The prime minister : the office and its holders since 1945

Bibliographic Information

The prime minister : the office and its holders since 1945

Peter Hennessy

(Penguin books)(Penguin history)

Penguin, 2001, c2000

Available at  / 7 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In The Prime Minister: the Office and its Holders since 1945, Peter Hennessy explores the formal powers of the Prime Minister and how each incumbent has made the job his or her own. Drawing on unparalleled access to many of the leading figures, as well as the key civil servants and journalists of each period, he has built up a picture of the hidden nexus of influence and patronage surrounding the office. From recently declassified archival material he reconstructs, often for the first time, precise prime ministerial attitudes towards the key issues of peace and war. He concludes with a controversial assessment of the relative performance of each Prime Minister since 1945, from Clement Atlee and Winston Churchhill to Margaret Thatcher and Tony Blair, and proposes a new specification for the premiership as it enters its fourth century. 'I really can't praise it too highly: a tremendous achievement ... an instant classic' Antony Jay, author of Yes, Prime Minister 'Supersedes everything else written on the subject. If I were Tony Blair, I'd keep a copy by my bedside' Adam Sisman, Observer 'A must ... far and away the best account of the office of the First Lord of the Treasury, its history, powers and practice, and an independent assessment of the occupants of Downing Street since the Second World War' Tony Benn, Spectator 'Important and extremely readable ... Hennessy's portrait of the Blair premiership is fascinating ... a major contribution to our understanding of how we are governed' Peter Oborne, Sunday Express Peter Hennessy is Attlee Professor of History at Queen Mary and Westfield College, University of London. Among many other books, he is the author of The Secret State, Whitehall and Never Again: Britain 1945-1951, which in 1993 won the NCR Award for Non-Fiction and the Duff Cooper Prize.

Table of Contents

  • Part 1 Prelude: the platonic idea and the constitutional deal
  • continuity and cottage pie. Part 2 The premiership: the double-headed nation
  • organized by history - the premiership before 1945
  • beyond any mortal? the stretching of the premiership since 1945
  • where the buck stops - premiers, "war cabinets" and nuclear war planning since 1945. Part 3 The prime ministers: a sense of architectronics - Clement Atlee, 1945-51
  • in history lie all the secrets - Winston Churchill, 1951-55
  • the Colonel and the drawing room - Anthony Eden, 1955-57
  • quiet, calm deliberation - Harold Macmillan, 1957-63
  • country values - Alec Douglas-Home, 1963-64
  • centre forward - Harold Wilson, 1964-70
  • the somersaulting modernizer - Edward Heath, 1970-74
  • centre half - Harold Wilson, 1974-76
  • the sea-changer - James Callaghan, 1976-79
  • a tigress surrounded by hamsters - Margaret Thatcher, 1979-90
  • the solo-coalitionist - John Major, 1990-97
  • command and control - Tony Blair, 1997-. Part 4 Coda: the premier league - the inevitability of disappointment
  • towards a new specification - premiership for the 21st century.

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