Conservatism ( , to "save" or "preserve") is a
political attitude and philosophy which advocates
institutions and
traditional practices that have developed
organically within a nation over a period of time. The
raison d'être or central emphasis of
conservatism is a focus on
stability and
continuity. The first established use of
the term in a political context was by
François-René de
Chateaubriand in 1819, following the
French Revolution. Depending on location,
the term has since been used to describe a variety of politicians,
with a wide range of different views.
In Western politics, the term
conservatism often refers to
the school of thought based on British politician
Edmund Burke's criticism of the
French Revolution. Though his legacy as a
conservative is disputed, he wrote against the excesses of mob
rule.
R. J. White wrote: "To put conservatism in a bottle with a label is
like trying to liquify the atmosphere ... The difficulty
arises from the nature of the thing. For conservatism is less a
political doctrine than a habit of mind, a mode of feeling, a way
of living."
Russell Kirk considered
conservatism "the negation of ideology."
Conservative political
parties have diverse views; the Liberal Democratic Party in
Japan, the Republican
Party in the United
States
, the Conservative Party in Britain, the
Bharatiya Janata Party in
India, the Conservative
Party in Canada and the Liberal Party of Australia are
all considered major conservative parties with varying
positions.
Development of Western conservatism
Historians use the word "conservative" to describe governments and
leaders from the earliest recorded times, but it was not until the
Age of Enlightenment, and the
reaction to events surrounding the
French Revolution of 1789, that modern
conservatism rose as a distinct political attitude or train of
thought. Many point to the rise of a conservative disposition in
the wake of the
Protestant
Reformation, specifically to the works of influential
Anglican theologian,
Richard Hooker, emphasizing
moderation in the political balancing of interests towards the
goals of social harmony and common good.
Edmund Burke's polemic
Reflections on the
Revolution in France (1790) helped conservatism gain
prominence.
Edmund Burke opposed the
French Revolution, which he saw as
violent and chaotic.
He argued that some people have less reason than others, and thus
some people will make better governments than others if they rely
upon reason. The proper formulation of government came not from
abstractions such as reason, but from time-honoured development of
the state, piecemeal progress through experience, and the
continuation of other important societal institutions such as the
family and the church. Tradition draws on the wisdom of many
generations and the tests of time, while reason may be a mask for
the preferences of one man, and at best represents only the
untested wisdom of one generation. However, Burke also wrote, "A
state without the means of change is without the means of its
conservation," but insisted that further change be organic rather
than revolutionary. An attempt to modify the complex web of human
interactions that form human society, for the sake of some doctrine
or theory, runs the risk of running afoul of the iron law of
unintended
consequences.
Western conservatism has also been influenced by the
Counter-Enlightenment works of
Joseph de Maistre. Maistre argued
for the restoration of hereditary
monarchy,
which he considered to be a
divinely sanctioned institution, and
for the indirect authority of the
Pope over
temporal matters. He also defended the principle of
hierarchical authority, which the Revolution sought to destroy.
Maistre published in 1819 his masterpiece
Du Pape ("On the
Pope"). The work is divided into four parts. In the first he argues
that, in the
church, the
pope is
sovereign, and that
it is an essential characteristic of all sovereign power that its
decisions should be subject to no appeal. Consequently, the pope is
infallible in his teaching,
since it is by his teaching that he exercises his sovereignty. In
the remaining divisions the author examines the relations of the
pope and the temporal powers, civilization and the welfare of
nations, and the
schismatic
churches. He argues that nations require protection against abuses
of power by a sovereignty superior to all others, and that this
sovereignty should be that of the papacy, the historical saviour
and maker of European civilization.
Conservatives strongly support the right of property, and Carl B.
Cone, in
Burke and the Nature of Politics, pointed out
that this view, expressed as philosophy, also served the interests
of the people involved. Conservatives diverge from
classical liberalism in the tradition
of
Adam Smith. Some conservatives look to
a modified free market order, such as the
American System,
ordoliberalism, or
Friedrich List's National System. The latter view differs
from strict
laissez-faire, in that the
state's role is to promote competition while maintaining the
national interest, community and identity.
