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Red Toryism |
Conventional politics is at a crossroads. Amid recession, depression, poverty, increasing violence and rising inequality, current politics is exhausted and inadequate. In Red Tory, Phillip Blond argues that only a radical new political settlement can tackle these problems. Red Toryism combines economic egalitarianism with social conservatism, calling for an end to the monopolisation of society and the private sphere by the state and the market.
Decrying the legacy of both the Labour and Conservative parties, Blond proposes a progressive Conservatism that will restore social equality and revive British culture. He calls for the strengthening of local communities and economies, ending dispossession, redistribution of the tax burden and restoration of the nuclear family.
Red Tory offers a different vision for our future and asks us to question our long-held political assumptions. Phillip Blond’s ideas have already been praised or attacked in every major British newspaper and journal and this will be a session that challenges political assumptions. It takes place a month before what is likely to be one of the closest general elections for three decades.
Phillip Blond will be interviewed by John Gray, political philosopher and author of many books including Straw Dogs and, most recently, Black Mass: Apocalyptic Religion and the Death of Utopia and Gray’s Anatomy: Selected Writings.
Suggested hashtag for Twitter users: #foiredtory
Phillip Blond is director of ResPublica, and a research fellow at NESTA. Phillip is an internationally recognised political thinker, and economic and cultural commentator. He has recently published a number of comment and analysis pieces in the Financial Times, the Independent, the Guardian and the Sunday Times. His work has attracted considerable attention as an advocate of a radical, progressive Toryism. Prospect named him as the British thinker to watch in 2009, and the Times called his forthcoming book Red Tory one of the highlights to look forward to in 2010.
John Gray has recently retired as Professor of European Thought at the London School of Economics. He is a regular contributor to the Guardian, New Statesman and the Times Literary Supplement and the author of over a dozen books, including Black Mass, Gray’s Anatomy, Heresies and the bestselling Straw Dogs. False Dawn has been translated into 14 languages.
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May 6th, 2010 at 12:32 pm
[...] This is a write-up of an event I attended in Bristol recently. [...]