1945 Labour Manifesto
Let Us Face the Future:
A Declaration of Labour Policy for the Consideration of the Nation
VICTORY IN WAR MUST BE FOLLOWED BY A PROSPEROUS PEACE
Victory is assured for us and our allies in the European war.
The war in the East goes the same way. The British Labour Party
is firmly resolved that Japanese barbarism shall be defeated just
as decisively as Nazi aggression and tyranny. The people will
have won both struggles. The gallant men and women in the Fighting
Services, in the Merchant Navy, Home Guard and Civil Defence,
in the factories and in the bombed areas - they deserve and must
be assured a happier future than faced so many of them after the
last war. Labour regards their welfare as a sacred trust.
So far as Britain's contribution is concerned, this war will have
been won by its people, not by any one man or set of men, though
strong and greatly valued leadership has been given to the high
resolve of the people in the present struggle. And in this leadership
the Labour Ministers have taken their full share of burdens and
responsibilities. The record of the Labour Ministers has been
one of hard tasks well done since that fateful day in May, 1940,
when the initiative of Labour in Parliament brought about the
fall of the Chamberlain Government and the formation of the new
War Government which has led the country to victory.
The people made tremendous efforts to win the last war also. But
when they had won it they lacked a lively interest in the social
and economic problems of peace, and accepted the election promises
of the leaders of the anti-Labour parties at their face value.
So the "hard-faced men who had done well out of the war"
were able to get the kind of peace that suited themselves. The
people lost that peace. And when we say "peace" we mean
not only the Treaty, but the social and economic policy which
followed the fighting.
In the years that followed, the "hard-faced men" and
their political friends kept control of the Government. They controlled
the banks, the mines, the big industries, largely the press and
the cinema. They controlled the means by which the people got
their living. They controlled the ways by which most of the people
learned about the world outside. This happened in all the big
industrialised countries.
Great economic blizzards swept the world in those years. The great
inter-war slumps were not acts of God or of blind forces. They
were the sure and certain result of the concentration of too much
economic power in the hands of too few men. These men had only
learned how to act in the interest of their own bureaucratically-run
private monopolies which may be likened to totalitarian oligarchies
within our democratic State. They had and they felt no responsibility
to the nation.
Similar forces are at work today. The interests have not been
able to make the same profits out of this war as they did out
of the last. The determined propaganda of the Labour Party, helped
by other progressive forces, had its effect in "taking the
profit out of war". The 100% Excess Profits Tax, the controls
over industry and transport, the fair rationing of food and control
of prices - without which the Labour Party would not have remained
in the Government - these all helped to win the war. With these
measures the country has come nearer to making "fair shares"
the national rule than ever before in its history.
But the war in the East is not yet over. There are grand pickings
still to be had. A short boom period after the war, when savings,
gratuities and post-war credits are there to be spent, can make
a profiteer's paradise. But Big Business knows that this will
happen only if the people vote into power the party which promises
to get rid of the controls and so let the profiteers and racketeers
have that freedom for which they are pleading eloquently on every
Tory platform and in every Tory newspaper.
They accuse the Labour Party of wishing to impose controls for
the sake of control. That is not true, and they know it. What
is true is that the anti-controllers and anti-planners desire
to sweep away public controls, simply in order to give the profiteering
interests and the privileged rich an entirely free hand to plunder
the rest of the nation as shamelessly as they did in the nineteen-twenties.
Does freedom for the profiteer mean freedom for the ordinary man
and woman, whether they be wage-earners or small business or professional
men or housewives? Just think back over the depressions of the
20 years between the wars, when there were precious few public
controls of any kind and the Big Interests had things all their
own way. Never was so much injury done to so many by so few. Freedom
is not an abstract thing. To be real it must be won, it must be
worked for.
The Labour Party stands for order as against the chaos which would
follow the end of all public control. We stand for order, for
positive constructive progress as against the chaos of economic
do-as-they-please anarchy.
The Labour Party makes no baseless promises. The future will not
be easy. But this time the peace must be won. The Labour Party
offers the nation a plan which will win the Peace for the People.
WHAT THE ELECTION WILL BE ABOUT
Britain's coming Election will be the greatest test in our history
of the judgement and common sense of our people.
The nation wants food, work and homes. It wants more than that
- it wants good food in plenty, useful work for all, and comfortable,
labour - saving homes that take full advantage of the resources
of modern science and productive industry. It wants a high and
rising standard of living, security for all against a rainy day,
an educational system that will give every boy and girl a chance
to develop the best that is in them.
