Industrial Charter

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The Industrial Charter: A Statement of Conservative Industrial Policy was a 1947 pamphlet and policy statement by the United Kingdom Conservative Party. The Charter is widely regarded as representing a seminal moment in the history of post war Conservatism as the party reconciled itself with many of the economic and social policies introduced by Clement Attlee's Labour government following the 1945 United Kingdom general election.

Contents

History

The Charter was first published in May 1947. It was the outcome of a process of rethinking brought about by the Conservative's landslide defeat in the 1945 United Kingdom general election. This process had begun a year earlier when the party's newly extended Research Department began work on defining a policy that was both Conservative and progressive. [1] The policy statement was accepted on 2 October 1947 at the Conservative's Annual Conference being held in Brighton. [2]

Content

The Industrial Charter was a collection of distinct economic policies and included a separate "Pledge to the Consumer", a "Woman's Charter" and a "Workers' Charter". It accepted the idea of a mixed economy, gave a commitment that the party would protect labour rights, stressed the need for fairness and opposed protectionism.

Its emphasis was, though, placed squarely upon the individual and the document was highly-critical of its opponents. The Labour Party's attempts at economic planning were criticised for having created an incompetent and swollen civil service focused on administering a multitude of overlapping and unnecessary restrictions. [3] It argued that the party had removed economic incentives and enforced a 'rigid straight jacket (sic) of doctrinaire political theory…[and] unnecessary controls'. [4] Instead it called for a rolling back of the state and urged that a 'sense of realism, free opportunity, incentives and justice' should 'inspire all industrial policy'. [5]

Reception

The Charter and a shortened 'popular' version were generally well received, sold an estimated 2.5 million copies and have often been thought to have helped "rehabilitate" the Conservative Party after 1945. [6]

Churchill, Leader of the Opposition, held a dinner at the Savoy and complimented the Charter to Rab Butler, who was in charge of the party's policy-making apparatus, but never formally adopted it as party policy. It was published on 12 May 1947. It was praised loudly by every paper apart from the Labour Herald . [7] Churchill, who is said to have commented “but I do not agree with a word of this” to Reginald Maudling’s five-line summary, did not endorse the Charter until after publication. [8] It was said by the Tory Right that the Industrial Charter would “amalgamate the Tory party with the YMCA”. [9] [10] The document caused a notable degree of debate at the October 1947 Conservative Party Conference. [11]

Harold Macmillan managed to persuade the press that the Charter was derived from his 1930s book “The Middle Way”, a claim echoed by Quintin Hogg. This was largely untrue, although Macmillan had sometimes bored drafting meetings by reading extracts from his book. In the view of historian Stuart Ball, the Charter probably owed more to Harry Crookshank’s tenure as Secretary for Mines in the late 1930s, when he followed a policy of cartelisation and market-sharing. [12]

Despite its favourable press, the historian Andrew Taylor also contends that the Charter should be seen as a propaganda failure as it failed to reach its intended audience. [13] This is backed up by a report conducted by Mass Observation which found that eighty per cent of a sample had no knowledge at all of the Charter in the month after its publication. [14]

Historical significance

Although perhaps not as pivotal a moment of the Conservative Party's history as often claimed, the Charter remains historically symbolic as marking the acceptance of the post-war consensus that would later be satirised as Butskellism. [15] This owes much to the significance later imbued into the document by those responsible for its publication. [16]

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References

  1. R.A. Butler, The Art of the Possible: the Memoirs of Lord Butler, K.G., C.H. (London, 1971), p. 145.
  2. The Times, 'Conservative Policy for Industry', 3 October 1947.
  3. Conservative Central Office, The Industrial Charter (1947), pp. 11 and 13.
  4. CCO, The Industrial Charter, p. 1.
  5. CCO, The Industrial Charter, p. 4.
  6. Peter Dorey, British Conservatism and Trade Unionism, 1945-1964 (Farnham, 2009), p. 48.
  7. Butler 1971, p145, p148
  8. Jago, pp192-5"
  9. "The YMCA" had been a derogatory nickname for a group of younger progressive Conservatives in the 1920s.
  10. Butler 1971, pp133-4
  11. Anthony Howard, Rab: the life of R.A. Butler (London, 1987), p. 156.
  12. Ball 2004, pp.292-3
  13. Andrew Taylor, 'Speaking to Democracy: the Conservative Party and Mass Opinion from the 1920s to the 1950s', in Mass Conservatism: The Conservatives and the Public since the 1880s, eds. S. Ball and I. Holliday (London, 2002), pp. 78-99.
  14. Mass Observation, File Report 2516, 'The Industrial Charter' (1947), p. 8.
  15. The Economist, 'Mr Butskell's Dilemma', 13 February 1954.
  16. E.H.H. Green, 'The Conservative Party, the State and the Electorate, 1945-1964', in Party, State and Society: Electoral Behaviour in Britain since 1820 (Aldershot, 1997), 176-200 (pp. 179-80); John Ramsden, The Age of Churchill and Eden, 1940-1957 (London, 1995), p. 94; and R.A. Butler, The Art of the Possible, p. 126.

Additional Bibliography