Most conservatives strongly support the
sovereign nation, and
patriotically identify with their own nation.
Nationalist
separatist movements may
simultaneously be both radical and conservative.
Forms of conservatism
Traditionalist conservatism
Traditionalist
conservatism, also known as "
Toryism,"
"traditional conservatism," "traditionalism," and "
Burkean conservatism" emphasizes the need for the
principles of
natural law and
transcendent moral order (especially
High
Church Christianity),
tradition and
custom,
hierarchy and
organic unity,
agrarianism,
classicism and
high
culture, and
patriotism,
localism, and
regionalism. It may be said to have affinities
with
reactionary and
counterrevolutionary thought, and some
adherents of this movement perhaps embrace that label, defying the
stigma that has attached to it in Western culture since the
Enlightenment. Many
traditionalist conservatives believe in
monarchism.
Liberal conservatism
Liberal conservatism is a
variant of conservatism that combines conservative values and
policies with
liberal stances. As these
latter two terms have had different meanings over time and across
countries, liberal conservatism also has a wide variety of
meanings. Historically, the term often referred to the combination
of
economic liberalism,
which champions
laissez-faire markets,
with the classical conservatism concern for established
tradition, respect for authority and religious
values. It contrasted itself with
classical liberalism, which supported
freedom for the individual in
both the economic and social spheres.
Over time, the general conservative philosophy has nothing in
itself to do with economic liberal arguments. Conservatism has
nothing to do with liberal economic thinking per se. This is also
the case in countries where liberal economic ideas have been the
tradition, such as the United States, and are thus considered
conservative.
In other countries where liberal conservative
movements have entered the political mainstream, such as Italy
and Spain
, the terms
liberal and conservative may be
synonymous. The liberal conservative tradition in the United
States combines the economic
individualism of the classical liberals with a
Burkean form of conservatism (which has
also become part of the
American
conservative tradition, such as in the writings of
Russell Kirk).
A secondary meaning for the term
liberal conservatism that
has developed in
Europe is a combination of
more modern conservative (less
traditionalist) views with those of
social liberalism. This has developed as
an opposition to the more
collectivist
views of
socialism. Often this involves
stressing what are now conservative views of free-market economics
and belief in
individual responsibility, with social liberal
views on defense of
civil rights,
environmentalism and support for a
limited
welfare state.
This philosophy is
that of Swedish
Prime
Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt.
In continental Europe, this is sometimes also translated into
English as
social conservatism.
Conservative liberalism
Conservative liberalism is a
variant of
liberalism that combines
liberal values and policies with conservative stances, or, more
simply, the right wing of the liberal movement. The roots of
conservative liberalism are found at the beginning of the
history of liberalism.
Until the
two World Wars, in most European
countries the political class was formed by conservative liberals,
from Germany
to Italy
.
Conservative liberalism is a more
positive and less
radical version of
classical liberalism. The events such
as
World War I occurring after 1917
brought the more radical version of classical liberalism to a more
conservative (i.e. more moderate) type of liberalism.
Libertarian conservatism
Libertarian conservatism describes
certain political ideologies within the United States
and Canada
which
combines libertarian economic issues
with aspects of conservatism. Its five main branches are
Constitutionalism,
paleolibertarianism, neolibertarianism,
small government conservatism
and
Christian
libertarianism. Additionally, they may overlap with
paleoconservatives in their support for
federalism, opposition to the welfare state and opposition to
imperialism though the latter group tends to be more nationalistic,
sometimes even embracing protectionism (see:
Economic Nationalism).
Scholars such as
Samuel Edward
Konkin III labeled libertarian conservatism
right-libertarianism.
Libertarian Conservatives support strict
laissez-faire policies such as
free trade, opposition to the
Federal Reserve and opposition to
business regulations. They are opposed to
corporate welfare,
subsidies, and other areas of economic
intervention. Many of them have views in accord to
Ludwig von Mises. However, many of them
oppose
abortion, as they see it as a
positive liberty and violates the
non-aggression principle
because abortion is aggression towards the fetus.
