Labour party

Labour party
a political party in Great Britain, formed in 1900 from various socialist and labor groups and taking its present name in 1906.

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British political party whose historic links with trade unions have led it to promote an active role for the state in the creation of economic prosperity and the provision of social services.

In opposition to the Conservative Party, it has been Britain's major democratic socialist party since the early 20th century. In 1900 the Trades Union Congress and the Independent Labour Party (founded 1893) established the Labour Representation Committee, which took the name Labour Party in 1906. In 1918 it became a socialist party with a democratic constitution, and by 1922 it had supplanted the Liberal Party as the official opposition party. In 1924 James Ramsay MacDonald formed the first Labour government, with Liberal support. The party was out of power from 1935 until a spectacular recovery in 1945 brought in Clement R. Attlee's government (until 1951), which introduced a system of social welfare, including a national health service, and extensive nationalization of industry. Labour regained power under Harold Wilson (1964–70) and later James Callaghan (1974–79), but it foundered because of economic problems and worsening relations with its trade-union allies. In 1983 Michael Foot's radical program resulted in a massive Labour defeat. Neil Kinnock moved the party toward the centre, but only in 1997 did Tony Blair and his "New Labour" agenda succeed in returning Labour to power.

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Introduction
Irish  Páirtí Lucht Oibre (“Irish Labour Party”) 

      main party of the left in the Republic of Ireland.

History
      The forerunner of the Labour Party, the Irish Labour Party and Trades Union Congress, was organized in 1912 by union leaders James Connolly (Connolly, James) and James Larkin and formally established as an independent party in March 1930, when it was renamed the Labour Party. In 1922 it won more than 20 percent of the vote in elections to the Dáil (lower house of Parliament) in the newly established Irish Free State and served as the major opposition party from 1922 to 1927. Despite its small size, the Labour Party participated in broad coalition governments with Fine Gael and other parties in 1948–51 and 1954–57.

      A cautious, conservative, and surprisingly rural party considering its origins in the trade union movement, the Labour Party moved leftward in the 1960s under a new leader, Brendan Corish, and attracted urban intellectuals. The party hoped to take advantage of the modernization of Irish society and outgrow its status as a minor party. Although it governed as a junior partner with Fine Gael in 1973–77 and 1981–87 (except for a period in 1982, when Fianna Fáil was in office), it made no electoral breakthroughs until 1990, when Mary Robinson (Robinson, Mary), candidate of the Labour Party and the Workers' Party, won the 1990 presidential election and became the first woman president of Ireland. In 1992, under the leadership of Dick Spring, the party enjoyed its greatest success in 70 years, winning nearly 20 percent of the vote and 33 seats in the Dáil in general elections that year. A majority coalition with the Fianna Fáil party collapsed after two years in 1994, and the party formed a new three-party coalition with Fine Gael and Democratic Left. The Labour Party's electoral gains evaporated in 1997, when the party won only 17 seats in the Dáil. In 1999 the party formally merged with Democratic Left, and in 2002 the combined party secured only 21 seats. The Labour Party captured just 20 seats in the 2007 elections.

Policy and structure
      From the 1960s, Labour Party policy reflected the mainstream of European social democracy. The party advocated liberalization of laws on divorce and contraception, an active role for the state in managing the economy, and a moderate position (between those of Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael) on the question of eventual unification with Northern Ireland. Originally opposed to membership in the European Economic Community (now commonly referred to as the European Union), which Ireland joined in 1973, the party gradually modified its stance and advocated a “yes” vote in referendums endorsing integration in 1987, 1992, and 1998. At the beginning of the 21st century, the party's support was primarily urban and disproportionately working class.

      Although the basic unit of party organization is the local branch, the Labour Party also has the affiliation of unions representing about half the Irish Congress of Trade Unions. Supreme authority is placed in its annual delegate conference, but administrative and general affairs are entrusted to a national executive, the General Council, which appoints the party's general secretary, the deputy general secretary, the organization secretary, and the international secretary. The Council, which meets three or four times a year, includes persons elected by the party conference; parliamentarians; representatives of the Association of Labour Councillors, the party's youth and women's sections, and its trade union affiliates; and some co-opted members. Additional women members may be appointed to ensure that women hold at least 20 percent of Council seats. Day-to-day business is delegated to an executive subcommittee. Essentially, the parliamentary leadership dominates policy making. Beginning in the 1980s, however, the party has entered coalition governments only with the approval of a postelection special delegate conference, and the party leader is now subject to selection by a one-member-one-vote system.

