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British conservative think tank From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Bow Group is a UK-based think tank promoting conservative opinion. Founded in 1951, it is the oldest group of its kind, counting many senior Conservative Party MPs and peers among its members. It represents a forum for political debate with its varied programme of events and official journal.
Formation | 7 February 1951 |
---|---|
Type | Public policy think tank |
Headquarters | London |
Official language | English |
Chairman | Ben Harris-Quinney |
Key people | Geoffrey Howe, Norman Lamont, Roger Scruton, David Starkey, Norman Tebbit |
Website | www |
Although often associated with the Conservative Party, the group is now perhaps better categorised as a right-wing think tank.[1] The Bow Group exists to publish and promote the research and policy proposals of its members, through policy papers, policy briefs and larger collaborative projects.[citation needed]
The group's journal, Crossbow, usually published four times a year, and the group's programme of meetings during the parliamentary year also provide its members and guest speakers and writers with a forum for political debate.[citation needed]
The Bow Group accepts applications for membership. It also accepts outside donations, sponsorship and advertising.[2]
The chairman of the Bow Group has been Ben Harris-Quinney since 2011. In 2015, he was disowned by four of the Bow Group's patrons and suspended from the Conservative Party.[3][4] In 2016, he was accused by Andrew Neil on BBC's Daily Politics show of being a "Walter Mitty figure" and dismissed by Lord Heseltine as being "of no account".[5] The commentator Iain Dale has accused him of having turned the Bow Group into an "impotent and irrelevant vehicle for Harris-Quinney to seek airtime for himself".[6]
The Bow Group was founded by a group of students with the aim of providing an effective counter to socialism and the Fabian Society. Since then, it has expanded under chairmen such as Geoffrey Howe, Leon Brittan, Norman Lamont, Michael Howard, Peter Lilley, Christopher Bland, and David Campbell Bannerman.[7]
Much of the group's thought can be categorised as conservatism supporting both a market economy and social responsibility. The reputation of the group was founded on the need for innovative conservative thinking to address the pressing problems of the day. In keeping with this trend, it was The Bow Group which promoted the idea of a World Refugee Year in the late 1950s. In the 1960s, the group attracted significant controversy in Conservative circles over its support for Kenyan independence. In the 1970s and early 1980s, the group was closely associated with the development of post-Keynesian economics and government policy for the Arts etc.[8] The publication in 1973 of Peter Lilley's Alternative Manifesto marked the beginnings of the intellectual shift from the policies of the Heath government. The group was later in the vanguard of developing policy on privatisation and new enterprise zones, and promoting the extension of share ownership. The group continued to publish pamphlets on a wide range of issues during the 1980s, 1990s and 2000s.[9]
In July 2012, the Bow Group, reflecting on 60 years of its history in British politics, appointed former British Prime Minister John Major as its President and Lords Howe, Howard and Lamont as its Senior Patrons to serve on the advisory board of the organisation.[10] In 2014 the conservative academics David Starkey and Roger Scruton joined the advisory board,[11] with Scruton addressing the Group on the difference between modern Conservatism and ideological conservatism.[12] In 2015 Norman Tebbit, former Conservative Party chairman and long-term confidant of Margaret Thatcher, also joined the board. Addressing the organisation at a lecture prior to his appointment he criticised the centrism and lack of ideological clarity in the modern Conservative Party,[13] and called for an end to the "Bedroom Tax".[11]
