - 23 October 1949
 
|-
 
! 8
 
| [[James Ramsay MacDonald]]
 
| [[Image:Ramsaymacdonald03.jpg|60px]]
 
| 21 November 1922
 
| 1 September 1931
 
| 8 years, 9 months
 
| (See Box No.4)
 
|-
 
! 9
 
| [[Arthur Henderson]]
 
| [[Image:Arthurhenderson.jpg|60px]]
 
| 1 September 1931
 
| 25 October 1932
 
| 1 year, 1 month, 24 days
 
| (See Box No.2)
 
|-
 
! 10
 
| [[George Lansbury]]
 
| [[Image:Lansbury-george.jpg|60px]]
 
| 25 October 1932
 
| 8 October 1935
 
| 2 years, 11 months
 
| 21 February 1859 - 7 May 1940
 
|-
 
! 11
 
| [[Clement Attlee]]
 
| [[Image:Clement Attlee.PNG|60px]]
 
| 8 October 1935
 
| 14 December 1955
 
| 20 years, 2 months
 
| 3 January 1883 - 8 October 1967
 
|-
 
! 12
 
| [[Hugh Gaitskell]]
 
| [[Image:Hugh Gaitskell.jpg|60px]]
 
| 14 December 1955
 
| 18 January 1963
 
| 7 years
 
| 9 April 1906 - 18 January 1963<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/january/18/newsid_3376000/3376971.stm Labour leader Hugh Gaitskell dies] [[BBC News]]</ref>
 
|-
 
! 13
 
| [[George Brown, Baron George-Brown|George Brown]]<sup>*</sup>
 
| [[Image:GeorgebrownUK.jpg|60px]]
 
| 18 January 1963<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.election.demon.co.uk/lableader.html|title=George Brown was leader under Labour Constitution having been Deputy Leader at time of death of leader|accessdate=2007-06-25}}</ref>
 
| 14 February 1963
 
| 27 days
 
| 2 September 1914 - 2 June 1985
 
|-
 
! 14
 
| [[Harold Wilson]]<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/march/16/newsid_2524000/2524099.stm Harold Wilson retires] [[BBC News]]</ref>
 
| [[Image:Dodwilson.JPG|60px]]
 
| 14 February 1963
 
| 5 April 1976
 
| 13 years, 1 month
 
| 11 March 1916 - 24 May 1995
 
|-
 
! 15
 
| [[James Callaghan]]
 
| [[Image:James Callaghan.JPG|60px]]
 
| 5 April 1976
 
| 3 November 1980
 
| 4 years, 6 months
 
| 27 March, 1912 - 26 March, 2005
 
|-
 
! 16
 
| [[Michael Foot]]
 
| [[Image:Michael Foot.jpg|60px]]
 
| 3 November 1980
 
| 2 October 1983
 
| 2 years, 10 months
 
| 23 July, 1913 - present
 
|-
 
! 17
 
| [[Neil Kinnock]]
 
| [[Image:Neil kinnock.jpg|60px]]
 
| 2 October 1983
 
| 18 July 1992
 
| 8 years, 9 months   
 
| 28 March, 1942 - present
 
|-
 
! 18
 
| [[John Smith (UK politician)|John Smith]]
 
| [[Image:JOHN SMITH PORTRAIT.JPG|60px]]
 
| 18 July 1992
 
| 12 May 1994
 
| 1 year, 9 months
 
| 13 September 1938 - 12 May 1994<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/may/12/newsid_2550000/2550803.stm Died from Heart Attack while Leader of the Opposition.] [[BBC News]]</ref>
 
|-
 
! 19
 
| [[Margaret Beckett]]<sup>*</sup>
 
| [[Image:Margaret Beckett May 2007.jpg|60px]]
 
| 12 May 1994
 
| 21 July 1994
 
| 2 months, 9 days
 
| 15 January, 1943 - present
 
|-
 
! 20
 
| [[Tony Blair]]
 
| [[Image:Blair June 2007.jpg|60px]]
 
| 21 July 1994<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/july/21/newsid_2515000/2515825.stm Labour chooses Blair] [[BBC News]]</ref><ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/may/2/newsid_2480000/2480505.stm First Labour Prime Minister since James Callaghan] [[BBC News]]</ref><ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/may/5/newsid_4919000/4919550.stm First Labour leader to win three General Elections in a row] [[BBC News]]</ref>
 
| 27 June 2007
 
| 12 years, 11 months
 
| 6 May, 1953 - present
 
|-
 
! 21
 
| [[Gordon Brown]]
 
| [[Image:Gordon Brown 2005 IMF close.jpg|60px]]
 
| 27 June 2007
 
| Present
 
| Ongoing
 
| 20 February, 1951 - present
 
|}
 
 
 
<sup>*</sup>''It should be noted that although these were technically Leaders of the Labour Party, they held this position only because of the death/resignation of the incumbent Leaders, and that neither was confirmed in the position by the party's electoral processes and therefore leaders by default. Both should be regarded as Acting Leaders, as they were at the time.''<br/>
 
 
 
==Deputy leaders of the Labour Party since 1922==
 
* [[John Robert Clynes]] 1922–1931
 
* Jointly [[John Robert Clynes]] 1931–1932 and [[William Graham (Scottish politician)|William Graham]] 1931–1932 (died in office)
 
* [[Clement Attlee]] 1932–1935
 
* [[Arthur Greenwood]] 1935–1945
 
* [[Herbert Morrison (politician)|Herbert Morrison]] 1945–1955
 
* [[James Griffiths]] 1955–1959
 
* [[Aneurin Bevan]] 1959–1960 (died in office)
 
* [[George Brown, Baron George-Brown|George Brown]] 1960–1970
 
* [[Roy Jenkins]] 1970–1972
 
* [[Edward Short]] 1972–1976
 
* [[Michael Foot]] 1976–1980
 
* [[Denis Healey]] 1980–1983
 
* [[Roy Hattersley]] 1983–1992
 
* [[Margaret Beckett]] 1992–1994
 
* [[John Prescott]] 1994–2007
 
* [[Harriet Harman]] 2007–present
 
 
 
==Leaders of the Labour Party in the House of Lords since 1924==
 
*[[Richard Haldane, 1st Viscount Haldane]] 1924-1928
 
*[[Charles Cripps, 1st Baron Parmoor]] 1928-1931
 
*[[Arthur Ponsonby, 1st Baron Ponsonby of Shulbrede]] 1931-1935
 
*[[Harry Snell, 1st Baron Snell]] 1935-1940
 
*[[Christopher Addison, 1st Viscount Addison]] 1940-1952
 
*[[William Jowitt, 1st Earl Jowitt]] 1952-1955
 
*[[Albert Victor Alexander, 1st Earl Alexander of Hillsborough]] 1955-1964
 
*[[Francis Pakenham, 7th Earl of Longford]] 1964-1968
 
*[[Edward Shackleton, Baron Shackleton]] 1968-1974
 
*[[Malcolm Shepherd, 2nd Baron Shepherd]] 1974-1976
 
*[[Fred Peart, Baron Peart]] 1976-1982
 
*[[Cledwyn Hughes, Baron Cledwyn of Penrhos]] 1982-1992
 
*[[Ivor Richard, Baron Richard]] 1992-1998
 
*[[Margaret Jay, Baroness Jay of Paddington]] 1998-2001
 
*[[Gareth Williams, Baron Williams of Mostyn]] 2001-2003
 
*[[Valerie Amos, Baroness Amos]] 2003-2007
 
*[[Catherine Ashton, Baroness Ashton of Upholland]] 2007-
 
 
 
