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‘A Tiny Little Footnote in History’: Conservative Centre Forward
Authors:STEPHEN EVANS
Institution:I would like to thank Tony Baldry MP, Sir William Benyon, Lord Carington of Upton (Lord Carrington), Lord Garel-Jones of Watford, the late Lord Gilmour of Craigmillar, the late Sir Charles Morrison, Lord Prior of Brampton, the late Lord Pym of Sandy, Sir Peter Tapsell MP, and Lord Wakeham of Maldon. I would also like to thank the two anonymous referees for their constructive criticism.
Abstract:In May 1985, two years after he had returned to the back benches, Francis Pym launched the first organised display of dissent within the parliamentary Conservative Party against Margaret Thatcher's leadership: Conservative Centre Forward. Those Conservative MPs who joined the group were very much believers in One Nation Conservatism. Conservative Centre Forward survived for barely a week after going public; it rapidly collapsed amid accusations of disloyalty and inept leadership. The group proved to be a short-lived experiment which achieved little of note and exposed those who were involved to widespread ridicule. Yet, it was precisely because Conservative Centre Forward collapsed so quickly and achieved so little that it was significant. In its own way, the short life of the group provided a revealing commentary upon the character of the mid-1980s Conservative Party. It was a party which, on the one hand, was moving inexorably to the right and therefore ever further away from the values of One Nation Conservatism which Conservative Centre Forward espoused. On the other hand, it was a party which was still traditional enough to view open displays of dissent, of whatever magnitude, as a threat to the unity upon which its continued electoral success depended.
Keywords:Conservative Centre Forward  Conservative Party  One Nation Conservatism  Thatcherism  Francis Pym  Margaret Thatcher  intra-party dissent  party unity
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