The
Labour Party is a centre-left political party in the United Kingdom
. Founded at the start of the 20th century, it
has been seen since 1920 as the principal party of the Left in England
, Scotland
and Wales
, but not
Northern
Ireland
, where it has only recently begun to organise
again.Labour first surpassed the
Liberal Party in general elections during
the early 1920s. Since then, the party has had several spells in
government, at first in minority governments under
Ramsay MacDonald in
1924 and
1929-1931, then as a junior
partner in the
wartime
coalition from
1940-1945 and
ultimately forming majority governments under
Clement Attlee in
1945-1951 and under
Harold Wilson in
1964-1970. Labour was in
government again in
1974-1979, first under Wilson
and then
James Callaghan, though
with a precarious and declining majority.
The Labour Party won a majority in the
1997 general election
under the leadership of
Tony Blair, its
first general election victory since
October 1974
and the first general election since
1970 in which it had
exceeded 40% of the popular vote.
The party's large majority in the House of
Commons
was slightly reduced to 167 in the 2001 general election
and more substantially reduced to 66 in 2005.
Labour is
the leading partner in the coalition Welsh government and the main
opposition party in the Scottish Parliament
. It has 13 members in the European
Parliament
and is also a member of the Socialist International. The
party's current leader is
Prime Minister Gordon Brown.
Party ideology
The party grew out of the trade union movement and
socialist political parties of the 19th century
seeking workers' representation and describes itself as a "
democratic socialist party".
However, since the "New Labour" project began, a larger proportion
of its support has come from middle-class voters and many perceive
this support as key to Labour's electoral success since 1997.
Historically the party was broadly in favour of
socialism as set out in
Clause Four of the original party constitution and
advocated socialist policies such as
public ownership of key industries,
government intervention in the
economy,
redistribution of
wealth, increased rights for workers, the
welfare state, publicly-funded healthcare and
education.Beginning in the late-1980s under the leadership of
Neil Kinnock, and subsequently that of
John Smith and
Tony Blair however the party moved away from
socialist positions, adopting
free
market policies, leading many observers to describe the Labour
Party as
Social Democratic or
Third Way rather than democratic
socialist.
Party electoral manifestos have not contained the term socialism
since 1992, when the original
Clause 4 was
abolished, although the new version says:
"The Labour Party is a democratic socialist party. It believes that
by the strength of our common endeavor 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."
Party constitution and structure
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. The 2008
Labour Party Conference was the first at which affiliated trade
unions and constituency Labour Parties did not have the right to
submit motions on contemporary issues that would previously have
been debated. Labour Party conferences now include more "keynote"
addresses, guest speakers and question-and-answer sessions, while
specific discussion of policy now takes place in the
National Policy Forum.
For many years Labour held to a policy of not allowing residents of
Northern Ireland to apply for membership,, instead supporting the
Social Democratic and
Labour Party (SDLP). The 2003 Labour Party Conference accepted
legal advice that the party could not continue to prohibit
residents of the province joining, and whilst the National
Executive has established a regional constituency party it has not
yet agreed to contest elections there.
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 million (£3.7 million from membership fees) and
expenditure of about £50 million, high due to that year's
general
election.
As a party founded by the unions to represent the interests of
working class people, Labour's link with the unions has always been
a defining characteristic of the party. In recent years this link
has come under increasing strain, with the
RMT
being expelled from the party in 2004 for allowing its branches in
Scotland to affiliate to the left-wing
Scottish Socialist Party. Other
unions have also faced calls from members to reduce financial
support for the Party and seek more effective political
representation for their views on privatisation, cuts and the
anti-trade union laws. Unison and
GMB have both
threatened to withdraw funding from constituency MPs and Dave
Prentis of
UNISON has warned that the union
will write "no more blank cheques" and is dissatisfied with
"feeding the hand that bites us" The trade unions still however
represent Labour's main source of funding.
Internationally, the Labour Party is a member of the
Socialist International and the
Party of European
Socialists while the party's
MEPs sit in the
Socialists
& Democrats group.