Fiscal conservatism
Fiscal conservatism is the
economic philosophy of prudence in government spending and debt.
Edmund Burke, in his '
Reflections on the
Revolution in France', articulated its principles:
[I]t is to the property of the citizen, and not to the
demands of the creditor of the state, that the first and original
faith of civil society is pledged.
The claim of the citizen is prior in time, paramount in
title, superior in equity.
The fortunes of individuals, whether possessed by
acquisition or by descent or in virtue of a participation in the
goods of some community, were no part of the creditor's security,
expressed or implied...
[T]he public, whether represented by a monarch or by a
senate, can pledge nothing but the public estate; and it can have
no public estate except in what it derives from a just and
proportioned imposition upon the citizens at large.
Social conservatism
Social conservatism stresses the
conservative attention for social stability and order. In order to
maintain that order and social peace, also the lower classes have
to be integrated into society (cf
Benjamin Disraeli 's risk of Two nations,
as described in
Sybil).
In Europe, social conservatism has played an important role in
history, being the direct parent of
christian democracy.
Christian democracy provided the ideological basis for the
conservative,
corporatist or
christian democrat version (
neo-corporatism) of the
welfare state.(
Esping-Andersen)
Nowadays,
the christian democratic family (European People's Party) is the
largest in the European parliament
. The double heritage of the EPP (
conservatism and its political heir
christian democracy) explains the EPP's
current composition.
The evolution of conservatism into social conservatism in Europe
also explains parts of the differences in
political culture between the United
States and Europe.
Green conservatism
Green conservatism is a term used
to refer to conservatives who have incorporated
green concerns into their
ideology. The
Conservative Party in the United
Kingdom under
David Cameron has
embraced a green agenda that includes proposals designed to impose
a tax on workplace car parking spaces, a halt to airport growth, a
tax on 4x4 vehicles and restrictions on car advertising.
Cultural conservatism
Cultural conservatism is a philosophy that supports preservation of
the heritage of a nation or culture. The culture in question may be
as large as
Western culture or
Eastern culture or as small as that of
Tibet. Cultural conservatives try to adapt
norms handed down from the past. The norms may be romantic, like
the
anti-metric movement that
demands the retention of
avoirdupois
weights and measures in Britain and opposes their replacement with
the
metric system. They
may be institutional: in the West this has included
chivalry and
feudalism, as
well as
capitalism,
laicité and the
rule of
law.
In the subset
social
conservatism, the norms may also be what is viewed as a
question of morality. In some cultures, practices such as
homosexuality are seen as immoral. In others,
it is considered immoral for a woman to reveal too much of her
body.
Cultural conservatives often argue that old institutions have
adapted to a particular place or culture and therefore ought to be
preserved. Others argue that a people have a right to their
cultural norms, their own language and traditions.
Religious conservatism
Religious conservatives seek to apply the teachings of particular
ideologies to politics, sometimes by proclaiming the value of those
teachings, at other times seeking to have those teachings influence
laws. Religious conservatism may support, or be supported by,
secular customs. In other places or at other times, religious
conservatism may find itself at odds with the culture in which the
believers reside. In some cultures, there is conflict between two
or more different groups of religious conservatives, each claiming
both that their view is correct, and that opposing views are
wrong.
Because many religions preserve a founding text, or at least a set
of well-established traditions, the possibility of radical
religious conservatism arises. These are radical both in the sense
of abolishing the status quo and of a perceived return to the radix
or root of a belief. They are ante conservative in their claim to
be preserving the belief in its original or pristine form. Radical
religious conservatism generally sees the status quo as corrupted
by abuses, corruption, or heresy. One example of such a movement
was the
radical reformation
within the
Protestant
Reformation and the later
restorationists of the 1800s. Similar
phenomena have arisen in practically all the world's religions, in
many cases triggered by the violent cultural collision between the
traditional society in question and the modern Western society that
has developed throughout the world over the past 500 years.