==See also==
 
{|width=100%
 
|-valign=top
 
|width=33%|
 
*[[Co-operative Party]]
 
*[[Labour Co-operative]]
 
*[[History of British Socialism]]
 
*[[Labourhome]]
 
*[[Labour leadership election]]
 
*[[List of organisations associated with the British Labour Party]]
 
*[[List of Labour Party (UK) MPs]]
 
*[[Labour Party|List of other Labour Parties]]
 
|width=33%|
 
*[[UK topics]]
 
*[[Politics of the UK]]
 
*[[Labour Party (UK) leadership election, 2007]]
 
*[[Welsh Labour]]
 
*[[Scottish Labour Party]]
 
*[[Liberal Democrats|Liberal Democrat Party]]
 
*[[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservative Party]]
 
*[[Socialist Party (England and Wales)|Socialist Party]] (successor to Militant)
 
|}
 
*[[Respect Party]]
 
 
 
==References==
 
 
{{reflist|2}}
 
{{reflist|2}}
  
==Further reading==
+
== References ==
*Davies, A.J, ''To Build A New Jerusalem'' (1996) ISBN 0349108099
+
* Clark, Sir George. ''Illustrated History Of Great Britain''. Octopus Books, 1982. ISBN 978-0706416664
* Stephen Driver and Luke Martell, [http://www.sussex.ac.uk/Users/ssfa2/new%20labour.html ''New Labour: Politics after Thatcherism''], 1998, and [http://www.sussex.ac.uk/Users/ssfa2/blair%27s%20britain.html ''Blair's Britain''], 2002, [[Polity Press]].
+
* Cliff, Tony, and Donny Gluckstein. ''The Labour Party: A Marxist History''. Bookmarks, 1988. ISBN 978-0906224458
* Geoffrey Foote, ''The Labour Party's Political Thought: A History'', Macmillan, 1997 ed.
+
* Daniels, Gary, and John McIlroy (eds.). ''Trade Unions in a Neoliberal World: British Trade Unions under New Labour''. Routledge, 2009. ISBN 978-0415603096
* Martin Francis, ''Ideas and Policies under Labour 1945-51'', [[Manchester University Press]], 1997. ISBN 0719048338
+
* Davies, A.J, ''To Build A New Jerusalem''. London: Michael Joseph, 1992. ISBN 0349108099
* [[Roy Hattersley]], ''[[New Statesman]]'', May 10 2004, [http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0FQP/is_4687_133/ai_n6152909 'We should have made it clear that we too were modernisers']
+
* Foote, Geoffrey. ''The Labour Party's Political Thought: A History''. Dover, NH: Croom Helm, 1985. ISBN 978-0709910756
* David Howell, ''British Social Democracy'', Croom Helm, 1976
+
* Francis, Martin. ''Ideas and Policies under Labour 1945-51''. Manchester University Press, 1997. ISBN 0719048338
* David Howell, 'MacDonald's Party'', Oxford University Press, 2002.
+
* Howell, David. ''British Social Democracy''. Croom Helm, 1976. ISBN 978-0856641244
* Ralph Miliband, ''Parliamentary Socialism'', Merlin, 1960, 1972.
+
* Howell, David. ''MacDonald's Party''. Oxford University Press, 2002. ISBN 978-0198203049
* Kenneth O. Morgan, ''Labour in Power'', 1945-51,[[OUP]] 1984.
+
* Lavelle, Ashley. ''The Death of Social Democracy: Political Consequences for the 21st Century''. Routledge, 2008. ISBN 978-0754670148
* Kenneth O. Morgan, ''Labour People: Leaders and Lieutenants, Hardie to Kinnock'' [[OUP]], 1987.
+
* Miliband, Ralph. ''Parliamentary Socialism''. Merlin Press, 2009. ISBN 978-0850361353
*Henry Pelling and Alastair J. Reid, ''A Short History of the Labour Party'', Palgrave Macmillan, 2005 ed.
+
* Morgan, Kenneth O. ''Labour in Power, 1945-51''. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1984. ISBN 978-0192158659
* [[Ben Pimlott]], ''Labour and the Left in the 1930s'',[[Cambridge University Press]], 1977.
+
* Morgan, Kenneth O. ''Labour People: Leaders and Lieutenants, Hardie to Kinnock''. Faber and Faber, 2011. ISBN 978-0571259618
* Raymond Plant, Matt Beech and Kevin Hickson (2004), ''The Struggle for Labour's Soul: understanding Labour's political thought since 1945'', Routledge
+
* Pelling, Henry, and Alastair J. Reid. ''A Short History of the Labour Party''. Palgrave Macmillan, 2005. ISBN 1403993130
* [[Clive Ponting]], ''Breach of Promise'' (1964-70), [[Hamish Hamilton]] 1989.
+
* Pilger, John. ''Freedom Next time''. Bantam Press, 2006. ISBN 0593055527
* Greg Rosen, ''Dictionary of Labour Biography''. [[Politicos Publishing]], 2001. ISBN 1902301188
+
* Pimlott Ben. ''Labour and the Left in the 1930s''. Cambridge University Press, 1977. ISBN 978-0521214483
* Greg Rosen, ''Old Labour to New'', [[Politicos Publishing]], 2005. ISBN 1842750453
+
* Plant, Raymond, Matt Beech, and Kevin Hickson. ''The Struggle for Labour's Soul: Understanding Labour's political thought since 1945''. Routledge, 2004. ISBN 978-0415312844
*Eric Shaw, ''The Labour Party since 1979: Crisis and Transformation'', Routledge, 1994
+
* Ponting, Clive. ''Breach of Promise: Labour in power, 1964-1970''. H. Hamilton, 1989. ISBN 978-0241126837
*Andrew Thorpe, ''A History of the British Labour Party'', Palgrave Macmillan, 2001
+
* Rosen, Greg. ''Dictionary of Labour Biography''. Politicos Publishing, 2001. ISBN 1902301188
* Phillip Whitehead, ''The Writing on the Wall'' [[Michael Joseph]], 1985.
+
* Rosen, Greg. ''Old Labour to New''. Politicos Publishing, 2005. ISBN 1842750453
* Patrick Wintour and Colin Hughes, ''Labour Rebuilt'' [[Fourth Estate]], 1990.
+
* Shaw, Eric. ''The Labour Party since 1979: Crisis and Transformation''. Routledge, 1994. ISBN 978-0415056151
* [[John Pilger]], [[Freedom Next time]] Bantam Press 2006. ISBN 0593055527.
+
* Thorpe, Andrew. ''A History of the British Labour Party''. Palgrave Macmillan, 2001. ISBN 978-0333560808
 +
* Whitehead, Phillip. ''The Writing on the Wall''. Michael Joseph, 1985. ISBN 978-0718128074
 +
* Wintour, Patrick, and Colin Hughes. ''Labour Rebuilt: The New Model Party''. Fourth Estate, 1990. ISBN 978-1872180700
 +
* Wright, Tony, and Matt Carter. ''People's Party: The History of the Labour Party''. Thames & Hudson Ltd, 1997. ISBN 978-0500279564
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
*[http://www.labour.org.uk Official Labour Party website]
+
All links retrieved July 16, 2023.
*[http://www.labour-party.org.uk/ Unofficial website with an archive of electoral manifestos and a directory of related websites]
 
*[http://www.labourhome.org/ Labourhome - unofficial Labour Party grassroots]
 
* Labour History Group website. [http://www.labourhistory.org.uk/]
 
*[http://labhist.tripod.com Unofficial history website]
 
*[http://politics.guardian.co.uk/labour/ Guardian Unlimited Politics—Special Report: Labour Party]
 
*[http://www.Leftiness.org The Johnathan Leftwinger MP internet web-browser site page computer documents (satire).]
 