History
Founding of the party
The Labour Party's origins lie in the late 19th century, around
which time it became apparent that there was a need for a new
political party to represent the interests and needs of the urban
proletariat, a demographic which had increased in number and had
recently been given
franchise. Some members
of the trades union movement became interested in moving into the
political field, and after further extensions of the voting
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
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
left-wing organisations and form them into a single body that would
sponsor Parliamentary candidates. The motion was passed at all
stages by the TUC and the proposed conference was held at the
Memorial Hall on Farringdon Street on 26 and 27 February 1900. The
meeting was attended by a broad spectrum of working-class and
left-wing organisations - trades unions represented about one third
of the membership of the TUC delegates.
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." This created an association called the
Labour
Representation Committee (LRC), meant to coordinate
attempts to support MPs sponsored by trade unions and represent 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 campaign effectively:
total expenses for the election only came to £33. Only 15
candidatures were sponsored, but two were successful;
Keir Hardie in
Merthyr Tydfil
and
Richard Bell in
Derby.
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 being ordered to
pay £23,000 damages for a 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 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.

Labour Party Plaque from Caroone
House, 8 Farringdon Street
In the
1906
election the LRC won 29 seats — helped by a
secret 1903 pact between
Ramsay MacDonald and
Liberal Chief
Whip
Herbert Gladstone that aimed to avoid splitting the opposition
vote between Labour and Liberal candidates in the interest of
removing the Conservatives from office.
In their first meeting after the election the group's Members of
Parliament decided to adopt the name "The Labour Party" formally
(15 February 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
individual membership until 1918 but operated as a conglomerate of
affiliated bodies. 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.
Early years and the rise of the Labour Party
The
1910
election saw 42 Labour MPs elected to the House of Commons, a
significant victory since, a year before the election, the House of
Lords had passed the
Osborne
judgment ruling 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 Trades Unions, the Liberal government
passed the Trade Disputes Act to allow Trade Unions to fund Labour
MPs once more.
During the
First World War the Labour
Party split between supporters and opponents of the conflict but
opposition to the war grew within the party 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. He was soon accepted
into
Prime Minister 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 conscription through organisations
such as the Non-Conscription Fellowship while a Labour Party
affiliate, the
British Socialist
Party, organised a number of unofficial strikes.
Arthur Henderson resigned from the
Cabinet in 1917 amid calls for party unity to be replaced by
George Barnes. The growth in
Labour's local activist base and organisation was reflected in the
elections following the war, 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. The
Communist Party of Great
Britain was refused affiliation between 1921 and 1923.Meanwhile
the
Liberal Party declined
rapidly and the party suffered a catastrophic split that allowed
the Labour Party to co-opt much of the Liberals' support.
With the Liberals in disarray Labour won 142 seats in
1922, making it the
second largest political group in the 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 government (1924)
The
1923 general
election was fought on the Conservatives'
protectionist proposals but, although they got
the most votes and remained the largest party, they lost their
majority in parliament, necessitating the formation of a government
supporting
free trade. Thus, with the
acquiescence of Asquith's Liberals,
Ramsay MacDonald became the first ever
Labour Prime Minister in January 1924, forming the first 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 rental 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.
The Conservatives were returned to power although Labour increased
its vote from 30.7% to a third of the popular vote, most
Conservative gains being at the expense of the Liberals. The
Zinoviev letter is now generally believed to have been a
forgery.
In opposition Ramsay MacDonald continued his policy of presenting
the Labour Party as a moderate force. During the
General Strike of 1926 he opposed
strike action, arguing that the best way to achieve social reforms
was through the ballot box.
Second Labour government (1929-1931)

The original "Liberty" logo, in use
until 1983
In the
1929
general election, the Labour Party became the largest in the
House of Commons for the first time, with 287 seats and 37.1% of
the popular vote. However MacDonald was still reliant on Liberal
support to form a minority government. MacDonald went on to appoint
Britain's first female cabinet minister,
Margaret Bondfield, who was appointed
Minister of
Labour.
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 unemployment had doubled to
over two and a half million. The government had no effective
answers to the crisis. By the summer of 1931 a dispute over whether
or not to reduce public spending had split the government. As the
economic situation worsened MacDonald agreed to form a "
National Government" with the
Conservatives and the
Liberals.
On 24 August 1931 MacDonald submitted the resignation of his
ministers and led a small number of his senior colleagues in
forming the National Government together with the other parties.
This caused great anger among those within the Labour Party who
felt betrayed by MacDonald's actions: he and his supporters were
promptly expelled from the Labour Party but went on to form a
separate
National Labour
Organisation, the remaining Labour Party (again led by
Arthur Henderson) and a few Liberals going
into opposition. The
ensuing general
election resulted in overwhelming victory for the National
Government and disaster for the Labour Party which won only 52
seats, 225 fewer than in 1929.