Conservatism in different countries
Albania
PLL Movement of Legality Monarchist Party of Albania.Rapreent the
King Leka I, son of Zog I of Albanians.
Australia
Conservatism in
Australia is related to
British and American conservatism in many respects, but has a
distinct political tradition. One scholar argues that Australian
conservatism is traditionally composed of diverse groups and
interests that are united more by opposition to certain political
developments than by a distinct shared ideology. In terms of
partisan politics, conservatism has often been defined as
opposition to the
Australian
Labor Party. Australian groups that have historically been
grouped on the conservative side include social conservatives,
British Empire nationalists,
organizations supporting rural interests, anti-socialist
Catholics, fundamentalist Christians and
free-market liberals."
Historically, for the first 70 years after the
Federation of Australia, the
non-Labor (and hence implicitly conservative) side of Australian
politics was associated with policies of moderate
protectionism in trade, and of support for the
welfare state, coupled with
maintenance of Australia's ties to the British Empire. Many
scholars have seen the government of
Robert Menzies as exemplifying this trend.
However, from the 1980s,
free-market
economic policies were increasingly associated with conservatism in
Australian politics, following the same trend as the United States
under
Ronald Reagan and the United
Kingdom under
Margaret Thatcher.
In contemporary Australian politics, the
Liberal Party of Australia is
seen as the main conservative party.
Botswana
Seretse Khama founded the conservative
Botswana Democratic Party
and it has been the most popular party in Botswana. According to
the
Economic Freedom of
the World survey, Botswana is Africa's second most capitalist
country.
Canada
Presently represented by Prime Minister
Stephen Harper and his ruling
Conservative Party of Canada,
Canadian conservatism has always been rooted in a preference for
the traditional and established ways of doing things, even as it
has shifted in economic, foreign and social policy. Like Burke,
they rejected the sense of both
ideology
and
revolution, preferring
pragmatism and
evolution. It is for that reason that unlike
conservatives in the
United States, Canadian conservatives are generally not
republicans, preferring the
monarchy and
Westminster system of government.
People's Republic of China
In the
People's
Republic of China
, new conservatism (新保守主义), sometimes translated as
"neoconservatism", was a movement which first arose in the early
1990s and argued that progress was best
accomplished through gradual reform of society, eschewing revolution and sudden overthrow of the governmental system. This movement was
based heavily on the ideas of
Edmund
Burke and was described in the West by the scholar Joseph
Fewsmith.
Other than the name, the movement had no
connection with neoconservatism in the United States
(the US movement is instead referred to as Niukang
in Chinese), though, from the standpoint of philosophy, it can be
identified as a form of conservative
thought, albeit ideologically different from "old conservatism"
(旧保守主义).
Taiwan (Republic of China)
In the
Republic of
China
,commonly known as Taiwan
, the
conservative Kuomintang , generally
supports free trade with China.
The KMT also has been known to be
anti-communist and follows the
Three Principles of the
People.
Germany
In Germany, conservatism has often been represented by
Christian Democratic parties.
They form
the bulk of the European
People's Party faction in the European Parliament
. The origin of these parties is usually in
Catholic parties of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and
Catholic social teaching
was their original inspiration. Over the years, conservatism
gradually became their main ideological inspiration, and they
generally became less Catholic. The German
Christian Democratic
Union (CDU), its Bavarian sister party
Christian Social Union
(CSU), and the Dutch
Christian Democratic Appeal
(CDA) are Protestant-Catholic parties.
India
Conservatism in India is represented by
Hindu nationalist parties like the
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
BJP advocates conservative social policies, self reliance, robust
economic growth, foreign policy driven by a nationalist agenda, and
strong national defense.
Hindutva has a
special place in its ideology and the party believes that ancient
Hindu culture and values will make India a more enlightened
society. BJP falls more correctly in the
Centre-right definition.