Additional Reading
Arthur Mitchell, Labour in Irish Politics 1890–1930 (1974), is the standard work on the early history of the Labour Party. The party's transformation from the 1960s is described in Michael Gallagher, The Irish Labour Party in Transition 1957–82 (1982). Tim Ryan, Dick Spring: A Safe Pair of Hands! (1993), is a journalistic profile of the party's most successful leader.Michael Marsh

Introduction
 British political party whose historic links with trade unions (organized labour) have led it to promote an active role for the state in the creation of economic prosperity and in the provision of social services. In opposition to the Conservative Party, it has been the major democratic socialist party in Britain since the early 20th century.

History
      The Labour Party was born at the turn of the 20th century out of the frustration of working-class people at their inability to field parliamentary candidates through the Liberal Party, which at that time was the dominant social-reform party in Britain. In 1900 the Trades Union Congress (the national federation of British trade unions) cooperated with the Independent Labour Party (founded in 1893) to establish a Labour Representation Committee, which took the name Labour Party in 1906. The early Labour Party lacked a nationwide mass membership or organization; up to 1914 it made progress chiefly through an informal agreement with the Liberals not to run candidates against each other wherever possible. After World War I the party made great strides, owing to a number of factors: first, the Liberal Party tore itself apart in a series of factional disputes; second, the 1918 Representation of the People Act extended the electoral franchise to all males aged 21 or older and to women aged 30 or older; and third, in 1918 Labour reconstituted itself as a formally socialist (socialism) party with a democratic constitution and a national structure. The party's new program, “Labour and the New Social Order,” drafted by Fabian Society leaders Sidney and Beatrice Webb (Webb, Sidney and Beatrice), committed Labour to the pursuit of full employment with a minimum wage and a maximum workweek, democratic control and public ownership of industry, progressive taxation, and the expansion of educational and social services. By 1922 Labour had supplanted the Liberal Party as the official opposition to the ruling Conservative Party.

      In 1924, with Liberal support, James Ramsay MacDonald (MacDonald, Ramsay) formed the first Labour government, though his minority administration was brought down less than one year later over questions of its sympathy for the new Soviet state and over alleged communist influence within the party. Labour emerged from the 1929 election as the largest party in Parliament, though again it lacked an overall majority and had to form a coalition government with the Liberals. In 1931 the party suffered one of the severest crises in its history when, faced with demands to cut public expenditure as a condition for receiving loans from foreign banks, MacDonald defied the objections of most Labour officials and formed a coalition government with Conservatives and Liberals. In the ensuing election Labour's parliamentary representation was reduced from 288 to 52. The party remained out of power until 1940, when Labour ministers joined a wartime coalition government under Winston Churchill (Churchill, Sir Winston).

      Labour achieved a spectacular recovery in the general election of 1945, when it won 393 seats and a comfortable 146-seat overall majority in the House of Commons (Commons, House of). Most commentators have attributed this victory to the electorate's overwhelming desire for social reform and its determination to avoid a return to the interwar era of economic depression and unemployment. Under the leadership of Prime Minister Clement Attlee (Attlee, Clement, 1st Earl Attlee of Walthamstow, Viscount Prestwood), the Labour governments of the following six years built on the state's recent experience of wartime intervention to construct a postwar political consensus based on a mixed economy, a much more extensive system of social welfare (including a National Health Service), and a commitment to the pursuit of full employment. Postwar economic recovery proved slow, however, and in the 1950 election Labour's majority was reduced to five. In 1951 it lost power to the Conservatives.