These are the aims. In themselves they are no more than words.
All parties may declare that in principle they agree with them.
But the test of a political programme is whether it is sufficiently
in earnest about the objectives to adopt the means needed to realise
them. It is very easy to set out a list of aims. What matters
is whether it is backed up by a genuine workmanlike plan conceived
without regard to sectional vested interests and carried through
Point by point these national aims need analysis. Point by point
it will be found that if they are to be turned into realities
the nation and its post-war Governments will be called upon to
put the nation above any sectional interest, above any free enterprise.
The problems and pressures of the post-war world threaten our
security and progress as surely as - though less dramatically
than - the Germans threatened them in 1940. We need the spirit
of Dunkirk and of the Blitz sustained over a period of years.
The Labour Party's programme is a practical expression of that
spirit applied to the tasks of peace. It calls for hard work,
energy and sound sense.
We must prevent another war, and that means we must have such
an international organisation as will give all nations real security
against future aggression. But Britain can only play her full
part in such an international plan if our spirit as shown in our
handling of home affairs is firm, wise and determined. This statement
of policy, therefore, begins at home.
And in stating it we give clear notice that we will not tolerate
obstruction of the people's will by the House of Lords.
The Labour Party stands for freedom - for freedom of worship,
freedom of speech, freedom of the Press. The Labour Party will
see to it that we keep and enlarge these freedoms, and that we
enjoy again the personal civil liberties we have, of our own free
will, sacrificed to win the war. The freedom of the Trade Unions,
denied by the Trade Disputes and Trade Unions Act, 1927, must
also be restored. But there are certain so-called freedoms that
Labour will not tolerate: freedom to exploit other people; freedom
to pay poor wages and to push up prices for selfish profit; freedom
to deprive the people of the means of living full, happy, healthy
lives.
The nation needs a tremendous overhaul, a great programme of modernisation
and re-equipment of its homes, its factories and machinery, its
schools, its social services.
All parties say so - the Labour Party means it. For the Labour
Party is prepared to achieve it by drastic policies and keeping
a firm constructive hand on our whole productive machinery; the
Labour Party will put the community first and the sectional interests
of private business after. Labour will plan from the ground up
- giving an appropriate place to constructive enterprise and private
endeavour in the national plan, but dealing decisively with those
interests which would use high-sounding talk about economic freedom
to cloak their determination to put themselves and their wishes
above those of the whole nation.
JOBS FOR ALL
All parties pay lip service to the idea of jobs for all. All parties
are ready to promise to achieve that end by keeping up the national
purchasing power and controlling changes in the national expenditure
through Government action. Where agreement ceases is in the degree
of control of private industry that is necessary to achieve the
desired end.
In hard fact, the success of a full employment programme will
certainly turn upon the firmness and success with which the Government
fits into that programme the investment and development policies
of private as well as public industry.
Our opponents would be ready to use State action to do the best
they can to bolster up private industry whenever it plunges the
nation into heavy unemployment. But if the slumps in uncontrolled
private industry are too severe to be balanced by public action
- as they will certainly prove to be - our opponents are not ready
to draw the conclusion that the sphere of public action must be
extended.
They say, "Full employment. Yes! If we can get it without
interfering too much with private industry." We say, "Full
employment in any case, and if we need to keep 8 firm public hand
on industry in order to get jobs for all, very well. No more dole
queues, in order to let the Czars of Big Business remain kings
in their own castles. The price of so-called 'economic freedom'
for the few is too high if it is bought at the cost of idleness
and misery for millions."
What will the Labour Party do?
First, the whole of the national resources, in land, material
and labour must be fully employed. Production must be raised to
the highest level and related to purchasing power. Over-production
is not the cause of depression and unemployment; it is under-consumption
that is responsible. It is doubtful whether we have ever, except
in war, used the whole of our productive capacity. This must be
corrected because, upon our ability to produce and organise a
fair and generous distribution of the product, the standard of
living of our people depends.
Secondly, a high and constant purchasing power can be maintained
through good wages, social services and insurance, and taxation
which bears less heavily on the lower income groups. But everybody
knows that money and savings lose their value if prices rise so
rents and the prices of the necessities of life will be controlled.
Thirdly, planned investment in essential industries and on houses,
schools, hospitals and civic centres will occupy a large field
of capital expenditure. A National Investment Board will determine
social priorities and promote better timing in private investment.
In suitable cases we would transfer the use of efficient Government
factories from war production to meet the needs of peace. The
location of new factories will be suitably controlled and where
necessary the Government will itself build factories. There must
be no depressed areas in the New Britain.
