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British Politics and Social Policy during the Second World War*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2009

Kevin Jefferys
Affiliation:
St Mary's College, Strawberry Hill

Extract

This article sets out to examine the relationship between party politics and social reform in the Second World War. The issue of government policy towards reform was raised initially by Richard Titmuss, who argued in his official history of social policy that the experience of total war and the arrival of Churchill's coalition in 1940 led to a fundamentally new attitude on welfare issues. The exposure of widespread social deprivation, Titmuss claimed, made central government fully conscious for the first time of the need for reconstruction; the reforms subsequently proposed or enacted by the coalition were therefore an important prelude to the introduction of a ‘welfare state’ by the post-war Labour administration. These claims have not been borne out by more recent studies of individual wartime policies, but as a general guide to social reform in the period the ideas of Richard Titmuss have never been entirely displaced. In fact the significance of wartime policy, and its close relationship with post-war reform, has been reaffirmed in the most comprehensive study of British politics during the war – Paul Addison's The road to 1945. For Addison, the influence of Labour ministers in the coalition made the government the most radical since Asquith's Liberal administration in the Edwardian period. The war, he notes, clearly placed on the agenda the major items of the post-war welfare state: social security for all, a national health service, full employment policies, improved education and housing, and a new system, of family allowances.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1987

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References

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28 A total of 121 M.P.s, mostly from the Labour party, voted against the government, an action justified on the grounds that Labour was only responding to Tory pressure on the Catering Wages Bill. On this and the party repercussions see Ede diary, 18–22 Feb. 1943, Add. MS 59696, pp. 38–47.

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31 The Times, 21 May 1943.

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38 Speech by Oliver Lyttleton at a meeting of Birmingham Unionist Association, 6 Nov. 1944, Chandos papers, Churchill College, Cambridge, CHAN II 4/17. I am grateful to the Masters, Fellows and Scholars of Churchill College in the University of Cambridge for permission to use this material.

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69 The Times, 22 June 1945, noted that Anderson skirted around the controversial issues in his final major speech of the war period, delivered to the Institute of Municipal Treasurers and Accountants.

70 Labour party, Let us face the future (1945): the measures advocated here included a wide field for public expenditure, the maintenance of purchasing power and a National Investment Board to establish priorities in the use of capital goods, as well as the nationalization of key industries.

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75 Diary, notes by Butler, 9 Sep. 1943, Butler papers, G 15, fo. 90: ‘whereas, on religious questions, there is a feeling that it is out-of-date to wrangle’.

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78 Kopsch, , ‘Conservative party’, pp. 341–61Google Scholar, notes the persistent Labour complaints that the government was giving way to the views of Conservative back-benchers. Certainly Churchill's decision to involve himself personally stemmed from the belief that at least one Conservative minister, Selborne, was threatening to resign on the issue – Cranborne to Selborne, 18 June 1944, Selborne papers, Bodleian Library, Oxford, MS Eng. Hist. c. 981, fos. 6–8.

79 The Times, an ardent supporter of the coalition's reconstruction policies, did much to stress this point of view, subsequently endorsed by historians of the election campaign.

80 Let us face the future: Mr Churchill's declaration of policy.

81 McCallum, and Readman, , Election of 1945, P. 48Google Scholar; ‘Mr Churchill was thinking in terms of the dangers that still lay ahead both in the Japanese War and in post-war Europe. The Labour Party was thinking in terms of victory won and the deserts of those who had won it.’ In May 1945 Attlee in fact added one condition to Churchill's offer of continuing the coalition which had not occurred to the prime minister – the importance of carrying into effect coalition plans for social reform. See Pelling, H., ‘The 1945 general election reconsidered’. The Historical Journal, XXIII, 2 (1980), 401Google Scholar; Macmillan, H., War diaries: politics and war in the Mediterranean (London, 1984), p. 761Google Scholar.

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