Newsroom
Conservative
News
Policy
Conservative Policies
About
Us
Party History
Local History
Your
Councillors
Get
Involved
Join
Party
Shop
Contact Us
Events
Today's Date:
|
A Brief History
of the Conservative Party
By Stuart Ball, Reader, School of
Historical Studies, University of Leicester
Introduction
The Conservative Party has a long history, during
which it has passed through many phases and changes.
For significant periods of modern British history it
has been the dominant governing party, but it has also
suffered divisions, defeats and spells in the
political wilderness. The Conservative Party has
remained relevant because its programme and outlook
have adapted to the changing social and political
environment, and it has never been exclusively linked
to any one issue or group. Continuity is provided by
the fact that the Conservative Party has always stood
for social stability and the rights of property.
Origins
The origins of the Conservative Party can be traced to
the 'Tory' faction which emerged in the later
seventeenth century. This 'Tory Party' established a
secure hold on government between 1783 and 1830, first
under the Younger Pitt and then Lord Liverpool.
However, after Liverpool's retirement in 1827 the
unity of the party was destroyed when the Duke of
Wellington and Robert Peel, were forced, largely as a
result of events in Ireland, to concede full political
emancipation to Roman Catholics. The Tory collapse
opened the way for a return of the Whigs in the 1830s,
and a series of measures including the Great Reform
Act of 1832 changed the political scene; in the
general election which followed the Act the Tories
were reduced to only 180 MPs.
It was in the wake of these upheavals that the name
'Conservative' first began to be used, as Peel sought
to rally the opponents of further reform in the
mid-1830s. He was successful in drawing support back
to the party and became Prime Minister after winning
the election of 1841. However, his decision in 1846 to
reverse course and repeal the protectionist Corn Laws
outraged many of his followers, and the party split
from top to bottom.
Disraeli and Modern
Conservatism
1929
election poster
The continuous modern history of the
Conservative Party begins with the era of Disraeli,
and he has perhaps the strongest amongst the many
claims to be regarded as its founding father. In 1866
the collapse of the Whig ministry allowed a minority
Conservative administration under the 14th Earl of
Derby to tackle the question of extending the
franchise. Shaped by Disraeli's adroit tactics in the
Commons, the Second Reform Act of 1867 was a bold
stroke which sought to protect Conservative interests
and restore their credibility as a governing party.
Most of the new voters were in the industrial towns
and cities, and it was with the aim of improving
Conservative prospects here that Disraeli founded what
became the central pillars of the party organisation:
the National Union, which began as a modest gathering
in 1867, and the Central Office, established in 1870.
Disraeli's government of 1874-1880 was a landmark in
Conservative fortunes, and its domestic measures
widened its appeal to the urban lower and middle
classes. At the same time, Disraeli forged the crucial
link between the Conservative Party and patriotic
pride in nation and empire. However, economic problems
and Gladstone's revival of Liberal spirits led to
Conservative defeat in 1880.
1929
election poster
Despite this setback, the position of the
Conservative Party was becoming much stronger in the
final quarter of the nineteenth century. No longer the
defender of the landed and aristocratic elite alone,
the Conservative Party was becoming a national
presence with an appeal to all communities, and it was
this combination which led to its first period of
dominance, from 1886 to 1906.
Disraeli's successor, the 3rd Marquis of Salisbury,
though by temperament deeply pessimistic, was an
astute strategist. A section of the Liberal Party, led
by Lord Hartington and Joseph Chamberlain, could not
accept Gladstone's policy of Home Rule for Ireland and
broke away. These Liberal Unionists first gave
informal support to Salisbury's government of
1886-1892, and then shared office as a junior partner
when Salisbury returned to power in 1895. As a result,
from the 1890s to the 1920s, 'Unionist' displaced
Conservative as the general term for the Party and its
supporters - in Scotland until the 1960s. The Irish
question, the Liberal weakness and disunity, and the
impact of the Boer War led to substantial Conservative
victories in 1895 and 1900.
Defeat and Disunity
1929 election poster
When
Salisbury retired from the Premiership in 1902, the
outlook for the Conservatives appeared to be
favourable. However, their fortunes swiftly declined
under his nephew and successor, Arthur Balfour, and
the period from 1902 to 1914 was the worst period of
defeat and disunity in the Party's modern history -
principally because of divisions over Joseph
Chamberlain's programme of pro-Empire tariff reform,
which was strongly opposed by a small group of free
traders. More seriously, working-class fears that
duties on food imports would raise the cost of living
made it an electoral liability.
The internal divisions which followed caused a purge
of the Cabinet in 1903 and did much to cause three
successive electoral defeats - the landslide of 1906,
which left only 157 Conservative MPs, and narrower
reverses in January and December 1910. The Party was
further divided over resistance to the Liberal
government's reform of the House of Lords in 1911, and
Balfour finally resigned the leadership.
The defeats also led to organisational reforms, and in
1911 the post of Party Chairman was created to oversee
the work of the Central Office. Balfour's unexpected
successor, Andrew Bonar Law, restored Party morale
with a series of vigorous attacks upon the government
and by his support of Ulster during the passage of the
Irish Home Rule Bill in 1912-1914.