In May 2015, with polls pointing to a hung Parliament in the run up to the 2015 general election, the Bow Group chairman, Ben Harris-Quinney, called on voters in marginal constituencies to support the values of conservatism by voting UK Independence Party (UKIP) where Conservative Party candidates could not win, and the Conservatives where UKIP could not win.[14] However, this suggestion of tactical voting was opposed by Bow Group patrons Lords Heseltine, Howard and Lamont, in a joint statement.[15]
In 2015, Lord Tebbit was appointed as the Bow Group's President, replacing Sir John Major who had stepped down in 2014.[16]
The Bow Group was a supporter of Brexit and worked with both pro-Brexit campaigns to support Britain's exit from the EU.[17]
In 2016, long-standing member Heseltine was removed from the organisation on the basis that he did not support conservative ideals. He was criticised by the group's then-President, Lord Tebbit, for being a "backstabber" and betraying Britain in favour of the European Union.[18]
Years | Chairman |
---|---|
1951–52 | Bruce Griffiths |
1952–53 | James Lemkin (first term) |
1953–54 | Richard Stone |
1954–55 | Robin Williams |
1955–56 | Geoffrey Howe |
1956–58[A] | James Lemkin (second term) |
1958–59 | Russell Lewis |
1959–60 | David Hennessy (first time) |
1960–61 | Tom Hooson |
1961–62 | David Howell |
1962–63 | David Hennessy (second time) |
1963–64 | John MacGregor |
1964–65 | Leon Brittan |
1965–66 | Henry Bosch |
1966–67 | Julian Critchley |
1967–68 | Reginald Watts |
1968–69 | Christopher Brocklebank-Fowler |
1969–70 | Christopher Bland |
1970–71 | Michael Howard |
1971–72 | Norman Lamont |
1972–73 | Peter Lloyd |
1973–75[A] | Peter Lilley |
1975–76 | Patricia Hodgson |
1976–77 | Ian Clarke |
1977–78 | Michael Stern |
1978–79 | Douglas French |
1979–80 | Richard Barber |
1980–81 | Richard Simmons |
1981–82 | Nirj Deva |
1982–83 | Colin Coulson-Thomas |
1983–84 | David Shaw |
1984–85 | Michael Lingens |
1985–86 | Nick Perry |
1986–87 | Nigel Waterson |
1987–88 | Cheryl Gillan |
1988–89 | Marie-Louise Rossi |
1989–90 | Ian Donaldson |
1990–91 | David Harvey |
1991–92 | Dexter Jerome Smith |
1992–93 | Nick Hawkins |
1993–94 | David Campbell Bannerman |
1994–95 | Alexander Nicoll |
1995–96 | Nick Button |
1996–97 | Jeremy Bradshaw |
1997–98 | Nick Green |
1998–99 | Nick Edgar |
1999–2000 | Andrew Jones |
2000–01 | Guy Strafford |
2001–02 | Damian Hinds |
2002–03 | Jocelyn Ormond |
2003–04 | Giles Taylor |
2004–05 | Chris Philp |
2005–06 | Kwasi Kwarteng |
2006–07 | Sam Gyimah |
2007–08 | Chris Skidmore |
2008–10[A] | Annesley Abercorn |
2010–11 | Brian Cattell |
2011– | Ben Harris-Quinney |
^A Two consecutive terms. |
In March 2012, the Bow Group released a report opposing the Government's plans to trial badger culling in England, stating that the findings of the previous Labour government's major badger culling trials several years earlier were that culling does not work. The paper was authored by Graham Godwin-Pearson with a foreword by Brian May and contributions by leading tuberculosis scientists, including Lord Krebs.[19][20][21]
In April 2012, at a Bow Group debate with David Starkey, Shami Chakrabarti and Kwasi Kwarteng, Starkey described Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond as a "Caledonian Hitler".[22]
In May 2013, the Bow Group warned MPs of the dangers of privatising Royal Mail, including the potential for stamps to increase in price, the threat to rural Post Offices and the political danger to the Conservative Party. The Bow Group also warned that Royal Mail was being significantly under-valued by the Government in its flotation by over £1 billion, which proved to be accurate.[23]
In April 2014 Priti Patel, writing in the Bow Group's Crossbow magazine, called for the coalition to come to an end stating that the country wanted to see "more Conservative policies", and with growth figures of 2.7% the reasons for the existence of the Coalition Government had "effectively expired".[24] These calls were echoed by the Chairman of the 1922 Committee Graham Brady, at a Bow Group debate in July 2014.[25]
In October 2015 the Bow Group joined the Leave.EU organisation and declared it would be campaigning for Britain's exit from the European Union.[26]
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