*[http://www.laboursouthall.com Labour Party's Ealing Southall website]
 
*[http://www.sedgefield-labour.com Labour Party's Sedgefield website]
 
*[http://www.elthamlabour.org.uk Labour Party's Eltham website]
 
*[http://www.southwarklabour.co.uk/ Labour in Southwark]
 
*[http://www.newstin.co.uk/uk/labour-party Labour Party aggregated news (multilingual)]
 
*[http://www.labouronline.org/wibs/166512/home Gloucester CLP website ]
 
*[http://www.aberavon.labour.co.uk Aberavon Constituency Labour Party website]
 
Labour History Archive and Study Centre holds archives of the National Labour Party see: http://www.phm.org.uk/
 
  
==Other British political parties==
+
*[https://labour.org.uk/ The Labour Party]
{{British political parties}}
+
*[https://scottishlabour.org.uk/ Scottish Labour]
 +
*[http://www.labour-party.org.uk/ An UNOFFICIAL site on the Labour Party]
  
 
[[Category:Politics and social sciences]]
 
[[Category:Politics and social sciences]]
 
[[Category:Politics]]
 
[[Category:Politics]]
  
 
+
{{credits|255401136}}
{{credits|176873782}}
 

Latest revision as of 19:37, 16 July 2023


Labour Party
Leader Keir Starmer
Founded 1900
Headquarters 105 Victoria Street
London
Political Ideology Social democracy
Democratic socialism
Political Position Centre-left
International Affiliation Socialist International
European Affiliation Party of European Socialists
European Parliament Group Party of European Socialists
Colours Red
Website www.labour.org.uk
See also Politics of the UK

Political parties
Elections

The Labour Party is a political party in the United Kingdom. Founded at the start of the twentieth century, it has been, since the 1920s, the principal party of the left in Great Britain, which comprises England, Scotland and Wales, but not Northern Ireland, where the Social Democratic and Labour Party occupies a roughly similar position on the political spectrum (although people in Northern Ireland are eligible to join the Labour Party). The party is described as centre-left, bringing together an alliance of social democratic, democratic socialist, and trade unionist outlooks.

Labour surpassed the Liberal Party as the main opposition to the Conservatives in the early 1920s. It has had several spells in government, first as minority governments under Ramsay MacDonald in 1924 and 1929-1931, then as a junior partner in the wartime coalition from 1940-1945, and then as a majority government, under Clement Attlee in 1945-1951 and under Harold Wilson in 1964-1970. Labour was in government again in 1974-1979 under Wilson and then James Callaghan, though with a precarious and declining majority. The Labour Party was more recently in government from 1997 to 2010 under Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, during the "New Labour" era.

The party's platform emphasises greater state intervention, social justice and strengthening workers' rights. Labour is a full member of the Party of European Socialists and Progressive Alliance, and holds observer status in the Socialist International.

Party ideology

The Labour Party grew out of the trade union movement and socialist political parties of the nineteenth century, and continues to describe itself as a party of democratic socialism. Labour was the first political party in Great Britain to stand for the representation of the low-paid working class and the working class were known as the Labour Party grassroots and members and voters. Historically within the party, differentiation was made between the social democratic and the socialist wings of the party, the latter often subscribing to a radical socialist, even Marxist, ideology.

Traditionally, the party was in favor of socialist policies such as public ownership of key industries, government intervention in the economy, redistribution of wealth, increased rights for workers and trade unions, and a belief in the welfare state and publicly funded healthcare and education:

The Labour Party is a democratic socialist party. It believes that by the strength of our common endeavour we achieve more than we achieve alone, so as to create for each of us the means to realise our true potential and for all of us a community in which power, wealth and opportunity are in the hands of the many, not the few, where the rights we enjoy reflect the duties we owe, and where we live together, freely, in a spirit of solidarity, tolerance and respect. [1]

Since the mid-1980s, under the leadership of Neil Kinnock, John Smith and Tony Blair the party has moved away from its traditional socialist position towards what is often described as the "Third Way," adopting some free market policies.[2]

This led many observers to describe the Labour Party as social democratic or even neo-liberal rather than democratic socialist.[3] The Labour government under Blair and then Gordon Brown brought in policies such as introducing a minimum wage and increasing the spending on the National Health Service (NHS) and education. It was also credited with reducing the gap between the rich and poor.[4]

Party electoral manifestos have not contained the term socialism since 1992. The new version of Clause IV, though affirming a commitment to democratic socialism,[1] no longer definitely commits the party to public ownership of industry: in its place it advocates "the enterprise of the market and the rigour of competition" along with "high quality public services ... either owned by the public or accountable to them."[1]

Some commentators have argued that traditional social democratic parties across Europe, including the British Labour Party, have been so deeply transformed in recent years that it is no longer possible to describe them ideologically as "social democratic,"[5] and claim that this ideological shift has put new strains on the Labour Party's traditional relationship with the trade unions.[6]

Party constitution and structure

The Labour Party is a membership organization consisting of Constituency Labour Parties, affiliated trade unions, socialist societies, and the Co-operative Party, with which it has an electoral agreement. Members who are elected to parliamentary positions take part in the Parliamentary Labour Party (PLP) and European Parliamentary Labour Party (EPLP). The party's decision-making bodies on a national level formally include the National Executive Committee (NEC), Labour Party Conference, and National Policy Forum (NPF)–although in practice the Parliamentary leadership has the final say on policy. Questions of internal party democracy have frequently provoked disputes in the party.