Iran

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, leader of the
Alliance of Builders of Islamic Iran
In
Iran
, conservatism is represented by parties such as the
Combatant Clergy
Association (CCA), which includes the nation’s foremost
politicized clerics (including the current Ayatollah) and is considered to be part of the
"Islamic right". The CCA was the majority party in the
fourth and fifth parliaments after the
Islamic revolution. It was founded in
1977 by a group of clerics with intentions to use cultural
approaches to overthrow
the Shah. Some
conservative Iranian political parties and organizations are part
of the powerful
Alliance of Builders of
Islamic Iran.
The alliance, mostly active in Tehran
, won almost
all of Tehran's seats in the Iranian Majlis election of
2004 and the Iranian City
and Village Councils election of 2003. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, former mayor of
Tehran (who is chosen by Tehran's City Council) and now
President of Iran, is considered one of
the main figures in the alliance.
Israel
In
Israel
, Likud is the major centre-right political party. Founded in
1973 as an alliance of several right-wing and liberal parties,
Likud's victory in the
1977 elections was a
major turning point in the country's political history. Likud
supports
free market capitalism and
liberalism. Likud, under the guidance of
Finance minister Binyamin Netanyahu, pushed through
legislation to reduce
value added
tax (VAT), income and corporate taxes, as well as
customs duty.
The party has instituted free trade
(especially with the European Union
and the United
States
) and has dismantled certain monopolies (e.g.
Bezeq and the sea ports). It has privatized
numerous government-owned companies (e.g.
El
Al and
Bank Leumi).
Likud has in the past espoused
hawkish
policies towards the
Palestinians,
including opposition to Palestinian statehood and support of the
Jewish settlers in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. However, it has
also been the party which carried out the first peace agreements
with Arab states.
For instance, in 1979, Likud Prime Minister,
Menachem Begin, signed the Camp David Accords with Egyptian
President Anwar
al-Sadat, which returned the Sinai Peninsula
(occupied by Israel in the Six-Day War of 1967) to
Egypt in return for peace between the two countries.
Yitzhak Shamir also granted some
legitimacy to the Palestinians by meeting them at the ill-fated
Madrid Conference
following the
Persian Gulf War in 1991.
However, Shamir refused to concede the idea of a Palestinian state,
and as a result was blamed by some (including
U.S. Secretary of State James Baker) for the failure of the summit.
Later, as Prime Minister,
Binyamin
Netanyahu restated Likud's position of opposing Palestinian
statehood, which after the
Oslo Accords
was largely accepted by the opposition
Labor Party, even though the shape of
any such state was not clear.
The Likud
emphasize such nationalist themes as the flag and the victory in
Israel
's 1948 war
with neighbouring Arab states. The Likud
advocates teaching values in childhood education. The Likud
endorses press freedom and promotion of private-sector media, which
has grown markedly under governments Likud has led. A Likud
government headed by Ariel Sharon, however, closed the popular
right-wing
pirate radio station
Arutz 7 ("Channel 7). Arutz 7 was popular
with the settlement movement and often criticised the government
from a right-wing perspective. However, the Likud is inclined
towards the
Torah and expresses support for it
within the context of civil Judaism, as a result of its
Irgun past, which aligned itself according to the word
of the
Tanakh.
Japan
Japan's
conservative Liberal
Democratic Party - which has dominated elections for half a
century — traditionally identified itself with a number of
general goals such as rapid, export-based economic growth and close
cooperation with the United States
in foreign and defense policies, as well as several
newer issues, such as administrative reform. Administrative
reform encompassed several themes: simplification and streamlining
of government bureaucracy; privatization of
state owned enterprises; and
adoption of measures, including tax reform, needed to prepare for
the strain on the economy posed by an
aging society.
Other priorities in the early 1990s included promoting a more
active and positive role for Japan in the rapidly developing
Asia-Pacific region, internationalizing Japan's economy by
liberalizing and promoting domestic demand, creating a high
technology information society, and promoting scientific
research.
Nepal
The Nepali politics can be viewed as a very interesting clash of
left wing parties, liberal democratic parties, conservative
democratic parties and the ultra-conservatism practiced by the
now-abolished Monarchy.
