An Age of Promises: British election manifestos and addresses 1900-1997
Thackeray, D; Toye, R
Date: 31 October 2019
Journal
Twentieth Century British History
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Publisher DOI
Abstract
This article explores the issue of electoral promises in Twentieth Century Britain –
how they were made, how they were understood, and how they evolved across time. It does
so through a study of general election manifestos (issued by political parties) and election
addresses (issued on behalf of individual candidates). The premise ...
This article explores the issue of electoral promises in Twentieth Century Britain –
how they were made, how they were understood, and how they evolved across time. It does
so through a study of general election manifestos (issued by political parties) and election
addresses (issued on behalf of individual candidates). The premise of the article is that
exploring the act of making promises illuminates the development of political communication
and democratic representation, and that considering the print culture and circulation history
aspects of addresses and manifestos helps us understand the relationship between the process
of pledging and actual policy outcomes. The article further argues that the Labour Party was
an innovator that helped push changes in the ways in which policies were promoted to the
electorate. It posits that the years 1900-97 saw an important but slow and contested shift
towards a more programmatic form of politics. This did not always favour policies of state
expansion, but it did favour promises of state action.
History
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