Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. The fifteen or sixteen years between 1930 and 1945 saw important changes in Hugh Gaitskell's personal circumstances: his coming to London, his academic post at University College, his involvement with party work, his earliest election campaign, his year of study and socialist rising in Vienna, his entry into Government service with the outbreak of war, his friendship and collaboration with ...

  2. 34 Hugh Gaitskell within Labour politics, with the SDP ‘claiming his mantle’ (Brivati, 1996: 445). Nor did New Labour seek to suggest that Gaitskell was an influ-ence upon them. When examining the relationship between revisionism and New Labour, Matt Beech emphasised how revisionism represented the

  3. 14 de ene. de 2013 · In late 1959, Hugh Gaitskell declared that the Labour Party needed to revise Clause IV of its 1918 Constitution. Within the party, his proposals faced much opposition. Ultimately, the strength of this opposition meant that Gaitskell was forced to retreat on the issue. Historians have noted Labour's emotional attachment to Clause IV.

  4. Biografia. Gaitskell nel 1961. Deputato laburista dal 1945 e ministro dei Carburanti dal 1947, nel 1950 fu nominato ministro degli affari economici. Nell'ottobre dello stesso anno succedette a Stafford Cripps come cancelliere dello Scacchiere, ma nel 1951 il tracollo dei laburisti lo allontanò dalla carica. Nel 1955 subentrò a Herbert Stanley ...

  5. 1 de sept. de 2018 · Hugh Gaitskell was the leader of the Labour Party and the leader of the opposition between 1955 and 1960. He was also the Chancellor of the Exchequer between 1950 and 1951 and was the Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer between 1951 and 1955. In the context of Brexit in modern British Politics of 2018, It is also important to note that the ...

  6. 1 Hugh Gaitskell, 1906-1960, Edited by W.T.Rodgers, Thames and Hudson, 25s. 2 One school of political commentators, headed by R. T. McKenzie (British Political Parties, 2nd edition, ch.XI) believes that British constitutional practice allows us as much democracy as is good for us in any case.

  7. Hugh Todd Naylor Gaitskell. Politician. Gaitskell became a socialist during the General Strike, and was elected as a Labour MP for Leeds South in 1945. He served as Chancellor of the Exchequer (1950-1) and took over the leadership of the Party on Attlee's retirement in December 1955. Gaitskell was a powerful Opposition Leader, who shaped party ...