In opposition during the 1930s
Arthur Henderson, elected in 1931
to succeed MacDonald, lost his seat in the
1931 general election. The only
former Labour cabinet member who has retained his seat, the
pacifist
George Lansbury,
accordingly became party leader.
The party experienced another 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 and
embarked on a long, drawn-out decline.
Lansbury resigned as leader in 1935 after public disagreements over
foreign policy. He was promptly replaced as leader by his deputy,
Clement Attlee, who would lead the
party for two decades. The party experienced a revival in the
1935 general
election, winning 154 seats and 38% of the popular vote, the
highest that Labour had achieved.
As the threat from
Nazi Germany
increased in the 1930s the Labour Party gradually abandoned its
earlier pacifist stance and supported re-armament, largely due to
the efforts of
Ernest Bevin and
Hugh Dalton who by 1937 had also
persuaded the party to oppose
Neville Chamberlain's policy of
appeasement.
Wartime coalition
The party returned to government in 1940 as part of a wartime
coalition. When
Neville
Chamberlain resigned in the spring of 1940, the incoming Prime
Minister
Winston Churchill decided
to bring the other main parties into a coalition similar to that of
the First World War. Clement Attlee was appointed
Lord Privy Seal and a member of the war
cabinet, eventually becoming the United Kingdom's first
Deputy Prime Minister.
A number of other senior Labour figures also took up senior
positions: the 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 while
A.
V.
Alexander
resumed the role he had held in the previous Labour government of
First Lord of the
Admiralty.
Post-war victory under Attlee
At the end of the war in Europe, in May 1945, Labour resolved not
to repeat the Liberals' error of 1918 but promptly withdrew from
government to contest the
1945 general election
in opposition to Churchill's Conservatives. Surprising many
observers, Labour won a formidable victory, winning just under 50%
of the vote with a majority of 145 seats.
Clement
Attlee's proved one of the most radical British governments of the
20th century, presiding over a policy of nationalising major
industries and utilities including the Bank of England
, coal mining, the steel industry, electricity, gas,
telephones and inland transport including railways, road haulage
and canals. It developed and implemented the "cradle to
grave"
welfare state conceived by the
economist
William Beveridge. To
this day the party considers the 1948 creation 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 and Pakistan in
1947, followed by Burma (Myanmar) and Ceylon (Sri Lanka) the
following year. At a secret meeting in January 1947, Attlee and six
cabinet ministers, including Foreign Secretary
Ernest Bevin, decided to proceed with the
development of Britain's nuclear deterrent, in opposition to the
pacifist and anti-nuclear stances of a large element inside the
Labour Party.
Labour went on to win the
1950 general election
but with a much reduced majority of five seats. Soon afterwards
defence became a divisive issues within the party, especially
defence spending (which reached a peak of 14% of GDP in 1951 during
the
Korean War), straining public
finances and forcing savings elsewhere. The Chancellor of the
Exchequer,
Hugh Gaitskell, introduced
charges for NHS prescription drugs causing Bevan, along with
Harold Wilson (then President of the
Board of Trade), to resign over the dilution of the principle of
free treatment on which the NHS had been established.
In the
1951
general election, Labour narrowly lost to the Conservatives
despite receiving the larger share of the popular vote, its highest
ever vote numerically. Most of the changes introduced by the
1945-51 Labour government were accepted by the Conservatives and
became part of the "post war consensus" that lasted until the late
1970s.
Opposition during the 1950s
Following the defeat of 1951 the party underwent a long period of
thirteen years in opposition. The party suffered an ideological
split during the 1950s while the postwar economic recovery, given
the social effects of Attlee's reforms, made the public broadly
content with the Conservative governments of the time. Attlee
remained as leader until his retirement in 1955.
His replacement
Hugh Gaitskell, a man
associated with the right-wing of the party, struggled to deal with
internal divisions in the late 1950s and early 1960s and Labour
lost the
1959
general election. In 1963 Gaitskell's sudden death from a
heart-attack made way for
Harold
Wilson to lead the party.
Labour in government under Wilson (1964-1970)

Harold Wilson: Labour Prime Minister,
1964–1970 and 1974-1976
A down-turn 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
4-seat majority under Wilson in the
1964 election but
increased its majority to 96 in the
1966 election.
