Politics (1951-64) Flashcards

1
Q

9

Describe the premiership of Winston Churchill (3)

A
  • Industrial Charter (1947) - accepted post-war consensus - Shifted party appeal to young
  • Aimed to create govt of broad appeal (sim to war cabinet coalition) - offered cabinet to the Liberal leader, but he refused
  • Pledge to build 300k houses a year reached in 1953
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2
Q

7

Describe the Industrial Charter (1947)

A

Statement of Conservative Industrial Policy
* Accepted post-war consensus
* welfare state e.g. NHS
* mixed economy - Keynesian economics + Beveridge philosophy

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3
Q

5

What were the pledges in This is the Road (1951)?

A

Conservative 1951 manifesto:
* denationalise iron and steel
* end rationing - paid for my dividend from end of Korean War
* end of 1940s Lab austerity

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4
Q

6

Describe the 1955 election

A
  • RAB’s 1955 budget: inc income tax cut, expansion of social services (esp housing) and end of rationing
  • Govt majority of 58, low turnout of 77.7%
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5
Q

9

Describe the premiership of Harold Macmillan

A
  • Published ‘Middle Way’ - advocated broadly centrist philosophy
  • ‘Never had it so good’ (1957) speech
  • 1959 electoral success
  • End of tenure: scandals, Night of Long Knives
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6
Q

3

Describe Labour weaknesses in the 1959 election

A
  • Gaistkell populist move - raise spending but not income tax
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7
Q

9

Describe Housing policy under the Conservatives (1951-64)

A
  • 300k homes a year pledge - achieved in 1953
  • by 1964, 1.7m new houses built
  • home ownership inc to 44% by 1964 (25% pre-war)
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8
Q

4

example of NHS policy under the Conservatives (1951-64)

A
  • Introduced prescriptions charges in 1952
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9
Q

6

Describe Labour party divisions (1951-64)

A
  • Bevan resignation triggered factionalism
  • Divisions over unilateralism
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10
Q

3

Describe the Knight of the Long Knives 1962

A
  • Macmillan sacked ⅓ of his cabinet in July 1962 in an aim to rebuild his image
  • Brought in younger figures like Maulding (CX) and Keith Joseph (Housing)
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11
Q

3

1957 Rent Act

A

denounced by Labour as ‘landlord’s charter’

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12
Q

7

Describe how Wilson’s policies led to Conservative defeat in 1964

A
  • Greater economic planning through creation of DEA
  • WhiteHeat - Supported education and skills development to achieve scientific revolution - rather than merely subsidising scientists
  • ‘Signpost for Sixties’
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13
Q

6

Describe the results of the 1964 election

A
  • Lab vote remained the same as 1959
  • Con vote went down 1.8m - suggested that the conservatives lost the election rather than labour winning it
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14
Q

Gaitskellites vs Bevanites

A

Gaitskellites: represented the right of Labour
Bevanites: the left-wing faction of the party led by Bevan

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15
Q

Bevin vs Bevan

A

Bevan: assisted in the formation of the NHS
Bevin: Union rights

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16
Q

name the scandals

A

vassal: (1962)
Philby: (1963) - member of the Cambridge 5
profumo: (1963)