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The First Paragraph of Red Tory

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The problem

Something is seriously wrong with Britain. This is an intuition that everybody, whatever their politics, shares. But what is this malaise from which we suffer? We all know the symptoms: increasing fear, lack of trust and abundance of suspicion, long-term increase in violent crime, loneliness, recession, depression, private and public debt, family breakup, divorce, infi delity, bureaucratic and unresponsive public services, dirty hospitals, powerlessness, the rise of racism, excessive paperwork, longer and longer working hours, children who have no parents, concentrated and seemingly irremovable poverty, the permanence of inequality, teenagers with knives, teenagers being knifed, the decline of politeness, aggressive youths, the erosion of our civil liberties and the increase of obsessive surveillance, public authoritarianism, private libertarianism, general pointlessness, political cynicism and a pervading lack of daily joy.

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Rise of the Red Tories

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The crisis is an opportunity to sweep away the rotten postwar settlement of British politics.

We live in a time of crisis. In such times humans retreat to safety, and build bulwarks against the future. The financial emergency is having this effect on Britain’s governing class. Labour has withdrawn to the safety of the sheltering state, and the comforts of its first income tax rise since the mid-1970s. Meanwhile, the Conservatives appear to be proposing a repeat of Thatcherite austerity in the face of economic catastrophe.

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The true Tory progressives

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Cameron could yet seal a new economic and social bond, the first genuinely radical move in 30 years

For the left, the Conservative party has always been a political organisation whose sole raison d'etre is the defence of the rich and privileged. In these pages both Peter Wilby and Jonathan Freedland have argued that the new Conservatives represent little more than Thatcherism mark II. As such, the very idea that the Conservatives could offer a new opportunity and govern in the progressive interest seems a contradiction in terms.

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Without a concept of virtue our politics and our banks are doomed

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The fundamental issue remains wholly unaddressed

In all the clamour and rage of the expenses crisis, the fundamental issue remains wholly unaddressed: that of the value system that allowed such abuses in the first place.

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The new Conservatism can create a capitalism that works for the poor

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We need a fresh approach that gives assets to all

Over the last 30 years the Anglo-Saxon world has adopted the most disingenuous of economic systems. Under the guise of capitalism for all, we have produced an extraordinary amount of capital but an ever diminishing number of capitalists. Rather than trickling downwards, wealth has leveraged upwards – denying increasing numbers of people the ability to truly own, trade and prosper.

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We are the new radicals

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Progressive Tories have rightly invaded Labour territory and parked blue tanks on red lawns.

In a speech last week, Tory Shadow Chancellor George Osborne argued that the Conservatives represent the best hope for the poor, the excluded and those languishing on permanent welfare in Britain.

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Labour’s betrayal of society

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The dominant legacy of the left is state authoritarianism and private libertarianism

Some electoral defeats are merely episodic; others are epochal. The defeat of New Labour in the spring of next year will be both. The coming rout is a function of natural intellectual exhaustion and unprecedented external revulsion

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The Ownership State

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Read the report that started the mutualism debate

"The Ownership State" has started a battle between Labour and the Tories over mutualism, with both parties announcing policies to remake the public sector along the lines of the employee-owned John Lewis Partnership.

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The Civic State

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re-moralise the market, re-localise the economy, re-capitalise the poor

It is now clear that we are at one of those epoch-changing moments in British political history. Just as the 'Winter of Discontent' in 78/79 marked a paradigm shift, an utter and complete reversal of the pre-existing order and the arrival of something new, something revolutionary and something transformative - so the present unprecedented debt crisis of 2008/2009 is doing the same.

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The new Tories will stop class becoming caste

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Poor people need access to wealth, not welfare.

As the camera pans around the Conservative Party conference hall in Manchester today, the traditional stereotypes are guaranteed their 15 minutes of TV fame. Women wearing Thatcher blue with pearls; aged and angry country squires in tweed; and vaguely frightening young men in City suits and alpha male haircuts will be portrayed as the party’s rank and file.

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