Fourthly, the Bank of England with its financial powers must be
brought under public ownership, and the operations of the other
banks harmonised with industrial needs.
By these and other means full employment can be achieved. But
a policy of Jobs for All must be associated with a policy of general
economic expansion and efficiency as set out in the next section
of this Declaration. Indeed, it is not enough to ensure that there
are jobs for all. If the standard of life is to be high - as it
should be - the standard of production must be high. This means
that industry must be thoroughly efficient if the needs of the
nation are to be met.
INDUSTRY IN THE SERVICE OF THE NATION
By the test of war some industries have shown themselves capable
of rising to new heights of efficiency and expansion. Others,
including some of our older industries fundamental to our economic
structure, have wholly or partly failed.
Today we live alongside economic giants - countries where science
and technology take leaping strides year by year. Britain must
match those strides - and we must take no chances about it. Britain
needs an industry organised to enable it to yield the best that
human knowledge and skill can provide. Only so can our people
reap the full benefits of this age of discovery and Britain keep
her place as a Great Power.
The Labour Party intends to link the skill of British craftsmen
and designers to the skill of British scientists in the service
of our fellow men. The genius of British scientists and technicians
who have produced radio-location, jet propulsion, penicillin.
and the Mulberry Harbours in wartime, must be given full rein
in peacetime too.
Each industry must have applied to it the test of national service.
If it serves the nation, well and good; if it is inefficient and
falls down on its job, the nation must see that things are put
right.
These propositions seem indisputable, but for years before the
war anti-Labour Governments set them aside, so that British industry
over a large field fell into a state of depression, muddle and
decay. Millions of working and middle class people went through
the horrors of unemployment and insecurity. It is not enough to
sympathise with these victims: we must develop an acute feeling
of national shame - and act.
The Labour Party is a Socialist Party, and proud of it. Its ultimate
purpose at home is the establishment of the Socialist Commonwealth
of Great Britain - free, democratic, efficient, progressive, public-spirited,
its material resources organised in the service of the British
people.
But Socialism cannot come overnight, as the product of a week-end
revolution. The members of the Labour Party, like the British
people, are practical-minded men and women.
There are basic industries ripe and over-ripe for public ownership
and management in the direct service of the nation. There are
many smaller businesses rendering good service which can be left
to go on with their useful work.
There are big industries not yet ripe for public ownership which
must nevertheless be required by constructive supervision to further
the nation's needs and not to prejudice national interests by
restrictive anti-social monopoly or cartel agreements - caring
for their own capital structures and profits at the cost of a
lower standard of living for all.
In the light of these considerations, the Labour Party submits
to the nation the following industrial programme:
- Public ownership of the fuel and power industries. For a quarter
of a century the coal industry, producing Britain's most precious
national raw material, has been floundering chaotically under
the ownership of many hundreds of independent companies. Amalgamation
under public ownership will bring great economies in operation
and make it possible to modernise production methods and to raise
safety standards in every colliery in the country. Public ownership
of gas and electricity undertakings will lower charges, prevent
competitive waste, open the way for co-ordinated research and
development, and lead to the reforming of uneconomic areas of
distribution. Other industries will benefit.
- Public ownership of inland transport. Co-ordination of transport
services by rail, road, air and canal cannot be achieved without
unification. And unification without public ownership means a
steady struggle with sectional interests or the enthronement of
a private monopoly, which would be a menace to the rest of industry.
- Public ownership of iron and steel. Private monopoly has maintained
high prices and kept inefficient high-cost plants in existence.
Only if public ownership replaces private monopoly can the industry
become efficient.
These socialised industries, taken over on a basis of fair compensation,
to be conducted efficiently in the interests of consumers, coupled
with proper status and conditions for the workers employed in
them.
- Public supervision of monopolies and cartels with the aim
of advancing ;industrial efficiency in the service of the nation.
Anti-social restrictive practices will be prohibited.
- A firm and clear-cut programme for the export trade. We would
give State help in any necessary form to get our export trade
on its feet and enable it to pay for the food and raw materials
without which Britain must decay and die. But State help on conditions
- conditions that industry is efficient and go-ahead. Laggards
and obstructionists must be led or directed into better ways.
Here we dare not fail.
- The shaping of suitable economic and price controls to secure
that first things shall come first in the transition from war
to peace and that every citizen (including the demobilised Service
men and women) shall get fair play. There must be priorities in
the use of raw materials, food prices must be held, homes for
the people for all before luxuries for the few. We do not want
a short boom followed by collapse as after the last war; we do
not want a wild rise in prices and inflation, followed by a smash
and widespread unemployment. It is either sound economic controls
- or smash.