Because of the decade long Maoist insurgency
and the movements of other parties, people of Nepal seem to be
rejecting the idea of extreme conservatism, and consequently the
Nepalese
monarchy
has now been abolished. However, an intense
debate still exists between intellectuals and political activists
regarding the degree of conservatism in Nepali politics. While the
Unified
CPN propose a progressive
ideology, rejecting all the conservative ideas; The
CPN-UML, a democratic party with communist
background, seems to be supporting progressive ideas blended with
some conservatism. The right wing party of
Nepali Congress, is considered to be more
conservative than others because of their history of supporting the
idea of the now abolished Hindu State as well as the idea of
ceremonial monarchy. However, Nepali Congress too has adopted a
Republican set up after the
2006 democracy movement in
Nepal.
Historians view the inter party clash in this small nation as a
melting pot of all the ideologies of the political spectrum and the
intense discussions continues to intrigue many political
analysts.
Netherlands
In the strict sense, the Netherlands did not have a conservative
tradition until the early 2000s. In the nineteenth-century, Dutch
statesmen such as
Guillaume Groen van
Prinsterer and
Abraham Kuyper
heavily criticized modernity, but their ideas evolved toward
Christian Democracy instead of
conservatism.
Explicit conservatism in the Netherlands starts with
Andreas Kinneging a philosopher of law who
denounced liberalism in favour of the Christian and classical
foundations of Western civilization. In the early 2000s, he
gathered around a group of young conservatives, among them activist
Joshua Livestro and journalist
Bart Jan Spruyt, and founded the
Edmund Burke Foundation with the ambition of becoming either a
major intellectual influence or a political movement. This project
failed. The Foundation now focuses on introducing conservatism to
students.
Traditionally, the Dutch conservative-liberal
People's Party for
Freedom and Democracy combines advocacy of free market economy
and lower taxes with advocacy of such personal liberties as
euthanasia and the use of softdrugs. The
Party for Freedom is a newly formed party
with conservative sentiments, advocating strict restriction on
immigration from Muslim countries and a return to what it calls the
'Judeo-Christian civilization'. However, it defends values which
are usually not associated with conservatives, such as same-sex
marriages. Furthermore, on social and economic issues it recently
tends to vote as often with parties on the Left as well as on the
Right. The party is led by
Geert
Wilders.
New Zealand
The
New Zealand National
Party ("National" or "the Nats") forms the largest (in terms of
parliamentary seats)
political party
in the next
New Zealand
Parliament, and thus function as the core of a governing
coalition. For many decades "National" has been the largest
liberal-conservative political party in New Zealand.
The National Party advocates policies of reducing
taxes, reducing
social
welfare payments, promoting
free
trade, restoring or maintaining New Zealand's defence
alliances, and promoting one standard of citizenship for all New
Zealanders ("One law for all").
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia
has been under the influence of conservative
clerics who uphold a strict interpretation of Islamic law, and the monarchy supports
conservative social polices. Women are required to dress
modestly, and all sexual activity outside of a traditional
heterosexual marriage is illegal. Dancing, playing music or showing
movies in public are forbidden.
Scandinavian countries
In
Scandinavian countries, conservatism has
been represented in liberal
conservative parties such as the National
Coalition party in Finland
, the Moderate Party
in Sweden, Høyre in Norway and
the Conservative
People's Party in Denmark. Domestically, these parties
generally support market-oriented policies. Denmark's
conservative-liberal
Venstre has
been characterized as a classical liberal party. Their former
leader (
Anders Fogh Rasmussen)
wrote the book
Fra Socialstat til Minimalstat ( ), which
advocated an extensive reform along classical liberal lines. This
said, it should be noted that the former prime minister stated that
classical liberalism is "out-dated" and gravitated towards a
heavily social-democratically influenced approach towards managing
the state , .
