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Building the Labour Party

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Building the Labour Party

The Politics of the Left in Early Twentieth Century Britain
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Description

In the early twentieth century, the Labour Party was a growing political force in Britain. Founded in 1900, as an amalgamation of a number of small socialist groups brought together by the Trade Union Congress, by the 1920s it had overtaken the Liberal Party in terms of general election success. It went on to form its first, albeit minority, governments in 1924 and 1929-1931 under the leadership of Ramsay MacDonald, who became the first ever Labour Prime Minister. This book, by the acclaimed Labour historian, the late Duncan Tanner, looks at the early years of the Labour Party's history, from the 1906 election, in which the Labour Representative Committee won just 29 seats, to the 1929 election when Labour became the largest party in the House of Commons for the first time. He considers the reasons behind Labour's meteoric rise, together with an analysis of the political and social climate of the time and the impact of World War I and prominent left-wing intellectuals. The catastrophic split of the Liberal Party at the height of World War I gave a large boost to the fledgling Labour Party, who provided a new ideological home for many disenchanted Liberal supporters. The first Labour government, of 1924, lasted a mere nine months, but managed to pass a number of key pieces of social legislation - including the Wheatley Housing Act which provided for the construction of 500,000 homes to be rented to working class families - which was to set the tone for Labour policy for the first of the century. By the time the Party came to power a second time in 1929 they had a stronger base of support, but were still reliant on the floundering Liberal Party in order to pass legislation.

Author Biography:

Duncan Tanner (1958-2010) was a leading historian of Labour history and Director of the Welsh Institute for Social and Cultural Affairs at Bangor University, where he contributed significantly to work on Welsh devolution. He was the author of Political Change and the Labour Party 1900-1918 and co-editor of The Labour Party in Wales 1900-2000; Labour's First Century; Debating Nationhood and Government in Britain 1885-1939: Perspectives from the 'Four Nations' and The Strange Survival of Liberal England. Andrew Thorpe is Professor of Modern British History and Associate Dean for Research and Knowledge Transfer in the College of Humanities at the University of Exeter. Mari Elin Wiliam is Lecturer in Modern and Welsh History at Bangor University.
Release date NZ
October 30th, 2018
Author
Audience
  • Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Contributors
  • Edited by Andrew Thorpe
  • Edited by Mari Elin Wiliam
Illustrations
8 integrated bw
Pages
288
ISBN-13
9781780768649
Product ID
21630413

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