
There is some truth to these arguments. During the mid-late 1970s, the toxic brew of a popular, authoritarian moralism, anti-immigration politics, and racist moral panics around inner city violence and mugging - against the backdrop of rising class consciousness, a powerful labour movement, and a flailing Labour government - powered the rise of the National Front. But come the 1979 general election, by leaning into these issues the Tories snuffed out the NF's support. The price was, however, the breaking of the labour movement, the defeat of collectivist politics, and a long period of more-or-less untrammelled dominance of labour by capital. A period, some might say, we've yet to emerge from. Another more localist example comes from my old stomping ground of Stoke-on-Trent. During the 00s, the British National Party came within a whisker of winning the elected mayoralty and had nine council seats. Fuhrer Nick Griffin referred to Stoke as the jewel in the BNP's crown, among other things. While the BNP were ultimately defeated by the joint efforts of the local anti-fascist movement and the Labour Party, they were able to get an opening because the Tory organisation in the city was but a rumour. In many wards the Tories didn't bother standing, so part of the BNP coalition were right wing voters for whom the fascists were the only option.
But also, there is a dollop of nostalgia. One nation conservatism appears attractive because it offers something for everyone. In contrast to the zero-sum class conflict Benjamin Disraeli plays out in his famous Sybil, or The Two Nations, what we all share is the nation. We are either born into or become members of a national community, and this forms an essential (if not essentialised) commonality between us. Racial difference, class location, gender identity, sexual preferences, we might not be equal but we are all Britons. We are equal before the law, are free to acquire property, but most importantly we all have a place and make a valuable contribution. One nation conservatism also believes that the institutions cohering and constituting us as a national community have evolved slowly out of the accumulation of historical experience, and as such are embodiments of generations of wisdom. This is exemplified by the state, in which the crown, the church, and the commons exist in partnership - one where, rightly, the people via their parliamentary representatives are sovereign but are at times guided and tempered by the wealth of experience and moral rectitude upheld by the monarchy and the clergy. And in practice, what does one nation conservatism mean? A party that self-consciously governs for everyone, that protects the social fabric and therefore the ties that bind our country as a community. Social problems are occasions for moral improvement and judicious intervention. Inequality, though inevitable, cannot be allowed to get out of hand. The obligation to work by the many is matched by paternalism, respect, reciprocity, and charity on the part of the wealthy few. One nation conservatism is therefore frightful of rapid social change, which can ride roughshod over delicate equilibria painstakingly forged over centuries. It is deeply suspicious of any politics, particularly left wing politics, that seeks to remould society according to radical blueprints. That way tyranny lies.
Harold Macmillan is the Tory leader and Prime Minister most associated with one nationism. At the height of the post-war boom, following his immediate predecessors the Conservatives were committed to the class compact struck by the 1945 Labour government. Council homes were built, the capacity of the welfare state expanded, public services adequately funded, and full employment maintained. Macmillan emerged from a youthful attraction to moderate conservatism, liberalism, and Fabianism, and was further imbued with a social conscience during the depression. Unlike most of his Tory colleagues, he was exercised by and campaigned against mass unemployment - reinforced by his Stockton constituency being badly blighted. He went on to serve in the war time government, and in Churchill's post war administration was the minister for housing. Macmillan understood that for his class to maintain itself in the long-term, the lower orders needed a stake and therefore a place within it. As such, well into his retirement he criticised Margaret Thatcher and her characterisation of the miners as the enemy within, but other aspects of her programme, such as privatising state industry, was something he supported. But ultimately, one nationism didn't prevail - for a time - because of Macmillan. Between the late 1940s and late 1960s, there were over two million members of the party. Association bars were common sights across the country, and the Tories had strong roots among sections of the working class. As late as the 1970s, the Tories organised tens of thousands of trade unionists. As Jeremy Corbyn today embodies a radical movement against capitalism, so Macmillan personified a mass defence of a system that then shared the goods. He was at the head of a conservative social movement with real mass appeal.
That age is long gone, and from the two-nation Toryism of the Thatcher and Major years through to the war of all-against-all hellscape proffered by the Conservatives today, there's no sign of it ever coming back. At least through the offices of that party. As if to underline the one nationism's flatline, in her piece Polly Toynbee musters a single 20-year-old student with a website as the only sign something resembling a return to Macmillanism is in the offing. One nation has gone because the Tories buried its political economy and inflicted a strategic defeat on the labour movement. It was they that decided the "solution" to the crisis of the 1970s was to do away with the postwar compromise and rebalance class relations with capital firmly in the saddle. The only problem was that this also undermined first the mass presence the Conservatives had in the country, and then, after a long, drawn out process, their passive support at the ballot box. A moderate, sensible Tory party, however much such a creature is preferable to the gateway to the far right that exists today, is not going to happen. What we see with the gruesome Badenoch-Jenrick double act, and the Putin-friendly chums of the oil lobby in Nigel Farage and Reform is where right wing politics is right now: as a naked and open defence of class relations and oligarchical interests. For the first time the right are open and honest about what they're about, and it's best for us to face them as they are. Willing back a time when they stated their interests with more circumspection is not helpful. There are no good Tories. Only class conscious defenders of a decaying system.