South Korea
In the 2008 parliamentary elections, the conservative
Grand National Party won 37% of the
vote in South Korea, compared with 25% for the liberal
United Democratic Party. After
decades of free market policies, free trade, and low taxation,
South Korea is a major
economic
power and one of the wealthiest countries in Asia. It had one
of the world's fastest growing economies since the 1960s, now
highly
developed and the
fourth largest in Asia and
13th largest in
the world.
Forming the G20 industrial nations and the
world's top ten exporters, it is an APEC and OECD member, defined as a
High Income Nation by the World
Bank and an Advanced Economy by the IMF
and CIA. The
Asian
Tiger is leading the
Next Eleven
nations and is still among the world's fastest growing
developed countries. Today, its success
story is known as the "
Miracle on the
Han", a role model for many
developing countries.
United Kingdom
Conservatism in the United
Kingdom
is related to its counterparts in other Western
nations, but has a distinct tradition. Edmund Burke is often considered the
father
of conservatism in the English-speaking world. Burke was a
Whig, while the term
Tory is given to the later Conservative Party. One
Australian scholar argues, "For Edmund
Burke and Australians of a like mind, the essence of conservatism
lies not in a body of theory, but in the disposition to maintain
those institutions seen as central to the beliefs and practices of
society."
The old established form of English, and after the
Act of Union, British conservatism, was
the Tory Party. It reflected the attitudes of a rural land owning
class, and championed the institutions of the monarchy, the
Anglican Church, the family, and
property as the best defence of the social order. In the early
stages of the
industrial
revolution, it seemed to be totally opposed to a process that
seemed to undermine some of these bulwarks. The new industrial
elite were seen by many as enemies to the social order.
Robert Peel was able to reconcile the new
industrial class to the Tory landed class by persuading the latter
to accept the repeal of the
Corn Laws in
1846. He created a new political group that sought to preserve the
old status quo while accepting the basics of
laissez-faire and
free
trade. The new coalition of traditional landowners and
sympathetic industrialists constituted the new
Conservative Party.
Benjamin
Disraeli gave the new party a political ideology. As a young
man, he was influenced by the
romantic
movement and
medievalism, and
developed a devastating critique of industrialism. In his novels,
he outlined an England divided into two nations, each living in
perfect ignorance of each other. He foresaw, like
Karl Marx, the phenomenon of an alienated
industrial proletariat. His solution involved a return to an
idealised view of a corporate or organic society, in which everyone
had duties and responsibilities towards other people or groups.
This "one nation" conservatism is still a significant tradition in
British politics. It has animated a great deal of social reform
undertaken by successive Conservative governments.
Although nominally a Conservative, Disraeli was sympathetic to some
of the demands of the
Chartists and argued
for an alliance between the landed aristocracy and the working
class against the increasing power of the middle class, helping to
found the
Young England group in 1842
to promote the view that the rich should use their power to protect
the poor from exploitation by the middle class. The conversion of
the Conservative Party into a modern mass organisation was
accelerated by the concept of
Tory
Democracy attributed to Lord
Randolph Churchill.
A Liberal-Conservative coalition during
World War I, coupled with the ascent of the
Labour Party, hastened the
collapse of the Liberals in the 1920s. After
World War II, the Conservative Party made
concessions to the socialist policies of the Left. This compromise
was a pragmatic measure to regain power, but also the result of the
early successes of
central planning
and state ownership forming a cross-party consensus. This was known
as
Butskellism, after the almost
identical
Keynesian policies of
Rab Butler on behalf of the Conservatives, and
Hugh Gaitskell for Labour.
However, in the 1980s, under the leadership of
Margaret Thatcher, and the influence of
Keith Joseph, there was a dramatic
shift in the ideological direction of British conservatism, with a
movement towards
free-market economic
policies. As one commentator explains, "The
privatization of state owned industries,
unthinkable before, became commonplace [during Thatcher's
government] and has now been imitated all over the world."
Some
commentators have questioned whether Thatcherism was consistent with the traditional
concept of conservatism in the United Kingdom
, and saw her views as more consistent with classical liberalism. Thatcher
was described as "a radical in a conservative party", and her
ideology has been seen as confronting "established institutions"
and the "accepted beliefs of the elite", both concepts incompatible
with the traditional conception of conservatism as signifying
support for the established order and existing social
convention.