      Throughout the 1950s the question of whether, and how, to adapt the party's traditional socialist approach to an affluent society—especially the question of the nationalization of industry—divided Labour's ranks. “Bevanites” (followers of former health minister Aneurin Bevan (Bevan, Aneurin)) wanted a more socialist economic policy and less dependence on the United States; the “revisionists,” led by Hugh Gaitskell (Gaitskell, Hugh), Attlee's successor as party leader, wished to drop the commitment to the nationalization of industry. Labour did not regain power until 1964 under Harold Wilson (Wilson, Harold, Baron Wilson Of Rievaulx), who was prime minister until 1970. Wilson attempted to resolve the problem of Britain's relative economic decline by pursuing a strategy of technocratic reform, corporatist relations with business and labour leaders, and a system of “indicative” economic planning, in which the government attempted to facilitate economic development in directions of predicted growth. The party held power again from 1974 to 1979, first under Wilson and then under James Callaghan (Callaghan, James Callaghan, Baron). Labour's narrow five-seat majority in the election of October 1974 diminished through the term, forcing the party to enter a “Lib-Lab” pact with the Liberal Party. Although hampered by a small majority, the Labour Party pursued controversial policies, including support for Britain's continued membership in the European Community and devolution in Scotland and Wales, which was rejected by referenda in 1979. Ultimately, the moderate social-democratic approach exemplified by the Wilson-Callaghan years foundered on the twin rocks of Britain's chronic economic problems and Labour's worsening relations with its trade union allies.

      Following the “Winter of Discontent” of 1978–79, when Britain suffered a series of major strikes by trade unions, the party was ousted from office by the Conservatives under Margaret Thatcher (Thatcher, Margaret). Subsequently, Labour underwent a period of considerable internal turmoil. Aided by the leaders of some major trade unions, the party's left wing succeeded in forcing through a number of organizational reforms that enhanced the power of grassroots activists and trade unions in the selection of parliamentary candidates and party leaders. In response, a number of leading parliamentarians and supporters seceded from Labour and founded the Social Democratic Party (SDP) in 1981. In the 1983 general election Callaghan's successor, Michael Foot (Foot, Michael), presented a radical manifesto—dubbed the “longest suicide note in history” by Gerald Kaufman, a Labour member of Parliament and critic of the party's reforms—that proposed extensive nationalization of industry, economic planning, unilateral nuclear disarmament, and the withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Community. The result was Labour's worst national electoral defeat in more than 50 years. Foot was replaced later that year by Neil Kinnock (Kinnock, Neil, Baron Kinnock of Bedwellty), a politician with leftist credentials who set about reestablishing Labour as a credible national electoral force. Kinnock's “modernization” process, which involved a reevaluation of party policies and the elimination of extremists—including the Trotskyist wing, Militant Tendency—contributed to Labour's electoral revival but was not sufficient to deprive the Conservatives of their governing majorities in the general elections of 1987 and 1992. Nevertheless, the process was continued by Kinnock's successors as party leader, John Smith (1992–94) and Tony Blair (Blair, Tony). In a series of programmatic and organizational changes, the party reembraced the mixed economy, declared its support for European integration, dropped its unpopular unilateral nuclear disarmament policy, rewrote the clause of its constitution that committed it to the public ownership of industry, and gave serious consideration to a new range of constitutional reforms, including devolution, voting reform, and reform of the House of Lords (Lords, House of).

      This “New Labour” agenda, combined with highly professionalized political marketing, produced a landslide victory in the general election of 1997, returning Labour to power after 18 years of Conservative Party rule and securing Tony Blair's appointment as prime minister. Through its policy of All Women Short Lists (AWSLs), the Labour Party dramatically increased the number of women in Parliament; in 1997 it elected 101 women members, nearly 25 percent of all Labour parliamentarians, bringing the total number of women members to a record 120.

      With a decisive 179-seat majority in Parliament, the Blair government accepted some of Margaret Thatcher's policies but also carried out several of the reforms it promised in its manifesto, including abolishing the right of most hereditary peers to sit in the House of Lords and introducing devolved legislative assemblies in Scotland and Wales after successful referenda. It signed the Social Chapter of the Treaty on European Union (Maastricht Treaty), which sought to harmonize European social policies on issues such as working conditions, equality in the workplace, and worker health and safety; helped to forge an agreement between Republicans and Unionists in Northern Ireland; modernized the format of “Prime Minister's Question Time,” during which the prime minister is required to answer questions from the opposition in person; and promised eventual referenda on the introduction of the euro, the European Union's single currency, and reforms of the electoral system. In 2001 the party won a second consecutive landslide victory, capturing a 167-seat majority—the largest-ever second-term majority for any party in the House of Commons. Despite the party's electoral success, Blair's leadership style was often criticized by his Labour opponents as dictatorial. Blair also faced internal dissent over his support for the U.S. policy of military confrontation with Iraq in 2003, when 139 Labour members of Parliament backed an amendment opposing the government's policy. Nevertheless, in 2005 Labour won its third consecutive general election (albeit with a significantly reduced majority) for the first time in the party's history.

Policy and structure
      Since its founding, the Labour Party has maintained a federal structure, operating in England, Scotland, and Wales. Within this structure the party accords rights of representation to its members through various affiliated organizations. These organizations include the constituency Labour parties (CLPs), which are responsible for recruiting and organizing members in each of the country's parliamentary constituencies; affiliated trade unions, which traditionally have had an important role in party affairs; the Parliamentary Labour Party (PLP), comprising Labour members of Parliament; and a variety of small socialist groups such as the Fabian Society. Delegates from these organizations meet in an annual conference, where they are given formal authority in policy-making matters. The Labour Party's various ancillary bodies (such as the women's and youth sections) are also entitled to representation at the annual conference, and a number of individuals attend in ex officio capacity—including members of Parliament and parliamentary candidates. One of the principal functions of the annual conference is to elect the National Executive Committee (NEC), which oversees the party's day-to-day affairs. Twelve members of the NEC are elected by trade union delegates, seven by CLPs, five by women delegates, one by youth delegates, and one by delegates from affiliated socialist societies.

      Notwithstanding the formal sovereignty of the annual conference, policy making in the Labour Party historically has been dominated by coalitions of parliamentary elites and major trade union leaders. On occasion, however, this moderate establishment has lost ground to radical trade unionists and activists from the CLPs. As a result, since 1987 the parliamentary leadership has attempted to reassert its authority through a series of organizational reforms approved and supported by moderate trade union leaders. In the electoral college that selects the party leader, for example, the proportion of votes controlled by the unions was reduced from 40 percent to one-third; the other two-thirds were divided equally between the PLP and the CLPs. Trade unions also used to control 40 percent of the vote in the local electoral colleges that selected candidates for Parliament, but since 1987 those candidates have been chosen by a simple ballot of local party members. In the annual conference the proportion of delegates controlled by the unions, at one time more than 90 percent, was reduced to a maximum of 50 percent.

      Another product of structural reform is the National Policy Forum, a body that effectively decreases the influence of the annual conference and reduces the voice of grassroots activists. The forum is divided into a number of smaller policy commissions, which are made up of appointed members and coordinated by a Cabinet minister (or, when the party is in opposition, by a shadow minister). The function of each commission is to produce policy reports for inspection by the forum and the NEC and for approval by the annual conference. Policy reports must be approved or rejected as a block, and affiliated organizations may not propose policy resolutions while issues are being deliberated by a commission.

      Prior to World War II, Labour's electoral support was based largely on blue-collar workers and middle-class socialists. Since the 1960s sections of the middle class who work in the public sector have joined the coalition. After 1979 the Labour vote became heavily regionalized and concentrated in industrial areas of Scotland, South Wales, and northern England, though the renovation of the party leading up to the electoral victory of 1997 succeeded in restoring significant support in urban areas across southern England. Approximately two-thirds of Labour's vote still comes from blue-collar workers, though they account for only about one-third of the party's membership. Individual membership, which stood at about 350,000 at the end of the 1990s, has declined since 1960, though there was an upsurge during Blair's first years as party leader. The party has relied heavily on its trade union affiliates throughout its history for financial support. Since the early 1990s attempts have been made to reduce this dependence, though the degree of change has not been significant. About half of the Labour Party's income is derived from union sources; the remainder comes from individual members, a variety of wealthy donors, and modest returns on investments. The party's increasingly close ties to British corporations under Blair's leadership provoked anger from the trade unions, some of which took steps to end their association with the party, including beginning talks in 2002 with the Conservative Party and the Liberal Democrats.

Paul David Webb

Additional Reading
Geoffrey Foote, The Labour Party's Political Thought: A History, 3rd ed. (1997). Eric Shaw, The Labour Party Since 1945: Old Labour, New Labour (1996); Discipline and Discord in the Labour Party: The Politics of Managerial Control in the Labour Party, 1951–87 (1988); and The Labour Party Since 1979: Crisis and Transformation (1994).

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Universalium. 2010.

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