In the days when Winston Churchill and Clement Attlee faced each other
in the House of Commons, there was disagreement about whose hands should
be on the Mace, the symbol of power at Westminster. Everyone assumed
that the hands on the Mace would be British. In the past half century,
the Prime Minister's power at Westminster has increased greatly, but it
has diminished in the worlds beyond.
In Westminster, the Prime Minister is now first without equal. But in
councils of the European Union, he or she is only one among fifteen
national leaders. In a shrinking world the chief issues facing Downing
Street today are 'intermestic', an amalgam of domestic politics and
international concerns. Tony Blair may say that he is batting for
Britain, but cricket skills are no match for an American president
playing hard ball, and policy-making in the European Union is definitely
not cricket.
In an era of television politics, the faces and voices of Margaret
Thatcher and Tony Blair are familiar to every voter, and the press
cooperates in turning politicians into media celebrities. But what you
see on the box is politics; it has little to do with the policies of
British government. Old-school leaders such as Harold Macmillan devoted
as much time to policy as to politics. But new-style prime ministers put
politics first.
Tony Blair wants to speak for all the British people, but the result is
'managed populism', for his voice travels down a one-way street. In
Whitehall, Blair's Third Way blunts the cutting edge of policy, leaving
officials puzzled about what to do when hard choices arise, especially
about Europe.
Anyone interested in politics and current affairs, whether a student or
a thoughtful reader and viewer, will find insight and illumination in a
book that draws on the author's unrivalled first-hand knowledge of
British politics over the past half century.
Richard Rose's work has been recognized by a lifetime achievement award
from the Political Studies Association. He is a Fellow of the British
Academy and director of the Centre for the Study of Public Policy at the
University of Strathclyde.