First World War
1945 election poster 
The First World War transformed the position
of the Conservative Party. As the 'patriotic' party,
its advocacy of vigorous prosecution of the war led to
increased popularity, and it also benefited from the
splits and eventual decline of the Liberal Party. In
May 1915 the Conservatives agreed to join a coalition
under the Liberal Prime Minister, H.H. Asquith.
In December 1916, concerned over lack of direction in
the war, the Conservative leaders supported the
supplanting of Asquith by a more energetic and
charismatic Liberal, David Lloyd George. The
Conservatives had a larger share of office in the
restructured coalition of 1916-1918, and provided most
of the back-bench support in the House of Commons.
When victory came in 1918 Lloyd George was at the
height of his popularity, and Bonar Law readily agreed
that the Coalition should continue in order to tackle
the problems of peace-making and reconstruction.
However, after economic depression and failures of
policy in 1920-1921, the Coalition became increasingly
unpopular amongst Conservative MPs and local
activists. In March 1921 Bonar Law resigned for
reasons of health, and Austen Chamberlain became the
Conservative leader. His approach was too autocratic
and inflexible, and he seemed too closely tied to the
discredited Lloyd George. A revolt against the
Coalition swelled up from the lower ranks of the
party, and Chamberlain was defeated at the meeting of
Conservative MPs held at the Carlton Club on 19
October 1922. Bonar Law led the victorious rebels, and
thus ousted both Chamberlain as Party Leader and Lloyd
George as Prime Minister.
Inter-war Ascendancy
1951 election poster
The
fall of the Coalition was the formative event in
Conservative politics between the wars. It marked a
decision to return to normal party politics, with
Labour replacing the Liberals as the main opposition.
The events of 1922 also brought to the fore a group of
anti-coalitionist junior ministers who dominated the
leadership until 1940. Stanley Baldwin was the most
important of these, and he replaced the dying Bonar
Law as party leader and Prime Minister in May 1923.
Despite leading the Conservatives into an unnecessary
defeat in December 1923 and a serious assault upon his
position in 1929-1931, Baldwin remained leader until
1937. Standing for honesty, moderation and traditional
English values, he attracted widespread popular
support. As a result of this and of the Liberal-Labour
rivalry, the Conservative Party dominated the
inter-war decades. Between 1918 and 1945 they were the
largest party in the House of Commons for all but two
and a half years.
In the crisis of August 1931 the Conservatives agreed
to serve under the former Labour Prime Minister,
Ramsay MacDonald, in a National government in which
the Conservatives formed by far the largest element.
In 1935 Baldwin replaced MacDonald as Prime Minister,
and in 1937 he handed on both the Premiership and the
Conservative leadership to Neville Chamberlain.
The latter's period as leader was dominated by
controversy over the policy of appeasement.
Chamberlain exerted a much closer grip over the Party
than Baldwin had done, and until the outbreak of war
he was strongly supported by the grass-roots and
almost all MPs. However, he seemed less suited to the
demands of wartime, and a revolt of Conservative MPs
in the Norway debate of 8-9 May 1940 forced his
resignation as Prime Minister.
Winston Churchill, an isolated Conservative critic
during the 1930s, now became Prime Minister; later in
the same year he also succeeded Chamberlain as party
leader. Churchill rallied the nation, but even his
prestige could not shelter the Conservative Party from
popular blame for the failures of the 1930s. This led
to its second major electoral defeat of the century in
1945, when it was reduced to only 210 MPs.
The Post-War Consensus
The Conservatives adapted to this setback whilst in
opposition during the 1945-1951 Labour governments,
and overhauled both organisation and policy. As a
result, between the late 1940s and the early 1970s the
Conservatives accepted the pillars of the post-war
'consensus': the Welfare State, the public ownership
of certain industries, government intervention in
economic affairs, and partnership in industry between
trade unions and employers. Although Churchill
remained rather unenthusiastic, these policies enabled
the Conservatives to regain power in 1951 and then to
remain in office continuously until 1964.
1955 election poster
The
key figures in this period were Anthony Eden, who
succeeded Churchill in April 1955 but retired after
the failed Suez invasion in January 1957; Harold
Macmillan, Prime Minister and Conservative leader from
1957 until November 1963; and R.A. Butler. Butler
twice seemed on the brink of becoming leader and Prime
Minister, but in 1963 Macmillan was instead
unexpectedly succeeded by Sir Alec Douglas-Home.
Macmillan's sudden resignation was due to ill-health,
but since 1961 his ministry had been mired in economic
stagnation and public scandal, and by 1963 defeat
seemed likely.
Although his aristocratic lineage was an easy target
for the meritocratic campaign of Labour, Douglas-Home
managed to regain some lost ground and the
Conservatives only narrowly lost the general election
in 1964.
