100 Years On: Who are the Inheritors of the ‘New Liberal’ Mantle? |
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Authors: | ALISON HOLMES |
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Affiliation: | A Postdoctoral Fellow at the Rothermere American Institute at Oxford University and worked for the Liberal Democrats for ten years, holding senior positions in both the 1992 and 1997 general election campaigns. |
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Abstract: | The 'great divorce' of progressive politics at the end of the nineteenth century permanently altered British politics. While the philosophies of the Labour movement and the Liberal Party had many common elements, ideologically they diverged on issues of the role of liberty and the state in relation to the individual and the community to the point that they became irreconcilable. New Liberalism was one result of that debate. Contemporary political debate reflects many of the same features as the turmoil present a century ago, and the Labour Party and the Liberal Democrats are again contesting much of the same ground. This article seeks to draw out the salient aspects of this debate to conclude which, if either, party is the inheritor of the New Liberal tradition. |
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Keywords: | ideology Labour Party Liberal Democrats New Liberalism |
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