The Death of Consensus: 100 Years of British Political
Nightmares – September 1, 2022
by Phil Tinline (Author)
Over
Britain's first century of mass democracy, politics lurched from crisis to
crisis. How does this history of broken consensus and political agony
illuminate our current age of upheaval?
Historians
usually focus on the dawn of a new consensus--postwar Keynesianism, or
Thatcherite neoliberalism. Yet journalist Phil Tinline argues that we should be
more interested in the periods of turmoil and misery in between. How did the
Great Depression's specters of fascism, bombing and mass unemployment force
politicians to think the unthinkable? Why do we only remember Thatcher's
triumph, and not the decade-long nightmares of hyperinflation, military coups
and communist dictatorship that made it possible? And how, since 2008, have we
and our leaders come to be paralyzed and deeply divided once again?
Tinline
brings to life two previous moments when the great compromise holding democracy
together began to crumble; when the political class could agree only that the
old era was dead, and imagine nothing but the ominous and the unacceptable.
This lively, original account of panic, torpor and chaos reveals the birth
pains of a new political settlement, giving hope that fresh ideas might yet
take hold. The Death of Consensus will make you see British democracy
differently.
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