- The better organisation of Government departments and the
Civil Service for work in relation to these ends. The economic
purpose of government must be to spur industry forward and not
to choke it with red tape.
AGRICULTURE AND THE PEOPLE'S FOOD
Agriculture is not only a job for the farmers; it is also a way
of feeding the people. So we need a prosperous and efficient agricultural
industry ensuring a fair return for the farmer and farm worker
without excessive prices to the consumer. Our agriculture should
be planned to give us the food we can best produce at home, and
large enough to give us as much of those foods as possible.
In war time the County War Executive Committees have organised
production in that way. They have been the means of increasing
efficiency and have given much practical assistance, particularly
to the small farmer. The Labour Party intends that, with suitable
modifications and safeguards, their work shall continue in peacetime.
Our good farm lands are part of the wealth of the nation and that
wealth should not be wasted. The land must be farmed, not starved.
If a landlord cannot or will not provide proper facilities for
his tenant farmers, the State should take over his land at a fair
valuation. The people need food at prices they can afford to pay.
This means that our food supplies will have to be planned. Never
again should they be left at the mercy of the city financier or
speculator. Instead there must be stable markets, to the great
gain of both producer and consumer.
The Ministry of Food has done fine work for the housewife in war.
The Labour Party intends to keep going as much of the work of
the Ministry of Food as will be useful in peace conditions, including
the bulk purchase of food from abroad and a well organised system
of distribution at home, with no vested interests imposing unnecessary
costs.
A Labour Government will keep the new food services, such as the
factory canteens and British restaurants, free and cheap milk
for mothers and children, fruit juices and food supplements, and
will improve and extend these services.
HOUSES AND THE BUILDING PROGRAMME
Everybody says that we must have houses. Only the Labour Party
is ready to take the necessary steps - a full programme of land
planning and drastic action to ensure an efficient building industry
that will neither burden the community with a crippling financial
load nor impose bad conditions and heavy unemployment on its workpeople.
There must be no restrictive price rings to keep up prices and
bleed the taxpayer, the owner-occupier and the tenant alike. Modern
methods, modern materials will have to be the order of the day.
There must be a due balance between the housing programme, the
building of schools and the urgent requirements of factory modernisation
and construction which will enable industry to produce efficiently.
Housing will be one of the greatest and one of the earliest tests
of a Government's real determination to put the nation first.
Labour's pledge is firm and direct - it will proceed with a housing
programme with the maximum practical speed until every family
in this island has a good standard of accommodation. That may
well mean centralising and pooling of building materials and components
by the State, together with price control. If that is necessary
to get the houses as it was necessary to get the guns and planes,
Labour is ready.
And housing ought to be dealt with in relation to good town planning
- pleasant surroundings, attractive lay-out, efficient utility
services, including the necessary transport facilities.
There should be a Ministry of Housing and Planning combining the
housing powers of the Ministry of Health with the planning powers
of the Ministry of Town and Country Planning; and there must be
a firm and united Government policy to enable the Ministry of
Works to function as an efficient instrument in the service of
all departments with building needs and of the nation as a whole.
THE LAND
In the interests of agriculture, housing and town and country
planning alike, we declare for a radical solution for the crippling
problems of land acquisition and use in the service of the national
plan.
Labour believes in land nationalisation and will work towards
it, but as a first step the State and the local authorities must
have wider and speedier powers to acquire land for public purposes
wherever the public interest so requires. In this regard and for
the purposes of controlling land use under town and country planning,
we will provide for fair compensation; but we will also provide
for a revenue for public funds from "betterment".
EDUCATION AND RECREATION
An important step forward has been taken by the passing of the
recent Education Act. Labour will put that Act not merely into
legal force but into practical effect, including the raising of
the school leaving age to 16 at the earliest possible moment,
"further" or adult education, and free secondary education
for all.
And, above all, let us remember that the great purpose of education
is to give us individual citizens capable of thinking for themselves.
National and local authorities should co-operate to enable people
to enjoy their leisure to the full, to have opportunities for
healthy recreation. By the provision of concert halls, modern
libraries, theatres and suitable civic centres, we desire to assure
to our people full access to the great heritage of culture in
this nation.
HEALTH OF THE NATION AND ITS CHILDREN
By good food and good homes, much avoidable ill-health can be
prevented. In addition the best health services should be available
free for all. Money must no longer be the passport to the best
treatment.