Wilson's government was responsible for a number of sweeping social
and educational reforms such as the legalisation of abortion and
homosexuality (initially only for people aged 21 or over).
The 1960s
Labour government also expanded comprehensive education and created
the Open
University
. But
Wilson's government had inherited a large trade deficit that led to
a currency crisis and an ultimately doomed attempt to stave off
devaluation of the pound. Labour went on to lose the
1970 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
provede a 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.
The Labour Party was returned to power again under Wilson a few
weeks after the
February 1974
general election, forming a minority government with the
support of the
Ulster Unionists. The
Conservatives were unable to form a government as they had fewer
seats despite receiving more votes numerically. It was the first
general election since 1924 in which both main parties had received
less than 40% of the popular vote and the first of six successive
general elections in which Labour failed to reach 40% of the
popular vote. In a bid to gain a proper majority a second election
was soon called for
October 1974
in which Labour, still with Harold Wilson as leader, managed a
majority of three, gaining just 18 seats and taking its total to
319.
1974-1979

James Callaghan: Labour Prime
Minister, 1976-1979.
For much of its time in office the Labour government struggled with
serious economic problems and a precarious majority in the Commons,
while the party's internal dissent over Britain's membership of the
European Economic
Community (EEC), which Britain had entered under Edward Heath
in 1972, led in 1975 to a
national
referendum on the issue in which two thirds of the public
supported continued membership.
Harold Wilson's personal popularity remained reasonably high but he
unexpectedly resigned as Prime Minister in 1976, citing health
reasons and was replaced by
James
Callaghan. The Wilson and Callaghan governments of the 1970s
tried to control inflation (which reached 26.9% in 1975) by a
policy of wage restraint. This was fairly successful, reducing
inflation to 7.4% by 1978. However it led to increasingly strained
relations between the government and the trade unions.
Fear of advances by the nationalist parties, particularly in
Scotland, led to the suppression of a report from Scottish Office
economist Gavin McCrone that suggested that an independent Scotland
would be 'chronically in surplus'. By 1977 by-election losses and
defections to the breakaway
Scottish Labour Party left
Callaghan heading a minority government, forced to trade with
smaller parties in order to govern. An arrangement negotiated in
1977 with
Liberal leader
David Steel, known as the
Lib-Lab Pact, ended after one year. After this
deals were forged with various small parties including the
Scottish National Party and the
Welsh nationalist
Plaid Cymru,
prolonging the life of the government slightly.
The nationalist parties, in turn, demanded
devolution to their respective constituent
countries in return for their supporting the government. When
referenda for Scottish and Welsh devolution were held in March 1979
Welsh devolution
was rejected outright while the
Scottish referendum
returned a narrow majority in favour without reaching the required
threshold of 40% support. When the Labour government duly refused
to push ahead with setting up the proposed Scottish Assembly, the
SNP withdrew its support for the government: this finally brought
the government down as it triggered a vote of confidence in
Callaghan's government that was lost by a single vote on 28 March
1979, necessitating a general election.
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 he decided to extend his wage restraint policy
for another year hoping that the economy would be in a better shape
for a 1979 election. But during the winter of 1978-79 there were
widespread strikes among lorry drivers, railway workers, car
workers and local government and hospital workers in favour of
higher pay-rises that caused significant disruption to everyday
life. These events came to be dubbed the "
Winter of Discontent".
In the
1979
election Labour suffered electoral defeat by the
Conservatives, now led by
Margaret Thatcher. The number of people
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, benefiting from both a surge in
turnout and votes lost by the ailing Liberals.
The "Wilderness Years" (1979-1997)
After its defeat in the 1979 election the Labour Party underwent a
period of bitter internal rivalry between the left-wing,
represented by
Michael Foot and
Tony Benn (whose supporters dominated the
party's organisation of local activists), and the right-wing
represented by
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 and potentially unelectable. In 1981 a group of four
former cabinet ministers (
Shirley
Williams,
William Rodgers,
Roy Jenkins, and
David Owen), who were from the right of the
Labour Party, issued the "
Limehouse Declaration" before forming
the
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 along with the
council house right to
buy scheme revived her popularity while the formation of the
SDP split the opposition vote. The Labour Party was defeated
heavily in the
1983 general election,
winning only 27.6% of the vote, its lowest share since
1918, and receiving
only half a million votes more than the
SDP-Liberal Alliance.
