Half In, Half Out: Prime Ministers On Europe

Half In, Half Out: Prime Ministers On Europe

by Andrew Adonis
Half In, Half Out: Prime Ministers On Europe

Half In, Half Out: Prime Ministers On Europe

by Andrew Adonis

Hardcover

$24.95 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

Born out of a series of Oxford University lectures devised by the former director of the No. 10 Policy Unit, Andrew Adonis, Half In, Half Out presents a comprehensive and enlightening look at Britain's Prime Ministers over the past seven decades - and explores their often hugely differing attitudes towards our neighbours on the other side of the Channel.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781785904349
Publisher: Biteback Publishing, Ltd.
Publication date: 04/02/2019
Pages: 304
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.80(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Andrew Adonis was an architect of education reform under Tony Blair, serving in the No. 10 Policy Unit and then as Minister for Schools from 1998 until 2008.

Table of Contents

The authors ix

Preface Andrew Adonis xi

Chapter 1 Winston Churchill Nicholas Soames Andrew Adonis 1

Chapter 2 Clement Attlee Rachel Reeves 11

Chapter 3 Anthony Eden David Dutton 27

Chapter 4 Harold Macmillan David Faber 47

Chapter 5 Alec Douglas-Home Andrew Holt 71

Chapter 6 Harold Wilson Andrew Adonis 77

Chapter 7 Edward Heath Michael McManus 87

Chapter 8 James Callaghan David Owen 111

Chapter 9 Margaret Thatcher Charles Powell 133

Chapter 10 John Major Chris Patten 151

Chapter 11 Tony Blair Andrew Adonis 171

Chapter 12 Gordon Brown Stewart Wood 195

Chapter 13 David Cameron Ivan Rogers 221

Chapter 14 Theresa May Steve Richards 263

Works cited and further reading 281

Preface

PREFACE


The title Half In, Half Out aptly sums up the European policy of the British state since ‘Victory in Europe’ on 8 May 1945.
I thought, on an initial mental overview, that it also summed up the European policy of each of the fourteen Prime Ministers since 1945. Some were marginally more pro- or anti-European than others – but the degrees of difference were fairly small in terms of actual policy, which followed the broad centre-ground consensus at each stage.

All fourteen Prime Ministers sought, I thought, to reconcile raison d’état with vox populi, and the result was realpolitik.
Having engaged closely with each of the fourteen holders of the supreme office since 1945, in and through these essays, I have reached a radically different conclusion. I now suggest that they represent a wide spectrum of views on Europe within the British political class. At each stage, there was no consensus on future policy, except to the extent that the Prime Minister of the day was able to forge one. Far from being preordained, policy was highly contingent on each of their prejudices and preferences.

Only by according fundamental importance to the European policy of each individual Prime Minister since 1945, and grasping the differences between them, can one explain why we didn’t go into
Europe in the 1940s and 1950s (the intense Euroscepticism of Attlee and Eden, opposed by Churchill in opposition but not in office); why we tried to do so in the 1960s (Macmillan and Wilson led strongly in favour); why we succeeded in doing so in the 1970s (Heath led where Macmillan and Wilson had left off and Wilson, confronting a hostile party in office for a second time, manoeuvred successfully to keep Britain in); and then why we refused to integrate further in the decades after the 1990s, as Thatcher launched modern Euroscepticism and her successors Major, Blair, Brown and Cameron, sharing or fearing it to varying extents, sought largely to maintain the status quo except on the Social Chapter and enlargement of the EU to central and Eastern Europe. It also explains why David Cameron held an in/out referendum in 2016 (a leadership gamble that went catastrophically wrong), and why Theresa May is attempting ‘hard
Brexit’ in 2018 (because she is intent on it, although she is not clear in her own mind or public statements quite what ‘it’ is).

At every point since 1945, European policy could have been different under different leadership. So today, and so in future.

Leadership matters. Ideas matter. They both matter fundamentally.
Jonathan Freedland’s profound insight into political behaviour – ‘people don’t believe in ideas, they believe in people who believe in ideas’ – shines through this book leader by leader.

A second conclusion emanates. Until the 2016 referendum,
not one of the fourteen Prime Ministers sought in office to disengage from Europe to any marked degree, whatever the state of
European relations they inherited. Nor did they seriously wish to do so. In this respect, there was indeed a consensus based on a practical assessment of the realm of the possible, whether desirable or not; and this consensus held until the referendum on 23 June 2016.

Margaret Thatcher, the most dominant Prime Minister after
Churchill in wartime, is highly ambiguous. Her European policy shifted dramatically at different stages of her premiership, as did
Churchill’s before and after taking office in 1951. In her first years,
she was a tough, unsentimental negotiator within the EU, but not sceptical so far as membership itself was concerned. Mid-term she became a remarkable force for Euro integration in the creation of the single market. Then, in 1988, came her showdown on
‘social Europe’ with the socialist President of the Commission,
Jacques Delors. This gave rise to her Bruges speech of 20 September
1988, perhaps the single most influential prime ministerial statement on Europe in the seventy-three years under review,
akin to Churchill’s Zurich speech of 1946, made when he was
Leader of the Opposition. But even after 1988 – indeed within the
Bruges speech itself – there was uncertainty and outright contradictions,
reflecting Thatcher’s characteristic ambiguity when departing from establishment views and veering sharply right.

It is time for bold, credible leadership on Europe. ‘Where there is no vision the people perish.’ As a strong pro-European, I
see putting bold leadership back into the EU as imperative, and I
draw inspiration from the two remarkable essays here by grandsons on their grandfathers – Sir Nicholas Soames on Churchill and David Faber on Macmillan. But if we are to leave, we need to leave with a plan that works, and there is none at present.

Some of these essays began as the Hertford Lectures, which were generously hosted by Will Hutton, the principal of Hertford
College, Oxford, and supported by Sir Clive Cowdery and
Prospect magazine. Iain Dale, with his brilliant political and publishing insight, immediately said that the story had to go back to Churchill to make sense, and encouraged me to publish on the second anniversary of the 2016 referendum. I am hugely grateful to Charlie Atkins, Olivia Beattie, Max Wind-Cowie,
Roger Liddle and Bernadette Marron for comments and assistance on the way to publication.

Not all those who led decisively for and against British engagement in the European Union were Prime Ministers. Nigel Farage shares responsibility for Brexit with Margaret Thatcher, David
Cameron and Theresa May, while Roy Jenkins stands alongside
Churchill, Macmillan, Heath and Wilson for taking us in.

Farage, who never held a responsible post of national leadership,
is tellingly the only leader to break from the consensus on ‘staying in once in’. All the others share the credit for keeping the show on the road, without crisis leading either to war or economic collapse. In the long view of history, maybe that’s as good as it gets.


Andrew Adonis, Westminster, 1 June 2018

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews