Servants of the People : The Inside Story Of New Labour

SKU: 9780140278507
Regular price $55.99
Unit price
per
  • Author:
    RAWNSLEY Andrew
  • ISBN:
    9780140278507
  • Publication Date:
    January 2002
  • Edition:
    1
  • Pages:
    592
  • Binding:
    Paperback
  • Publisher:
    Penguin Classics
  • Country of Publication:
Servants of the People : The Inside Story Of New Labour
Servants of the People : The Inside Story Of New Labour

Servants of the People : The Inside Story Of New Labour

SKU: 9780140278507
Regular price $55.99
Unit price
per
  • Author:
    RAWNSLEY Andrew
  • ISBN:
    9780140278507
  • Publication Date:
    January 2002
  • Edition:
    1
  • Pages:
    592
  • Binding:
    Paperback
  • Publisher:
    Penguin Classics
  • Country of Publication:

Description

Andrew Rawnsley's Servants of the People is a timely and fascinating look at New Labour.

Every new government promises to represent a new dawn, but for New Labour it was the Covenant that Tony Blair made with Britain. The party that won a landslide victory on May Day 1997 made the special claim that it represented a decisive break with the disappointments of the old left and the old right: its Third Way would transcend both. Having fashioned an extraordinarily wide coalition to secure power, New Labour would hold it as Servants of the People. Was that a grandiloquent way of saying the government would be enslaved to the opinion polls? Or has Tony Blair been pursuing a strategic plan, breathtaking in its audacity, to remake the political landscape of Britain in the third millennium?

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  • Andrew Rawnsley's Servants of the People is a timely and fascinating look at New Labour.

    Every new government promises to represent a new dawn, but for New Labour it was the Covenant that Tony Blair made with Britain. The party that won a landslide victory on May Day 1997 made the special claim that it represented a decisive break with the disappointments of the old left and the old right: its Third Way would transcend both. Having fashioned an extraordinarily wide coalition to secure power, New Labour would hold it as Servants of the People. Was that a grandiloquent way of saying the government would be enslaved to the opinion polls? Or has Tony Blair been pursuing a strategic plan, breathtaking in its audacity, to remake the political landscape of Britain in the third millennium?

Andrew Rawnsley's Servants of the People is a timely and fascinating look at New Labour.

Every new government promises to represent a new dawn, but for New Labour it was the Covenant that Tony Blair made with Britain. The party that won a landslide victory on May Day 1997 made the special claim that it represented a decisive break with the disappointments of the old left and the old right: its Third Way would transcend both. Having fashioned an extraordinarily wide coalition to secure power, New Labour would hold it as Servants of the People. Was that a grandiloquent way of saying the government would be enslaved to the opinion polls? Or has Tony Blair been pursuing a strategic plan, breathtaking in its audacity, to remake the political landscape of Britain in the third millennium?