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Off topic, but this ought to interest you (I'm sure that basically the same story is being run in many places around now): the rise of immaterial labour is facing its biggest ever challenge. But this challenge is clearly going to be a bit of a wild see-saw for a number of years to come.
ReplyDeletehttps://news.sky.com/story/the-40-jobs-most-at-risk-of-ai-and-40-it-cant-touch-13447013
"the institutions cohering and constituting us as a national community have evolved slowly out of the accumulation of historical experience, and as such are embodiments of generations of wisdom"
ReplyDeleteThat's a really important sentence because it remains the core belief of a lot of ordinary conservatives (that is, not members of the political party) today. None of them consider themselves extremists, but they are a huge problem for two reasons.
Firstly, they have no real political representation at all - they are only seen as easy marks by politicians who actually represent oligarchy and the supremacy of existing ruling elites. As such they are repeatedly manipulated and taken advantage of, and eventually, when they start to catch on, forced into a pipeline to becoming far right - because they just have nowhere else to go.
Secondly, and far more problematic, is that their social instincts are wildly out of alignment with the real socio-economic and technological environment of the 21st century, to fish out of water levels. They are adapted for a kind of world that no longer exists and can't be brought back on any predictable time scale. Today's reality is one of accelerating change and disruption, for the foreseeable future, and there's no way for natural conservatives to react which won't have the effect of trying to burn it all down. So that even if there were politicians who genuinely tried to respect their feelings, those politicians would be equally incapable of coping with reality. And as if that wasn't bad enough - it's the core of their very nature that they can't possibly understand this truth nor accept it.
Isn't the difference that most of the one nation Tories had fought alongside men from less privileged origins? Macmillan himself was a veteran of the same war that Major Attlee fought in, as was Churchill. The next war featured Edward Heath and many/most of his cohorts. The dawn of Thatcherism coincided with the retirement/death of most such men, almost all of whom were off the scene by the early 80s.
ReplyDeleteIn later ages, the Tory leadership were either not from priviliged origins, or were but felt no obligation to those of humbler origin, David Cameron & Boris Johnson being the incarnation of this.
One Nation Conservatism always was purely a tactical posture for consumption by the UK electorate, and gullible political analysts, and the servile mass media. The apparent acceptance of post war leading Tories of the welfare state, etc , ie " Butskellism", was required because of the then balance of class forces in Britain, with a very strong , heavily socialist and communist influenced trades union movement, with a core of the great class forces of miners, dockers, engineers, etc. And the military power, plus undeniable ideological mass appeal of the propaganda imageof the Soviet Union as a competitor.The Tories merely bided their time before their deliberate financialisation and deindustrialisation destroyed the Big Battalians of the working class,. Then, under Thatcher, the mask of One Nation Toryism was easily cast off , the beast within was again revealed and we are where we are today.
ReplyDeleteThroughout the period of purely tactical pro welfare state One Nation Toryism, however, if one deigns to look across the wider , but still huge, colonial British Empire , beyond Britain itself, even as it rapidly diminished, the gross crimes of British Imperialism are legion, as pure brutal terror was imposed on those struggling for liberation, from Malaya, to Kenya, to Cyprus, or the then Rhodesia, etc, etc, and outwards to then semi colonial countries like Iran, and onwards to the Vietnam War, where Wilson allowed US forces to use British controlled bases to move troops and supplies.
All the huge crimes of overseas postwar British imperialism were ordered by these self same One Nation Tories, (and "good old Attlee" too if course ) you are all sentimentally mythologising .
"One nation conservatism is therefore frightful of rapid social change"
ReplyDeleteIt's the damage to social cohesion that is the issue, for One Nation Conservatism change should be an evolution not a revolution. Change is absorbed and integrated, like the levels of historic immigration the UK saw up to the late 20th Century. I've seen Thatcherism criticised for its atomising tendencies, yet I think mass immigration over short time period has resulted in patterns of ghettoisation that is far more atomising to the nation as a whole than Thatcherism was.
Well obviously you believe that. But where we are now is to a large extent the consequence of Thatcher's policies whether you like it or not. You can't argue she had a big impact on the economy without also having a big impact on society. And you can't pretend that the changes she forced upon us are in no way responsible for where we are now. But, of course, you will...
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