Michael Foot promptly resigned as leader and was replaced by the
moderate
Neil Kinnock who progressively
moved the party towards the centre. Labour improved its performance
in
1987,
gaining 20 seats and so reducing the Conservative majority to 102
from 143.
Neil Kinnock was seen as right-wing by the Labour Left, especially
the so-called
Militant Tendency.
Kinnock later forced this group out of the party and they would
later form the
Socialist Party of England
and Wales and the
Scottish
Socialist Party; a remnant of Militant continues to operate
within the Labour Party through the magazine
Socialist Appeal.
In November 1990 Margaret Thatcher was forced out of office by her
colleagues and replaced as Prime Minister by
John Major. 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 other key policy differences with the
Conservatives were ended as Labour dropped its policies of
re-nationalisation of public utilities and Trade Union rights. Most
opinion polls showed the party to have a slight lead over the
Conservatives, though rarely sufficient for a majority, or else
predicted a hung parliament, but in the event the Conservatives
were returned to power, though with a much reduced majority of
20.
After this unexpected defeat, 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 take Britain out of the
European Exchange Rate
Mechanism. After this disaster for the Conservatives, Labour
moved ahead in the opinion polls. John Smith's sudden death from a
heart attack in May 1994 made way for
Tony
Blair to lead the party.

Labour Party logo under Kinnock, Smith
and Blair's leaderships.
"New Labour"
Tony Blair continued to move the party further to the centre,
abandoning the largely symbolic
Clause
Four at the 1995 mini-conference in a strategy to increase the
party's appeal to "
middle England".
More than a simple 're-branding', however, the project would draw
upon a new political '
third
way', particularly informed by the thought of the British
sociologist
Anthony Giddens.
"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. It 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 modernisers from those holding to more
traditional positions, normally referred to as "Old Labour".
In government (1997-present)
The Labour Party won the
1997 general election
with a huge landslide majority of 179; it was the largest Labour
majority ever, and the largest swing to a political party achieved
since
1945.
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, with its own elected-mayor. Combined with a Conservative
opposition that had yet to organise effectively under
William Hague, and the continuing popularity
of Blair, Labour went on to win the
2001 election with a
similar majority, dubbed the "quiet landslide".
A perceived turning point was when Tony Blair controversially
allied himself with US President
George
W. Bush in supporting the
Iraq War, which caused him to lose much of
his political support. The
UN
Secretary-General, among many, considered the war illegal. The
Iraq War was deeply unpopular in most western countries, with
Western governments divided in their support and under pressure
from
worldwide popular
protests. At the
2005 election, Labour
was re-elected for a third term, but with a reduced majority of 66.
The decisions that led up to the Iraq war and it's subsequent
conduct are currently the subject of
Sir John Chilcot's Iraq Inquiry.

Current logo of the Labour Party
Significantly, the party lost power in Scotland to a minority
Scottish National Party
government in 2007. Shortly after this, Tony Blair resigned as
Prime Minister and was replaced by his
Chancellor,
Gordon Brown. Although the party experienced a
brief rise in the polls after this, its popularity soon slumped to
its lowest level since the days of
Michael
Foot. During May 2008, Labour suffered heavy defeats in the
London mayoral
election,
local
elections and the loss in the
Crewe and Nantwich
by-election, culminating in the party registering its worst
ever opinion poll result since records began in 1943, of 23%, with
many citing Brown's leadership as a key factor.
Finance proved a major problem for the Labour Party during this
period; 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 policy-making under the
reforms of Neil Kinnock and Tony Blair, also contributed to
financial problems. Between January and March 2008, the Labour
Party received just over £3 million in donations and were £17
million in debt; compared to the Conservatives' £6 million in
donations and £12 million in debt..
Electoral performance
This chart shows the electoral performance of the Labour Party in
general elections since 1900.

