Summer 2011: Fabian Review
As the Labour Party begins to regroup after a painful election defeat, the Fabian Review looks at what went wrong, what went right, and how to move on.
- Summer 2011
- Tom Hampson
- 1 June 2011
People find it increasingly hard to find anything good to say about the state; the ‘big state’ has become a big stick with which to beat Labour’s record in office.
With the state under attack – not just from spending cuts by a Government ideologically committed to dramatically replacing government’s role, but from Labour critics intent on seeing the party travel a less centralising and technocratic path – the summer Fabian Review investigates the charges on their merits.
Tim Horton analyses new YouGov polling which finds the state to be curiously popular – even among Tories.
Mary Riddell interviews Ed Miliband’s charismatic adviser Maurice Glasman.
In a series of specially commissioned Fabian Essays investigating the role of the state, John Denham argues our national identity should guide how we use the state; Will Straw investigates whether the Labour Government was addicted to law; Alison McGovern keeps sight of the ‘real life’ of the state; and Tim Horton argues that far from being remote or distant, big state institutions are at the core of many meaningful relationships and shared experiences.
Jemima Olchawski reviews Owen Jones’s ‘Chavs: The Demonization of the Working Class.’
Copies are also available priced £4.95 from the Fabian Society bookshop – call 020 7227 4900, email bookshop@fabian-society.org.uk or send a cheque payable to “The Fabian Society” to 11 Dartmouth Street, London, SW1H 9BN.
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