Speak for Britain: A new history of the Labour Party

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Speak for Britain!: A new history of the Labour Party
File:Speak for Britain.jpg
Cover of the first edition
Author Martin Pugh
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Published London
Publisher Bodley Head (2010), Vintage (2011)
Publication date
2010
Media type Print
Pages 464
ISBN 9780099520788
324.24107

Speak for Britain!: A new history of the Labour Party is a 2010 book by British author Martin Pugh.

Synopsis

Speak for Britain! is a comprehensive history of the Labour Party from foundation to New Labour. The author argues Labour never entirely succeeded in 'converting the whole working class to Socialism', instead adopting radical liberalism in some areas and populism in others to win over different voters. The book criticises the failure of the party to embrace constitutional reform in the United Kingdom, 'compounding common ground with Conservatism'. Hugh Gaitskell is also criticised for alleged failure to understand the Labour movement and the abandonment of the commitment to full-scale public ownership of industry is also examined.

Reception

In The Guardian former Labour politician Roy Hattersley wrote that 'a "new history of the Labour party" needs to be far more than a catalogue of names and events. Pugh certainly has opinions which, irrespective of their merits, make welcome additions to the narrative...But most of Speak for Britain (one exception is constitutional reform) lacks analysis. As a result, it informs without teaching the lessons that Labour needs to learn.'[1] In the New Statesman the book was described as 'timely'.[2] In World Socialism, published by the Socialist Party of Great Britain the book was characterised as 'a good factual picture of the Labour Party’s history' and also noting that the author 'clearly has it in for Blair, regarding him as an essentially Conservative figure' and that in the index listing of 'Thatcher, Margaret’, the index lists a few page references and then states, ‘see also Blair, Tony'.[3] The book was also reviewed by a Conservative Party MP in the Total politics magazine.[4]

References

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