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.
| Election |
Number of votes for Labour |
Share of votes |
Seats |
Outcome of election |
| 1900 |
62,698 |
1.8% |
2 |
Conservative Victory |
| 1906 |
321,663 |
5.7% |
29 |
Liberal Victory |
| 1910 |
505,657 |
7.6% |
40 |
Hung parliament (Liberal minority government) |
| 1910 |
371,802 |
7.1% |
42 |
Hung parliament (Liberal minority government) |
| 1918† |
2,245,777 |
21.5% |
57 |
Coalition Victory |
| 1922 |
4,076,665 |
29.7% |
142 |
Conservative Victory |
| 1923 |
4,267,831 |
30.7% |
191 |
Hung parliament (Labour minority
government) |
| 1924 |
5,281,626 |
33.3% |
151 |
Conservative Victory |
| 1929‡ |
8,048,968 |
37.1% |
287 |
Hung parliament (Labour minority
government) |
| 1931 |
6,339,306 |
30.8% |
52 |
National Government Victory |
| 1935 |
7,984,988 |
38.0% |
154 |
National Government Victory |
| 1945 |
11,967,746 |
49.7% |
393 |
Labour Victory |
| 1950 |
13,266,176 |
46.1% |
315 |
Labour Victory |
| 1951 |
13,948,883 |
48.8% |
295 |
Conservative Victory |
| 1955 |
12,405,254 |
46.4% |
277 |
Conservative Victory |
| 1959 |
12,216,172 |
43.8% |
258 |
Conservative Victory |
| 1964 |
12,205,808 |
44.1% |
317 |
Labour Victory |
| 1966 |
13,096,629 |
48.0% |
364 |
Labour Victory |
| 1970 |
12,208,758 |
43.1% |
288 |
Conservative Victory |
| 1974 |
11,645,616 |
37.2% |
301 |
Hung parliament (Labour minority
government) |
| 1974 |
11,457,079 |
39.2% |
319 |
Labour Victory |
| 1979 |
11,532,218 |
36.9% |
269 |
Conservative Victory |
| 1983 |
8,456,934 |
27.6% |
209 |
Conservative Victory |
| 1987 |
10,029,807 |
30.8% |
229 |
Conservative Victory |
| 1992 |
11,560,484 |
34.4% |
271 |
Conservative Victory |
| 1997 |
13,518,167 |
43.2% |
419 |
Labour Victory |
| 2001 |
10,724,953 |
40.7% |
413 |
Labour Victory |
| 2005 |
9,562,122 |
35.3% |
356 |
Labour Victory |
†The first election held under the Representation of the
People Act 1918 in which all men over 21, and most women over
the age of 30 could vote, and therefore a much larger
electorate.
‡The first election under universal suffrage in which all women
aged over 21 could vote.
Leaders of the Labour Party since 1906
- Main article: List of United
Kingdom Labour Party leaders
- Keir Hardie, 1906-1908
- Arthur Henderson,
1908-1910
- George Nicoll Barnes,
1910-1911
- Ramsay MacDonald,
1911-1914
- Arthur Henderson,
1914-1917
- William Adamson, 1917-1921
- John Robert Clynes,
1921-1922
- Ramsay MacDonald,
1922-1931
- Arthur Henderson,
1931-1932
- George Lansbury, 1932-1935
- Clement Attlee, 1935-1955
- Hugh Gaitskell, 1955-1963
- George Brown,
1963
- Harold Wilson, 1963-1976
- James Callaghan, 1976-1980
- Michael Foot, 1980-1983
- Neil Kinnock, 1983-1992
- John Smith,
1992-1994
- Margaret Beckett, 1994
- Tony Blair, 1994-2007
- Gordon Brown, 2007-present
Deputy Leaders of the Labour Party since 1922
- Main article: Deputy Leader of the
Labour Party
- John Robert Clynes,
1922-1932
- William
Graham, 1931-1932
- Clement Attlee, 1932-1935
- Arthur Greenwood,
1935-1945
- Herbert Morrison,
1945-1955
- Jim Griffiths, 1955-1959
- Aneurin Bevan, 1959-1960
- 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
- Frank 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, 2007-2008
- Janet
Royall, Baroness Royall of Blaisdon, 2008-present
Labour Prime Ministers
See also
References
- http://ukpollingreport.co.uk/blog/archives/30
- Belfast Telegraph
- New Labour and Thatcherism: Political Change in
Britain, Richard Heffernan, 2001; New Labour has picked up where Thatcherism left
off, Stuart Hall, The Guardian, 6
August 2003; From Thatcherism to New Labour: Neo-Liberalism,
Workfarism and Labour Market Regulation, Professor
Bob Jessop,
Lancaster University; New Labour, Economic Reform and the European Social
Model, Jonathon Hopkin and Daniel Wincott, British Journal of Politics
and International Relations, 2006.