In August 1965 Douglas-Home stood down, and the first
formal party leadership election by a ballot of MPs
took place; it was also the first change of leadership
whilst in opposition since 1911. The victor was Edward
Heath, whose lower middle-class background was thought
more publicly acceptable than the aristocratic image
of Macmillan and Douglas-Home. Heath survived the
Party's loss of further seats to Labour in the 1966
election, but never secured the affection of the
public or Conservative backbenchers. To general
surprise, he won the 1970 election and became Prime
Minister.
Despite his personal achievement in taking Britain
into the Common market, the failures of the Heath
ministry of 1970-1974 have been the catharsis of
modern Conservatism. The reversals of policy, the
failure to control inflation or contain the trade
unions through legislation on industrial relations,
and two defeats at the hands of the coal-miners led
first to the fall of Heath and second to the rise and
development of Thatcherism. After losing the two
elections of February and October 1974, Heath was
forced to hold a ballot for the Party leadership in
February 1975 in which he was defeated by Margaret
Thatcher.
The Rise of Thatcherism
In opposition during 1975-1979 the new leader
developed a radical agenda founded upon the 'free
market', rolling back government intervention and
leaving as much as possible to individual initiative.
This was the core of Thatcherism.
Concern over economic decline and the power wielded by
the trade unions created a receptive public mood, and
Thatcher led the Conservatives to three successive
victories in 1979, 1983 and 1987. She was the dominant
political personality throughout the 1980s, especially
after securing victory in the Falklands war of 1982.
She is widely credited with restoring Britain's status
as an enterprise-based economy and as a significant
influence on the international stage. However, at the
end of the decade economic recession, her commitment
to the deeply unpopular 'poll tax', and internal
disputes over European policy led to Mrs Thatcher's
defeat in a leadership ballot in November 1990.

1979 election poster
From Major to Howard
The successor to emerge from this contest was the
relatively unknown figure of John Major, the candidate
thought most able to unify a divided and traumatised
party. Major abandoned the 'poll tax' and presented a
more 'caring' image, and support for the Conservatives
improved enough for him to hold on to a narrow
majority in the general election of April 1992.
However, this margin was steadily eroded during the
following parliament, and by 1997 his administration
was clinging on by its fingertips.
1997 election poster
The Major government of 1992-1997 was a
painful period for the Conservative Party, and opinion
poll ratings slumped to record lows following the
economic fiasco of 'Black Wednesday' in 1992. The most
serious problems were caused by a recession which hit
Conservative support in southern England, a collapse
of normal party unity over the increasingly
contentious issue of Europe, and 'sleaze' - a string
of personal scandals involving Conservative ministers
and MPs. Press hostility and a modernised Labour
opposition prevented the Conservatives from recovering
when the economic position improved, and on 1 May 1997
they suffered their third and final sweeping defeat of
the twentieth century. Only 165 MPs survived, and
Major at once resigned the leadership; in his place,
the Party selected its youngest leader in modern
times, William Hague.
The Conservatives were unable to recover ground during
the 1997-2001 Parliament. The party remained unpopular
with the public, whilst the Labour government’s
careful management of the economy meant that it
survived any other difficulties without lasting
damage. Hague followed a more ‘Euro-sceptic’ policy,
ruling out joining the single European currency. This
caused tensions in the party but also led to its
greatest success in the period, doubling its seats to
36 in the European Parliament elections of June 1999.
However, concentration on Europe was less effective in
the June 2001 general election, and Conservative hopes
of at least a partial recovery were dashed. 166 MPs
were elected, only one more than in 1997, and on the
morning after the poll Hague announced his
resignation. A new selection procedure had been
introduced, and after ballots of Conservative MPs the
two leading candidates went forward to a vote of the
party membership in September 2001. Iain Duncan Smith
secured 155,933 votes to Kenneth Clarke’s 100,864, and
so became the new leader of the Conservative Party.
During the following two years there was little sign
of improvement in the Party's fortunes, as the
domestic political and economic situation remained
largely unchanged. The Conservatives supported the
policy of Prime Minister Tony Blair in the overthrow
of Saddam Hussein's regime in Iraq in the spring and
summer of 2003. This was in tune with Conservative
opinion whilst the Labour Party was deeply divided
over the issue, but the war did not change the
relative popularity of the two parties. A significant
minority of Conservative MPs had been doubtful about
Duncan Smith's leadership from the outset, and the
lack of improvement in the Party's position caused
this number to increase during the summer and autumn
of 2003. The criticism and speculation culminated in a
ballot of Conservative MPs on 29 October, in which
Duncan Smith was defeated by 75 votes to 90. The
desire of the party to avoid further disunity was
shown when only one candidate was nominated for the
vacant leadership, and so a contest was avoided.
Michael Howard was declared Leader on 6 November;
although older than both of his predecessors, he had
the asset of considerable experience of government,
having been a cabinet minister from 1990 to 1997.
- Stuart Ball, Reader, School of Historical Studies,
University of Leicester."
The Conservative Party is
grateful to Stuart Ball for contributing this brief
history, which represents his personal view. It is
not an official Conservative Party statement.
|
|