The Labour Party and the Labour Left

<p>This Thesis examines the relationship between the organisational and ideological transformation of the Labour Party, and the decline of intra-party factionalism by the groups of the Labour Left during the period from 1979 to 1997. Two central questions are considered. First, whether the fr...

Popoln opis

Bibliografske podrobnosti
Main Authors: Young, R, Ross Young
Drugi avtorji: Professor Anthony Heath, M
Format: Thesis
Jezik:English
Izdano: 2001
Teme:
_version_ 1826277984681590784
author Young, R
Ross Young
author2 Professor Anthony Heath, M
author_facet Professor Anthony Heath, M
Young, R
Ross Young
author_sort Young, R
collection OXFORD
description <p>This Thesis examines the relationship between the organisational and ideological transformation of the Labour Party, and the decline of intra-party factionalism by the groups of the Labour Left during the period from 1979 to 1997. Two central questions are considered. First, whether the fragmentation and decline of the Left during this period can best be understood by examining the interplay between organisational and ideological factors at <em>both</em> the party <em>and</em> individual group levels. Second, whether 'New Labour' continues to exhibit some of the key traits of attitudinal dissent among its grassroots membership, despite the lack of an organisational apparatus within which sub-groups of activists could challenge the centralising tendencies of party leaders and influence the direction of party policy.</p> <p>Labour's ideological and organisational transformation had a number of important consequences for the prevalence of intra-party factionalism. The organisational reforms meant that Labour ceased to represent Duverger's 'branch-mass' type of party. Furthermore, party leaders regained centralised control over members and activists through the resurgence of Michels' 'iron law of oligarchy'. The depth of Labour's ideological transformation also reinforced the narrowing of the ideological gap between (radical) grassroots members and ordinary (moderate) voters, such that May's 'law of curvilinear disparity' appeared extinct inside Blair's New Labour. Labour's transformation had a remarkably fragmenting effect at the group-level. The Labour Left was a collection of various groupings, each of which displayed different structural properties and ideological characteristics. There was no single organisational form of Labour Left factionalism, nor was their any common sense of ideological purpose. The processes of party transformation would act only to further the Left's fragmentation and cement its decline.</p> <p>However, it would be premature to talk of New Labour as a party free from dissent. Despite the dissolution of the Labour Left, New Labour's grassroots membership has retained some of the principal features of factionalism. Using data from original survey research among party members, it is suggested that New Labour has encouraged new types of 'objective' and 'subjective' factionalism. The kind of factionalism typified by the Labour Left of the 1970s and 1980s may have disappeared, but we should not preclude the growth of new dimensions of conflict between party leaders and grassroots members.</p>
first_indexed 2024-03-06T23:37:08Z
format Thesis
id oxford-uuid:6e09469d-854f-420c-8167-c755b1b919f1
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T23:37:08Z
publishDate 2001
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:6e09469d-854f-420c-8167-c755b1b919f12022-03-26T19:21:47ZThe Labour Party and the Labour LeftThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:6e09469d-854f-420c-8167-c755b1b919f1Political parties1979-1997Great BritainPolitics and governmentEnglishPolonsky Theses Digitisation Project2001Young, RRoss YoungProfessor Anthony Heath, M<p>This Thesis examines the relationship between the organisational and ideological transformation of the Labour Party, and the decline of intra-party factionalism by the groups of the Labour Left during the period from 1979 to 1997. Two central questions are considered. First, whether the fragmentation and decline of the Left during this period can best be understood by examining the interplay between organisational and ideological factors at <em>both</em> the party <em>and</em> individual group levels. Second, whether 'New Labour' continues to exhibit some of the key traits of attitudinal dissent among its grassroots membership, despite the lack of an organisational apparatus within which sub-groups of activists could challenge the centralising tendencies of party leaders and influence the direction of party policy.</p> <p>Labour's ideological and organisational transformation had a number of important consequences for the prevalence of intra-party factionalism. The organisational reforms meant that Labour ceased to represent Duverger's 'branch-mass' type of party. Furthermore, party leaders regained centralised control over members and activists through the resurgence of Michels' 'iron law of oligarchy'. The depth of Labour's ideological transformation also reinforced the narrowing of the ideological gap between (radical) grassroots members and ordinary (moderate) voters, such that May's 'law of curvilinear disparity' appeared extinct inside Blair's New Labour. Labour's transformation had a remarkably fragmenting effect at the group-level. The Labour Left was a collection of various groupings, each of which displayed different structural properties and ideological characteristics. There was no single organisational form of Labour Left factionalism, nor was their any common sense of ideological purpose. The processes of party transformation would act only to further the Left's fragmentation and cement its decline.</p> <p>However, it would be premature to talk of New Labour as a party free from dissent. Despite the dissolution of the Labour Left, New Labour's grassroots membership has retained some of the principal features of factionalism. Using data from original survey research among party members, it is suggested that New Labour has encouraged new types of 'objective' and 'subjective' factionalism. The kind of factionalism typified by the Labour Left of the 1970s and 1980s may have disappeared, but we should not preclude the growth of new dimensions of conflict between party leaders and grassroots members.</p>
spellingShingle Political parties
1979-1997
Great Britain
Politics and government
Young, R
Ross Young
The Labour Party and the Labour Left
title The Labour Party and the Labour Left
title_full The Labour Party and the Labour Left
title_fullStr The Labour Party and the Labour Left
title_full_unstemmed The Labour Party and the Labour Left
title_short The Labour Party and the Labour Left
title_sort labour party and the labour left
topic Political parties
1979-1997
Great Britain
Politics and government
work_keys_str_mv AT youngr thelabourpartyandthelabourleft
AT rossyoung thelabourpartyandthelabourleft
AT youngr labourpartyandthelabourleft
AT rossyoung labourpartyandthelabourleft