For many years Labour held to a policy of uniting Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland by consent, and had not allowed residents of Northern Ireland to apply for membership, instead supporting the nationalist Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) which informally takes the Labour whip at the House of Commons.[7] Yet, Labour has a unionist faction in its ranks, many of whom assisted in the foundation in 1995 of the UK Unionist Party led by Robert McCartney. The 2003 Labour Party Conference accepted legal advice that the party could not continue to prohibit residents of the province joining.[8]

Labour is strictly not a political party, but instead a composition of trade unions and various political organizations. Labour defines a difference between the leading Parliamentary Labour Party (PLP), Constituency Labour Parties (CLP), Socialist Societies, Trade Union affiliates and various political parties that choose to affiliate to Labour known as entryist groups, though the Communist Party of Britain has been refused affiliation on occasion. Vladimir Lenin argued that socialist parties should affiliate to Labour to influence the PLP.[9]

History

Founding of the party

The Labour Party's origins lie in the late nineteenth century when it became apparent that there was a need for a political party to represent the interests and needs of the urban proletariat which had increased in numbers, and of working-class males who had recently been given franchise. Some members of the trade union movement became interested in moving into the political field, and after the extensions of the franchise in 1867 and 1885, the Liberal Party endorsed some trade-union sponsored candidates. In addition, several small socialist groups had formed around this time with the intention of linking the movement to political policies. Among these were the Independent Labour Party, the intellectual and largely middle-class Fabian Society, the Social Democratic Federation and the Scottish Labour Party.

In the 1895 General Election the Independent Labour Party put up 28 candidates, but won only 44,325 votes. Keir Hardie, the leader of the party believed that to obtain success in parliamentary elections, it would be necessary to join with other left-wing groups.

Labour Representation Committee

Keir Hardie, one of the Labour Party's founders and first leader

In 1899, a Doncaster member of the Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants, Thomas R. Steels, proposed in his union branch that the Trade Union Congress call a special conference to bring together all the left-wing organizations and form them into a single body which would sponsor Parliamentary candidates. The motion was passed at all stages by the TUC, and this special conference was held at the Memorial Hall, Farringdon Street, London on February 26-27, 1900. The meeting was attended by a broad spectrum of working-class and left-wing organizations; trade unions representing about one third of the membership of the TUC delegates.[10]

Labour Party Plaque from Caroone House 8 Farringdon Street (demolished 2004)

After a debate, the 129 delegates passed Hardie's motion to establish "a distinct Labour group in Parliament, who shall have their own whips, and agree upon their policy, which must embrace a readiness to cooperate with any party which for the time being may be engaged in promoting legislation in the direct interests of labour."[11] This created an association called the Labour Representation Committee (LRC), meant to coordinate attempts to support MPs—MPs sponsored by trade unions and representing the working-class population.[12] It had no single leader. In the absence of one, the Independent Labour Party nominee Ramsay MacDonald was elected as Secretary. He had the difficult task of keeping the various strands of opinions in the LRC united. The October 1900 "Khaki election" came too soon for the new party to effectively campaign; total expenses for the election only came to £33.[13] Only 15 candidatures were sponsored, but two were successful: Keir Hardie in Merthyr Tydfil and Richard Bell in Derby.[14]

Support for the LRC was boosted by the 1901 Taff Vale Case, a dispute between strikers and a railway company that ended with the union ordered to pay £23,000 damages for a strike. The judgment effectively made strikes illegal since employers could recoup the cost of lost business from the unions. The apparent acquiescence of the Conservative government of Arthur Balfour to industrial and business interests (traditionally the allies of the Liberal Party in opposition to the Conservative's landed interests) intensified support for the LRC against a government that appeared to have little concern for the industrial proletariat and its problems.[14]

In the 1906 election, the LRC won 29 seats—helped by the secret 1903 pact between Ramsay Macdonald and Liberal Chief Whip Herbert Gladstone, which aimed at avoiding Labour/Liberal contests in the interest of removing the Conservatives from office.[14]

In their first meeting after the election, the group's Members of Parliament decided adopt the name "The Labour Party" (February 15, 1906). Keir Hardie, who had taken a leading role in getting the party established, was elected as Chairman of the Parliamentary Labour Party (in effect, the Leader), although only by one vote over David Shackleton after several ballots. In the party's early years, the Independent Labour Party (ILP) provided much of its activist base as the party did not have an individual membership until 1918 and operated as a conglomerate of affiliated bodies until that date. The Fabian Society provided much of the intellectual stimulus for the party. One of the first acts of the new Liberal government was to reverse the Taff Vale judgment.[14]

Early years, and the rise of the Labour Party

The December 1910 General Election saw 42 Labour MPs elected to the House of Commons.

This was a significant victory since a year before the election the House of Lords had passed the Osborne judgment which ruled that Trades Unions in the United Kingdom could no longer donate money to fund the election campaigns and wages of Labour MPs. The governing Liberals were unwilling to repeal this judicial decision with primary legislation. The height of Liberal compromise was to introduce a wage for Members of Parliament, to remove the need to involve the Trade Unions. By 1913, faced with the opposition of the largest Trade Unions, the Liberal government passed the Trade Disputes Act to once more allow Trade Unions to fund Labour MPs.

During the First World War the Labour Party split between supporters and opponents of the conflict and opposition within the party to the war grew as time went on. Ramsay MacDonald, a notable anti-war campaigner, resigned as leader of the Parliamentary Labour Party and Arthur Henderson became the main figure of authority within the Party and was soon accepted into H. H. Asquith's War Cabinet, becoming the first Labour Party member to serve in government.

Despite mainstream Labour Party's support for the Coalition, the Independent Labour Party was instrumental in opposing mobilization through organizations such as the Non-Conscription Fellowship and a Labour Party affiliate, the British Socialist Party, organized a number of unofficial strikes.

Arthur Henderson resigned from the Cabinet in 1917 amidst calls for Party unity, being replaced by George Barnes. The growth in Labour's local activist base and organization was reflected in the elections following the War, with the co-operative movement now providing its own resources to the Co-operative Party after the armistice. The Co-operative Party later reached an electoral agreement with the Labour Party.

Following the war, the Liberal Party went into rapid decline. With the party suffering a catastrophic split between supporters of leader David Lloyd George and former leader H. H. Asquith. This allowed the Labour Party to co-opt much of the Liberals' support.

With the Liberals in disarray, Labour won 142 seats at the 1922 General Election making it the second largest political group in the British House of Commons and the official opposition to the Conservative Government. After the election, the now rehabilitated Ramsay MacDonald was voted the first official leader of the Labour Party.

First Labour governments

Ramsay MacDonald, the first Labour Prime Minister, 1924, 1929–1931 (National from 1931-35)

MacDonald government (1924)

The 1923 general election was fought on the Conservatives' protectionist proposals; although they got the most votes and remained the largest party, they lost their majority in parliament, requiring a government supporting free trade to be formed. So with the acquiescence of Asquith's Liberals, Ramsay MacDonald became Prime Minister in January 1924 and formed the first ever Labour government, despite Labour only having 191 MPs (less than a third of the House of Commons).

Because the government had to rely on the support of the Liberals, it was unable to get any socialist legislation passed by the House of Commons. The only significant measure was the Wheatley Housing Act which began a building programme of 500,000 homes for rent to working-class families.

The government collapsed after only nine months when the Liberals voted for a Select Committee inquiry into the Campbell Case, a vote which MacDonald had declared to be a vote of confidence. The ensuing general election saw the publication, four days before polling day, of the notorious Zinoviev letter, which implicated Labour in a plot for a Communist revolution in Britain, and the Conservatives were returned to power, although Labour increased its vote from 30.7 percent of the popular vote to a third of the popular vote; most of the Conservative gains were at the expense of the Liberals. The Zinoviev letter is now generally believed to have been a forgery.[15]

In opposition, Ramsay MacDonald continued with his policy of presenting the Labour Party as a moderate force in politics. During the General Strike of 1926 he opposed strike action arguing that the best way to achieve social reforms was through the ballot box.