- , ca. 1999. via Internet Archive. Accessed 31 March 2007.
"Residents of Northern Ireland are not eligible for
membership."
- Understanding Ulster by Antony Alcock, Ulster Society
Publications, 1997. Chapter II: The Unloved, Unwanted Garrison. Via
Conflict Archive on the Internet. Accessed 31 October 2008.
- Labour NI ban overturned, BBC News. 1 October
2003. Accessed 31 March 2007.
- RMT 'breached' Labour party rules BBC News, 27
January 2004
- Labour's link to unions in danger BBC News, 16
June 2004
- CWU resolution to TUC Congress 2009
- Local Government Chronicle
- See, for instance, the 1899 Lyons vs. Wilkins judgement, which
limited certain types of picketing
- Mortimer, Jim, ‘The formation of the labour party -
Lessons for today’ 2000 Jim Mortimer was a General Secretary of
the Labour Party in the 1980s
- http://www.labour.org.uk/history_of_the_labour_party
- Wright T. & Carter M,(1997) "The People's Party"
Thames & Hudson, ISBN 0-500-27956-x
- Thorpe, Andrew. (2001) A History Of The British Labour
Party, Palgrave, ISBN 0-333-92908-x
- http://gdl.cdlr.strath.ac.uk/redclyde/redcly140.htm
- Davies, A.J. (1996) To Build A New Jerusalem: The British
Labour Party from Keir Hardie to Tony Blair, Abacus, ISBN 0349
108099
- Clark, Sir George, Illustrated History Of Great
Britain, (1987) Octupus Books
-
http://www.snpyouth.org/ysi/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=12&Itemid=24
- Britain: Nightmare on Downing Street - Time to
reclaim the Labour Party Socialist Appeal, 12 May 2003
- 1992: Tories win again against odds BBC News, 5
April 2005
- http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,745536,00.html
- http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/3661134
- http://www.iht.com/articles/2004/08/28/sochi_ed3_.php
- Source:
http://www.election.demon.co.uk/geresults.html
Further reading
- Davies, A.J, To Build A New Jerusalem (1996) ISBN
0349108099
- Geoffrey Foote, The Labour Party's Political Thought: A
History, Macmillan, 1997 ed.
- Martin Francis, Ideas and Policies under Labour
1945-51, Manchester
University Press, 1997. ISBN 0719048338
- Roy Hattersley, New Statesman, 10 May 2004, 'We should have made it clear that we too were
modernisers'
- David Howell, British Social Democracy, Croom Helm,
1976
- David Howell, MacDonald's Party, Oxford University
Press, 2002.
- Ralph Miliband, Parliamentary Socialism, Merlin, 1960,
1972. ISBN 0850361354
- Kenneth O. Morgan, Labour in Power, 1945-51, OUP, 1984.
- Kenneth O. Morgan, Labour People: Leaders and Lieutenants,
Hardie to Kinnock OUP, 1992. ISBN
0192852701
- Henry Pelling and Alastair J. Reid, A Short History of the
Labour Party, Palgrave Macmillan, 2005 ed. ISBN
1403993130
- Ben Pimlott, Labour and the Left
in the 1930s, Cambridge
University Press, 1977.
- Raymond Plant, Matt Beech and Kevin Hickson (2004), The
Struggle for Labour's Soul: understanding Labour's political
thought since 1945, Routledge. ISBN 0415312841
- Clive Ponting, Breach of
Promise, 1964-70, Penguin, 1990. ISBN 0140132600
- Greg Rosen, Dictionary of Labour Biography. Politicos Publishing, 2001. ISBN
1902301188
- Greg Rosen, Old Labour to New, Politicos Publishing, 2005. ISBN
1842750453
- Eric Shaw, The Labour Party since 1979: Crisis and
Transformation, Routledge, 1994
- Andrew Thorpe, A History of the British Labour Party,
Palgrave Macmillan, 2008. ISBN 0230500110
- Phillip Whitehead, The Writing on the Wall, Michael Joseph, 1985.
- Patrick Wintour and Colin Hughes, Labour Rebuilt,
Fourth Estate, 1990.
- John Pilger, Freedom Next Time, Bantam Press, 2006.
ISBN 0593055527.
External links
Official party sites
Other