In the new National Health Service there should be health centres
where the people may get the best that modern science can offer,
more and better hospitals, and proper conditions for our doctors
and nurses. More research is required into the causes of disease
and the ways to prevent and cure it.
Labour will work specially for the care of Britain's mothers and
their children - children's allowances and school medical and
feeding services, better maternity and child welfare services.
A healthy family life must be fully ensured and parenthood must
not be penalised if the population of Britain is to be prevented
from dwindling.
SOCIAL INSURANCE AGAINST THE RAINY DAY
The Labour Party has played a leading part in the long campaign
for proper social security for all - social provision against
rainy days, coupled with economic policies calculated to reduce
rainy days to a minimum. Labour led the fight against the mean
and shabby treatment which was the lot of millions while Conservative
Governments were in power over long years. A Labour Government
will press on rapidly with legislation extending social insurance
over the necessary wide field to all.
But great national programmes of education, health and social
services are costly things. Only an efficient and prosperous nation
can afford them in full measure. If, unhappily, bad times were
to come, and our opponents were in power, then, running true to
form, they would be likely to cut these social provisions on the
plea that the nation could not meet the cost. That was the line
they adopted on at least three occasions between the wars.
There is no good reason why Britain should not afford such programmes,
but she will need full employment and the highest possible industrial
efficiency in order to do so.
A WORLD OF PROGRESS AND PEACE
No domestic policy, however wisely framed and courageously applied,
can succeed in a world still threatened by war. Economic strife
and political and military insecurity are enemies of peace. We
cannot cut ourselves off from the rest of the world - and we ought
not to try.
Now that victory has been won, at so great a cost of life and
material destruction, we must make sure that Germany and Japan
are deprived of all power to make war again. We must consolidate
in peace the great war-time association of the British Commonwealth
with the U.S.A. and the U.S.S.R. Let it not be forgotten that
in the years leading up to the war the Tories were so scared of
Russia that they missed the chance to establish a partnership
which might well have prevented the war.
We must join with France and China and all others who have contributed
to the common victory in forming an International Organisation
capable of keeping the peace in years to come. All must work together
in true comradeship to achieve continuous social and economic
progress.
If peace is to be protected we must plan and act. Peace must not
be regarded as a thing of passive inactivity: it must be a thing
of life and action and work.
An internationally protected peace should make possible a known
expenditure on armaments as our contribution to the protection
of peace; an expenditure that should diminish as the world becomes
accustomed to the prohibition of war through an effective collective
security.
The economic well-being of each nation largely depends on world-wide
prosperity. The essentials of prosperity for the world as for
individual nations are high production and progressive efficiency,
coupled with steady improvement in the standard of life, an increase
in effective demand, and fair shares for all who by their effort
contribute to the wealth of their community. We should build a
new United Nations, allies in a new war on hunger, ignorance and
want.
The British, while putting their own house in order, must play
the part of brave and constructive leaders in international affairs.
The British Labour Movement comes to the tasks of international
organisation with one great asset: it has a common bond with the
working peoples of all countries, who have achieved a new dignity
and influence through their long struggles against Nazi tyranny.
And in all this worth-while work - whether political, military
or economic - the Labour Party will seek to promote mutual understanding
and cordial co-operation between the Dominions of the British
Commonwealth, the advancement of India to responsible self-government,
and the planned progress of our Colonial Dependencies.
LABOUR'S CALL TO ALL PROGRESSIVES
Quite a number of political parties will be taking part in the
coming Election. But by and large Britain is a country of two
parties.
And the effective choice of the people in this Election will be
between the Conservative Party, standing for the protection of
the rights of private economic interest, and the Labour Party,
allied with the great Trade Union and co-operative movements,
standing for the wise organisation and use of the economic assets
of the nation for the public good. Those are the two main parties;
and here is the fundamental issue which has to be settled.
The election will produce a Labour Government, a Conservative
Government, or no clear majority for either party: this last might
well mean parliamentary instability and confusion, or another
Election.
In these circumstances we appeal to all men and women of progressive
outlook, and who believe in constructive change, to support the
Labour Party. We respect the views of those progressive Liberals
and others who would wish to support one or other of the smaller
parties of their choice. But by so doing they may help the Conservatives,
or they may contribute to a situation in which there is no parliamentary
majority for any major issue of policy.
In the interests of the nation and of the world, we earnestly
urge all progressives to see to it - as they certainly can - that
the next Government is not a Conservative Government but a Labour
Government which will act on the principles of policy set out
in the present Declaration.
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