MacDonald government (1929-1931)

At the 1929 general election the Labour Party for the first time became the largest grouping in the House of Commons with 287 seats, and 37.1 percent of the popular vote (actually slightly less than the Conservatives). However, MacDonald was still reliant on Liberal support to form a minority government.

The government however, soon found itself engulfed in crisis; The Wall Street Crash of 1929 and eventual Great Depression occurred soon after the government came to power, and the crisis hit Britain hard. By the end of 1930, the unemployment rate had doubled to over 2.5 million.[16]

The government had no effective answers to the crisis. By the summer of 1931, a dispute over whether to introduce large cuts to public spending split the government. With the economic situation worsening, MacDonald agreed to form a "National Government" with the Conservatives and the Liberals.

On August 24, 1931, MacDonald submitted the resignation of his ministers and led a small number of his senior colleagues in forming the National Government with the other parties. This move caused great anger within the Labour Party and MacDonald and his supporters were then expelled from the Labour Party and formed the National Labour Party. The remaining Labour Party, now led by Arthur Henderson, and a few Liberals went into opposition.

Soon after this, a General Election was called. The 1931 election resulted in a landslide victory for the National Government, and was a disaster for the Labour Party which won only 52 seats, 225 fewer than in 1929.

Opposition during the 1930s

Arthur Henderson, who had been elected in 1931 as Labour leader to succeed MacDonald, lost his seat in the 1931 General Election. The only former Labour cabinet member who survived the landslide was the pacifist George Lansbury, who accordingly became party leader.

The party experienced a further split in 1932 when the Independent Labour Party, which for some years had been increasingly at odds with the Labour leadership, opted to disaffiliate from the Labour Party. The ILP embarked on a long drawn out decline.

Lansbury resigned as leader in 1935 after public disagreements over foreign policy. He was replaced as leader by his deputy, Clement Attlee. The party experienced a revival at the 1935 General Election, winning a similar number of votes to those attained in 1929 and actually, at 38 percent of the popular vote, the highest percentage that Labour had ever achieved, securing 154 seats.

With the rising threat from Nazi Germany in the 1930s, the Labour Party gradually abandoned its earlier pacifist stance, and came out in favor of rearmament. This shift largely came about due to the efforts of Ernest Bevin and Hugh Dalton who by 1937 also persuaded the party to oppose Neville Chamberlain's policy of appeasement.[16]

Wartime coalition

The party was brought back into government in 1940 as part of a wartime coalition government: When Neville Chamberlain resigned as Prime Minister after the defeat in Norway in spring 1940, and incoming Prime Minister Winston Churchill decided that it was important to bring the other main parties into the government and have a Wartime Coalition similar to that in the First World War. Clement Attlee became Lord Privy Seal and a member of the War cabinet, and was effectively (and eventually formally) Deputy Prime Minister for the remainder of the duration of the War in Europe.

A number of other senior Labour figures took up senior positions: the trade union leader Ernest Bevin as Minister of Labour directed Britain's wartime economy and allocation of manpower; the veteran Labour statesman Herbert Morrison became Home Secretary; Hugh Dalton was Minister of Economic Warfare and later President of the Board of Trade; and A. V. Alexander resumed the role of First Lord of the Admiralty he had held in the previous Labour government. The party generally performed well in government, and its experience there may have been partly responsible for its post-war success.

Post-War victory under Attlee

With the end of the war in Europe in May 1945, Labour resolved not to repeat the Liberals' error of 1918, and withdrew from the government to contest the 1945 general election (July 5) in opposition to Churchill's Conservatives. Surprising many observers, Labour won a landslide victory, winning just under 50 percent of the vote with a majority of 145 seats.

Clement Attlee: Labour Prime Minister 1945-1951

Clement Attlee's government proved to be one of the most radical British governments of the twentieth century. It presided over a policy of selective nationalization of major industries and utilities, including the Bank of England, coal mining, the steel industry, electricity, gas, telephones, and inland transport (including the railways, road haulage and canals). It developed the "cradle to grave" welfare state conceived by the Liberal economist William Beveridge. To this day, the party still considers the creation in 1948 of Britain's publicly funded National Health Service under health minister Aneurin Bevan its proudest achievement.

Attlee's government also began the process of dismantling the British Empire when it granted independence to India in 1947. This was followed by Burma (Myanmar) and Ceylon (Sri Lanka) the following year.

With the onset of the Cold War, at a secret meeting in January 1947, Attlee, and six cabinet ministers including foreign minister Ernest Bevin, secretly decided to proceed with the development of Britain's nuclear deterrent,[16] in opposition to the pacifist and anti-nuclear stances of a large element inside the Labour Party.

Labour won the 1950 general election but with a much reduced majority of five seats. Soon after the 1950 election, things started to go badly for the Labour government. Defense became one of the divisive issues for Labour itself, especially defense spending (which reached 14 percent of GDP in 1951 during the Korean War).[17] These costs put enormous strain on public finances, forcing savings to be found elsewhere. The Chancellor of the Exchequer, Hugh Gaitskell introduced prescription charges for NHS prescriptions, causing Bevan, along with Harold Wilson (President of the Board of Trade) to resign over the dilution of the principle of free treatment.

Soon after this, another election was called. Labour narrowly lost the October 1951 election to the Conservatives, despite their receiving a larger share of the popular vote and, in fact, their highest vote ever numerically.

Most of the changes introduced by the 1945-1951 Labour government however were accepted by the Conservatives and became part of the "post war consensus," which lasted until the 1970s.

The "Thirteen Wasted Years"

Following their defeat in 1951 the party underwent a long period in opposition lasting 13 years. The party suffered an ideological split during the 1950s, and the postwar economic recovery meant that the public was broadly contented with the Conservative governments of the time. Attlee remained as leader until his retirement in 1955.

His replacement Hugh Gaitskell struggled with internal divisions within the party in the late 1950s and early 1960s, and Labour lost the 1959 general election. Gaitskell's sudden death in 1963 made way for Harold Wilson to lead the party.

The 1960s and 1970s

Wilson government (1964-1970)

Harold Wilson, Labour Prime Minister 1964–1970 and 1974-1976

A downturn in the economy, along with a series of scandals in the early 1960s (the most notorious being the Profumo affair), engulfed the Conservative government by 1963. The Labour party returned to government with a razor-thin four-seat majority under Wilson in the 1964 election, and increased their majority to 96 in 1966 election.

Events derailed the wave of optimism which swept Labour to power in 1964. Wilson's government inherited a large trade deficit, which led to a currency crisis and an ultimately doomed attempt to stave off devaluation of the pound.

Despite the crisis, Wilson's government was responsible for a number of social and educational reforms such as legalization of abortion and homosexuality, and the abolition of the death penalty for murder. The 1960s Labour government also expanded comprehensive education and created the Open University.

Labour unexpectedly lost the 1970 general election to the Conservatives under Edward Heath. Heath's government however soon ran into trouble over Northern Ireland and a dispute with miners in 1973 which led to the "three-day week."