United States
Conservatism in the United States
includes a variety of political ideologies
including fiscal conservatism,
supply-side economics,
social conservatism, libertarian conservatism, bioconservatism, traditionalist conservatism, and
religious conservatism, as
well as support for a strong military. Modern American conservatism was
largely born out of alliance between
classical liberals and social
conservatives in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Important American conservatives include
William F. Buckley and
Barry Goldwater.
US president
Ronald Reagan, who was a
self-declared conservative, is widely seen as a symbol of American
conservatism. In an interview, he said "I believe the very heart
and soul of conservatism is
libertarianism." Organizations in the US
committed to promoting conservative ideology include the
American Conservative Union,
Eagle Forum,
Heritage Foundation and the
Hoover Institution. US-based media
outlets that are conservative include
Human Events,
National Review,
The American Conservative,
Policy Review, and The Weekly Standard.
In the US, social conservatives emphasize traditional views of
social units such as the
family,
church, or
locale. Social conservatism may entail
defining
marriage as relationships between
one man and one woman (thereby prohibiting
same-sex marriage and
polygamy) and laws placing restrictions on the
practice of
abortion. While many religious
conservatives believe that government should have a role in
defending moral values, libertarian conservatives such as
Barry Goldwater advocated a hands-off
government where social values were concerned.
See also
References
Further reading
- Our Culture, What's Left of It: The Mandarins and the
Masses / Theodore
Dalrymple (2005) ISBN 1566636434
- Fascists and conservatives : the radical right and the
establishment in twentieth-century Europe / Martin Blinkhorn.,
1990
- Edmund Burke. Reflections on
the Revolution in France, Hackett Publishing Company, Inc.
October 1997: ISBN 0-87220-020-5 (paper).
- Crunden, Robert, The Superfluous Men: Critics of American
Culture, 1900–1945, 1999. ISBN 1-882926-30-7
- Recent conservative political thought : American perspectives /
Russell G Fryer., 1979
- Paul E. Gottfried, The Conservative Movement, 1993.
ISBN 0-8057-9749-1
- The British Right : Conservative and right wing politics in
Britain / Neill Nugent., 1977
- America alone : the neo-conservatives and the global order /
Stefan A Halper., 2004
- Ted Honderich Conservatism
- Russell Kirk, The Conservative
Mind, 7th Ed., 2001. ISBN 0-89526-171-5
- Russell Kirk, The Politics of
Prudence, 1993. ISBN 1-882926-01-3
- The conservative press in twentieth-century America / Ronald
Lora., 1999
- From the New Deal to the New Right: race and the southern
origins of modern conservatism / Joseph E Lowndes., 2008
- Jerry Z. Muller Conservatism
- Right-wing women : from conservatives to extremists around the
world / P Bacchetta., 2002
- Unmaking law : the Conservative campaign to roll back the
common law / Jay M Feinman., 2004
- Radicals or conservatives? The contemporary American right /
James McEvoy., 1971
- Robert Nisbet Conservatism:
Dream and Reality, 2001. ISBN 0-7658-0862-5
- James Page, 'Ought the Neo-Cons Be Considered Conservatives? A
Philosophical Response'.AQ: Journal of Contemporary Analysis.
75(6):32-33/40. 2003; available on-line at
http://eprints.qut.edu.au/archive/00003599/
- Conservatism in America since 1930 : a reader / Gregory L
Schneider., 2003
- Noel O'Sullivan Conservatism
- The new racism : conservatives and the ideology of the tribe /
Martin Barker., 1982
- A time for choosing : the rise of modern American conservatism
/ Jonathan M Schoenwald., 2001
- Roger Scruton The Meaning of
Conservatism
- Facing fascism : the Conservative party and the European
dictators, 1935–1940 / N J Crowson., 1997
- James Fitzjames Stephen,
Liberty, Equality, Fraternity.
External links