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5 The oratory of James Callaghan

  • Stephen Meredith
View more publications by Manchester University Press
Labour orators from Bevan to Miliband
This chapter is in the book Labour orators from Bevan to Miliband

Abstract

James Callaghan's speech concerning Britain's macroeconomic future remains his most recognisable rhetorical flourish and is often held to denote the so-called crisis and turn of British social democracy in the mid-1970s. It represents only one of a number of oratorical interventions in party and national policy. This chapter assesses Callaghan's oratory across the spectrum of his political and public roles and experience, and evaluates his relative success in advancing his position or that of the Labour Party as evidenced by his party and wider public impact. It suggests that, with obvious notable exceptions, Callaghan demonstrated undoubted party and public communication skills, often in difficult circumstances during his prime ministerial tenure, and held it to be one of his core political strengths. Callaghan's 1976 conference speech represented a further set-piece attempt to alert those of his own party and Labour alliance of the new realities and possibilities of economic policy.

Abstract

James Callaghan's speech concerning Britain's macroeconomic future remains his most recognisable rhetorical flourish and is often held to denote the so-called crisis and turn of British social democracy in the mid-1970s. It represents only one of a number of oratorical interventions in party and national policy. This chapter assesses Callaghan's oratory across the spectrum of his political and public roles and experience, and evaluates his relative success in advancing his position or that of the Labour Party as evidenced by his party and wider public impact. It suggests that, with obvious notable exceptions, Callaghan demonstrated undoubted party and public communication skills, often in difficult circumstances during his prime ministerial tenure, and held it to be one of his core political strengths. Callaghan's 1976 conference speech represented a further set-piece attempt to alert those of his own party and Labour alliance of the new realities and possibilities of economic policy.

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