The 1970s proved to be a very difficult time to be in government for both the Conservatives and Labour due to the 1973 oil crisis which caused high inflation and a global recession.

Labour returned to power again under Wilson a few weeks after the February 1974 general election, forming a minority government with Ulster Unionist support. The Conservatives were unable to form a government as they had fewer seats, even though they had received more votes. It was the first General Election since 1924 in which both main parties received less than 40 percent of the popular vote, and was the first of six successive General Elections in which Labour failed to reach 40 percent of the popular vote. In a bid for Labour to gain a majority, a second election was soon called for October 1974 in which Labour, still with Harold Wilson as leader, scraped a majority of three, gaining just 18 seats and taking their total to 319.

Labour in power 1974-1979

In government, the Labour Party's internal splits over Britain's membership of the European Economic Community (EEC) which Britain had entered under Edward Heath in 1972, led to a national referendum on the issue in 1975, in which two thirds of the public supported continued membership.

James Callaghan: Labour Prime Minister from 1976 to 1979.

The Labour Government struggled for much of its time in office with serious economic problems and a precarious and declining majority in the commons. Fear of advances by the nationalist parties, particularly in Scotland, led to the suppression of a report from Scottish Office economist Gavin McCrone which suggested that an independent Scotland would be 'chronically in surplus' and to secret collusion with Margaret Thatcher's Conservatives. Harold Wilson unexpectedly resigned as prime minister in 1976. He was replaced by James Callaghan.

The Wilson and Callaghan governments were hampered by their lack of a workable majority in the commons. At the October 1974 election, Labour won a majority of only three seats. Several by election losses and defections to the breakaway Scottish Labour Party meant that by 1977, Callaghan was heading a minority government, and was forced to do deals with other parties to survive. An arrangement was negotiated in 1977 with the Liberal leader David Steel known as the Lib-Lab pact, but this ended after one year. After this, deals were made with various small parties, including the Scottish National Party and the Welsh nationalist Plaid Cymru, which prolonged the life of the government slightly longer.

The nationalist parties demanded devolution to their respective countries in return for their support for the government. When referendums for Scottish and Welsh devolution were held in March 1979, the Welsh referendum was rejected outright, and the Scottish referendum had a narrow majority in favor but did not reach the threshold of 40 percent support of the electorate, a requirement of the legislation. When the Labour Government refused to push ahead with setting up the Scottish Assembly, the SNP withdrew its support for the government, causing the government to collapse on a vote of no confidence.

The Wilson and Callaghan governments in the 1970s tried to control inflation (which had reached 26.9 percent in 1975) by instituting a policy of wage restraint. This policy was initially fairly successful at controlling inflation, which had been reduced to 7.4 percent by 1978.[14] However, it led to increasingly strained relations between the government and the trade unions.

Callaghan had been widely expected to call a general election in the autumn of 1978, when most opinion polls showed Labour to have a narrow lead.[14] However instead, he decided to extend the wage restraint policy for another year in the hope that the economy would be in a better shape in time for a 1979 election. This proved to be a big mistake.

During the winter of 1978-1979 there were widespread strikes in favor of higher pay rises which caused significant disruption to everyday life. The strikes affected lorry drivers, railway workers, car workers and local government and hospital workers. These came to be dubbed as the "Winter of Discontent."

The strikes made Callaghan's government unpopular. After the withdrawal of SNP support for the government, the Conservatives put down a vote of no confidence, which was held and passed by one vote on March 28, 1979, forcing a general election.

In the 1979 general election, Labour suffered electoral defeat to the Conservatives led by Margaret Thatcher. The numbers voting Labour hardly changed between February 1974 and 1979, but in 1979 the Conservative Party achieved big increases in support in the Midlands and South of England, mainly from the ailing Liberals, and benefited from a surge in turnout.

The 'Wilderness Years' (1979-1997)

Following their defeat at the 1979 election, the Labour Party underwent a period of bitter internal rivalry in the Labour Party which had become increasingly divided between the ever more dominant left-wingers under Michael Foot and Tony Benn (whose supporters dominated the party organization at the grassroots level), and the right under Denis Healey.

The election of Michael Foot as leader in 1980, dismayed many on the right of the party, who believed that Labour was becoming too left-wing. In 1981 a group of four former cabinet ministers from the right and center of the Labour Party (Shirley Williams, William Rodgers, Roy Jenkins, and David Owen) issued the "Limehouse Declaration" and formed the breakaway Social Democratic Party.

Margaret Thatcher's government was initially deeply unpopular due to high unemployment and inflation but the success of the Falklands War in 1982, her success in controlling inflation and the right to buy revived her popularity, while the formation of the SDP split the opposition vote. The Labour Party was defeated by a landslide in the 1983 general election winning only 27.6 percent of the vote, their lowest share since 1918. Labour won only half-a-million votes more than the SDP-Liberal Alliance which had attracted the votes of many moderate Labour supporters.

Michael Foot resigned as leader and was replaced by Neil Kinnock, who progressively moved the party towards the center. Labour improved its performance at the 1987 general election, gaining 20 seats reducing the Conservative majority to 102 from 143 in 1983, despite a sharp rise in turnout.

Neil Kinnock was seen as too right-wing for much of the Labour Left—especially the Militant Tendency that Kinnock later forced them out of the party; they would later become the Socialist Party of England and Wales.

Margaret Thatcher was replaced as prime minister by John Major in 1990. By the time of the 1992 general election, the economy was in recession and, despite the personal unpopularity of Neil Kinnock, Labour looked as if it could win. The party had dropped its policy of Unilateral Nuclear Disarmament, and had tried to present itself as a credible government-in-waiting. Most opinion polls showed the party to have a slight lead over the Conservatives, although rarely sufficient for a majority. The Conservatives were returned to power but with a much reduced majority of 20. Although Labour's support was comparable to the February and October 1974 and May 1979 General Elections, the overall turnout was much larger.

Kinnock resigned as leader and was replaced by John Smith. Soon after the 1992 election, the Conservative government ran into trouble, when on Black Wednesday it was forced to leave the European Exchange Rate Mechanism. After this, Labour moved ahead in the opinion polls as the Conservatives declined in popularity. John Smith's sudden death from a heart attack in May 1994 made way for Tony Blair to lead the Party.

New Labour

Tony Blair, Labour Prime Minister 1997-2007

Tony Blair moved the party further to the right, adopting policies which broke with Labour's socialist heritage at the 1995 mini-conference in a strategy to increase the party's appeal to "middle England."

"New Labour" was first termed as an alternative branding for the Labour Party, dating from a conference slogan first used by the Labour Party in 1994 which was later seen in a draft manifesto published by the party in 1996, called New Labour, New Life For Britain. The rise of the name coincided with a rightwards shift of the British political spectrum; for Labour, this was a continuation of the trend that had begun under the leadership of Neil Kinnock. "New Labour" as a name has no official status but remains in common use to distinguish modernizers from those holding to more traditional positions who normally are referred to as "Old Labour." New Labour has been used a derogative term by some to separate the "Thatcherite" policies adopted by Tony Blair and Gordon Brown to that of Old Labour and the old Clause 4.

New Labour's apparent abandoning of working class supporters has resulted, some argue, in the Campaign for a New Workers' Party, the Respect Coalition, the rise in the Scottish National Party and the British National Party, revival of the Conservative Party, questioning of capitalism and trade union activity that has not been seen since the 1980s.

In government

With the unpopularity of John Major's government, the Labour party won the 1997 election with a landslide majority of 179.

Among the early acts of Tony Blair's government were the establishment of the National minimum wage, the devolution of power to Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, and the re-creation of a city-wide government body for London; the Greater London Authority.

Labour went on to win the 2001 election with a similar majority to 1997. Tony Blair controversially allied himself with President George W. Bush in supporting the Iraq War, which lost his government much support.[18]

At the 2005 election, Labour was returned to power with a much reduced majority.

The party lost power in Scotland after losing the 2007 Scottish Parliament election. In the same year, Tony Blair stood down as prime minister and was replaced by Gordon Brown. Although the party experienced a brief rise in the polls, the party's popularity soon slumped to its lowest level since under Michael Foot. During May 2008, Labour suffered heavy defeats in the London mayoral election, local elections and the Crewe and Nantwich by-election, culminating in the party registering its worst ever opinion poll result since records began in 1943, of 23 percent.[19]

Finance proved a major problem for the Labour Party at the beginning of the twenty-first century. A "cash for peerages" scandal under Tony Blair resulted in the drying up of many major sources of donations. Declining party membership, partially due to the reduction of activists' influence upon policymaking under the reforms of Neil Kinnock and Tony Blair, has also contributed to financial woes.

Gordon Brown's Labour government suffered its first significant defeat in the House Of Lords on October 15, 2008, when the Lords rejected proposals to allow police to hold terror suspects for 42 days without charge. Gordon Brown was accused of a "tax bombshell" by opposition leader David Cameron, who argued that the "tax cut" of VAT by 2.5 percent and the overall tax cut package was funded by debt which would lead to future tax increases.[20]

In the 2010 general election, Labour with 29.0 percent of the vote won the second largest number of seats (258). The Conservatives with 36.5 percent of the vote won the largest number of seats (307), but no party had an overall majority, meaning that Labour could still remain in power if they managed to form a coalition with more than one other smaller party to gain an overall majority; anything less would result in a minority government. On 10 May 2010, after talks to form a coalition with the Liberal Democrats broke down, Brown announced his intention to stand down as Leader before the Labour Party Conference, and a day later resigned as both Prime Minister and party leader.

In opposition

Ed Miliband, leader of the party, 2010–2015

Harriet Harman became the Leader of the Opposition and acting Leader of the Labour Party following the resignation of Gordon Brown, pending a leadership election subsequently won by Ed Miliband. Miliband emphasised "responsible capitalism" and greater state intervention to change the balance of the economy away from financial services. Tackling vested interests[21] and opening up closed circles in British society were themes he returned to a number of times. Miliband also argued for greater regulation of banks and energy companies.[22]

The Parliamentary Labour Party voted to abolish Shadow Cabinet elections in 2011,[23] ratified by the National Executive Committee and Party Conference.

On March 1, 2014, at a special conference the party reformed internal Labour election procedures, including replacing the electoral college system for selecting new leaders with a "one member, one vote" system following the recommendation of a review by former general-secretary Ray Collins. Mass membership would be encouraged by allowing "registered supporters" to join at a low cost, as well as full membership. Members from the trade unions would also have to explicitly "opt in" rather than "opt out" of paying a political levy to Labour.[24]

In September 2014, Shadow Chancellor Ed Balls outlined his plans to cut the government's current account deficit, and the party carried these plans into the 2015 general election. Whereas Conservatives campaigned for a surplus on all government spending, including investment, by 2018-19, Labour stated it would balance the budget, excluding investment, by 2020.[25]

The 2015 general election unexpectedly resulted in a net loss of seats, with Labour representation falling to 232 seats in the House of Commons.[26] The party lost 40 of its 41 seats in Scotland in the face of record swings to the Scottish National Party. Though Labour gained more than 20 seats in England and Wales, mostly from the Liberal Democrats but also from the Conservative Party, it lost more seats to the Conservatives, for net losses overall.[27]

The day after May 7, 2015 election, Miliband resigned as party leader. Harriet Harman again became acting leader. The Labour Party held a leadership election, in which Jeremy Corbyn, then a member of the Socialist Campaign Group, was elected leader by a landslide. [28]

On April 18, 2017, Prime Minister Theresa May announced she would seek an unexpected snap election on June 8, 2017. Corbyn said he welcomed May's proposal and said his party would support the government's move in the parliamentary vote announced for 19 April.[29] Some of the opinion polls had shown a 20-point Conservative lead over Labour before the election was called, but this lead had narrowed by the day of the general election, which resulted in a hung parliament. Despite remaining in opposition for its third election in a row, Labour at 40.0 percent won its greatest share of the vote since 2001, made a net gain of 30 seats to reach 262 total MPs, and, with a swing of 9.6 percent, achieved the biggest percentage-point increase in its vote share in a single general election since 1945.[30]

Following Labour's heavy defeat in the 2019 general election, Jeremy Corbyn announced that he would stand down as Leader of the Labour Party. Keir Starmer announced his candidacy in the ensuing leadership election on January 4, 2020, winning multiple endorsements from MPs as well as from the trade union Unison.[31] He went on to win the leadership contest on April 4, 2020, beating rivals Rebecca Long-Bailey and Lisa Nandy, and therefore also became Leader of the Opposition.[32] In his acceptance speech, he said would refrain from "scoring party political points" and that he planned to "engage constructively with the government", having become Opposition Leader amid the COVID-19 pandemic.[33] He appointed his Shadow Cabinet the following day, which included former leader Ed Miliband, as well as both of the candidates he defeated in the leadership contest. He also appointed Anneliese Dodds as Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer, making her the first woman to serve in that position in either a ministerial or shadow ministerial position.[34]

In the 2023 United Kingdom local elections, Labour saw a net gain of 536 councillors and 22 councils, becoming the largest party of local government for the first time since 2002.[35]

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Labour Party Rule Book 2013 Labour.org.uk. Retrieved July 16, 2023.
  2. Helene Mulholland, Labour will continue to be pro-business, says Ed Miliband The Guardian (April 7, 2011). Retrieved July 16, 2023.
  3. Stuart Hall, New Labour has picked up where Thatcherism left off The Guardian (August 6, 2003). Retrieved July 16, 2023.
  4. Matthew Weaver, Guardian Unlimited, Wealth Gap Narrows faster in UK The Guardian (October 21, 2008). Retrieved July 16, 2023.
  5. Ashley Lavelle, The Death of Social Democracy: Political Consequences for the 21st Century (Routledge, 2008, ISBN 978-0754670148).
  6. Gary Daniels and John McIlroy (eds.), Trade Unions in a Neoliberal World: British Trade Unions under New Labour (Routledge, 2009, ISBN 978-0415603096).
  7. Antony Alcock, The Unloved, Unwanted Garrison Understanding Ulster (Ulster Society Publications, 1997). Retrieved July 16, 2023.
  8. Labour NI ban overturned BBC News (October 1, 2003). Retrieved July 16, 2023.
  9. Tony Cliff and Donny Gluckstein, The Labour Party: A Marxist History (Bookmarks, 1988, ISBN 978-0906224458).
  10. Jim Mortimer, The formation of the labour party - Lessons for today Socialist History Society, 2000. Retrieved July 16, 2023.
  11. David Shackelton Spartacus Educational. Retrieved July 16, 2023.
  12. Ralph Miliband, Parliamentary Socialism (Merlin Press, 2009, ISBN 978-0850361353).
  13. Tony Wright and Matt Carter, People's Party: The History of the Labour Party (Thames & Hudson Ltd, 1997, ISBN 978-0500279564).
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 14.4 14.5 Andrew Thorpe, A History Of The British Labour Party (Palgrave, 2001, ISBN 978-0333560808).
  15. Richard Norton-Taylor, Zinoviev letter was dirty trick by MI6 The Guardian (February 3, 1999). Retrieved July 16, 2023.
  16. 16.0 16.1 16.2 A.J. Davies, To Build A New Jerusalem: The British Labour Party from Keir Hardie to Tony Blair (Abacus, 1996, ISBN 0349108099).
  17. Sir George Clark, Illustrated History Of Great Britain (Octopus Books, 1982, ISBN 978-0706416664).
  18. European Opposition To Iraq War Grows DW (January 13, 2003). Retrieved July 16, 2023.
  19. Brown hit by worst party rating Reuters (May 9, 2008). Retrieved July 16, 2023.
  20. Andrew Grice, Cameron predicts £1,500 'tax bombshell' The Independent (November 18, 2008). Retrieved July 2023.
  21. Ed Miliband: Surcharge culture is fleecing customers BBC News (January 19, 2012). Retrieved July 16, 2023.
  22. Ed Miliband's Banking Reform Speech: The Full Details New Statesman (January 16, 2014). Retrieved July 16, 2023.
  23. Barry Neild, Labour MPs vote to abolish shadow cabinet elections The Guardian (July 6, 2011). Retrieved July 16, 2023.
  24. Andrew Grice, Tony Blair backs Ed Miliband's internal Labour reforms The Independent (February 28, 2014). Retrieved July 16, 2023.
  25. Robert Preston, Is Osborne right that a smaller state means a richer UK? BBC News (September 29, 2014). Retrieved July 16, 2023.
  26. Sophie McIntyre, How many seats did Labour win? The Independent (May 7, 2015). Retrieved July 16, 2023.
  27. Labour election results: Ed Miliband resigns as leader BBC News (May 8, 2015). Retrieved July 16, 2023
  28. Rowena Mason, Labour leadership: Jeremy Corbyn elected with huge mandate The Guardian (September 12, 2015). Retrieved July 16, 2023.
  29. Jon Stone, Jeremy Corbyn welcomes Theresa May's announcement of an early election The Independent (April 18, 2017). Retrieved July 16, 2023.
  30. Harriet Agerholm and Louis Dore, Jeremy Corbyn increased Labour's vote share more than any of the party's leaders since 1945 The Independent (June 9, 2017). Retrieved July 16, 2023.
  31. Keir Starmer enters Labour leadership contest BBC News (January 4, 2020). Retrieved July 15, 2023.
  32. Keir Starmer Elected as new Labour leader BBC News (April 4, 2020). Retrieved July 15, 2023.
  33. Nick Duffy, Sir Keir Starmer statement in full: New Labour leader vows to 'engage constructively' with government on coronavirus iNews (July 13, 2020). Retrieved July 15, 2023.
  34. Ed Miliband returns to Labour top team BBC News (April 6, 2020). Retrieved July 15, 2023.
  35. Jennifer Scott, Faye Brown, and Alexandra Rogers, Local elections 2023: Labour overtakes Conservatives as largest party of local government Sky News (May 6, 2023). Retrieved July 15, 2023.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Clark, Sir George. Illustrated History Of Great Britain. Octopus Books, 1982. ISBN 978-0706416664
  • Cliff, Tony, and Donny Gluckstein. The Labour Party: A Marxist History. Bookmarks, 1988. ISBN 978-0906224458
  • Daniels, Gary, and John McIlroy (eds.). Trade Unions in a Neoliberal World: British Trade Unions under New Labour. Routledge, 2009. ISBN 978-0415603096
  • Davies, A.J, To Build A New Jerusalem. London: Michael Joseph, 1992. ISBN 0349108099
  • Foote, Geoffrey. The Labour Party's Political Thought: A History. Dover, NH: Croom Helm, 1985. ISBN 978-0709910756
  • Francis, Martin. Ideas and Policies under Labour 1945-51. Manchester University Press, 1997. ISBN 0719048338
  • Howell, David. British Social Democracy. Croom Helm, 1976. ISBN 978-0856641244
  • Howell, David. MacDonald's Party. Oxford University Press, 2002. ISBN 978-0198203049
  • Lavelle, Ashley. The Death of Social Democracy: Political Consequences for the 21st Century. Routledge, 2008. ISBN 978-0754670148
  • Miliband, Ralph. Parliamentary Socialism. Merlin Press, 2009. ISBN 978-0850361353
  • Morgan, Kenneth O. Labour in Power, 1945-51. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1984. ISBN 978-0192158659
  • Morgan, Kenneth O. Labour People: Leaders and Lieutenants, Hardie to Kinnock. Faber and Faber, 2011. ISBN 978-0571259618
  • Pelling, Henry, and Alastair J. Reid. A Short History of the Labour Party. Palgrave Macmillan, 2005. ISBN 1403993130
  • Pilger, John. Freedom Next time. Bantam Press, 2006. ISBN 0593055527
  • Pimlott Ben. Labour and the Left in the 1930s. Cambridge University Press, 1977. ISBN 978-0521214483
  • Plant, Raymond, Matt Beech, and Kevin Hickson. The Struggle for Labour's Soul: Understanding Labour's political thought since 1945. Routledge, 2004. ISBN 978-0415312844
  • Ponting, Clive. Breach of Promise: Labour in power, 1964-1970. H. Hamilton, 1989. ISBN 978-0241126837
  • Rosen, Greg. Dictionary of Labour Biography. Politicos Publishing, 2001. ISBN 1902301188
  • Rosen, Greg. Old Labour to New. Politicos Publishing, 2005. ISBN 1842750453
  • Shaw, Eric. The Labour Party since 1979: Crisis and Transformation. Routledge, 1994. ISBN 978-0415056151
  • Thorpe, Andrew. A History of the British Labour Party. Palgrave Macmillan, 2001. ISBN 978-0333560808
  • Whitehead, Phillip. The Writing on the Wall. Michael Joseph, 1985. ISBN 978-0718128074
  • Wintour, Patrick, and Colin Hughes. Labour Rebuilt: The New Model Party. Fourth Estate, 1990. ISBN 978-1872180700
  • Wright, Tony, and Matt Carter. People's Party: The History of the Labour Party. Thames & Hudson Ltd, 1997. ISBN 978-0500279564

External links

All links retrieved July 16, 2023.

Credits

New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:

The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:

Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.