The politics of Levelling up
The politics of Levelling up
‘Levelling-up’ is an expression of a realignment in British politics with the Conservatives presenting themselves as the new party of redistribution. This is not primarily concerned with redistribution between social classes, or even between regions, but rather targets communities that feel they have lost their centrality and standing. This seemingly surprising manoeuvre is facilitated by voters’ distrust of politics, a geography of discontent that reflects uneven patterns of social and economic development, and the Conservative Party’s capacity for pragmatic shifts in ideological direction. Yet the sustainability of this project is uncertain. Levelling-up creates opportunities for high-profile initiatives and symbols of change through which the government can craft a narrative of success. It may also help the Conservatives appeal to voters that lean one way on economics but another on social issues by targeting attention and interventions in specific places – in a way that speaks to some voters’ feelings of having been neglected over many decades and having lost status to other groups in society. The tensions in delivering levelling-up reflect the complexity of the changes wrought by globalisation and technological change but the challenge for progressive forces is to develop a better alternative, a far from easy task.
302-311
Jennings, William
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Stoker, Gerard
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Mckay, Lawrence
4ecf2fd8-3fbf-4a3c-9c22-6856fc1a09be
June 2021
Jennings, William
2ab3f11c-eb7f-44c6-9ef2-3180c1a954f7
Stoker, Gerard
209ba619-6a65-4bc1-9235-cba0d826bfd9
Mckay, Lawrence
4ecf2fd8-3fbf-4a3c-9c22-6856fc1a09be
Jennings, William, Stoker, Gerard and Mckay, Lawrence
(2021)
The politics of Levelling up.
The Political Quarterly, 92 (2), .
(doi:10.1111/1467-923X.13005).
Abstract
‘Levelling-up’ is an expression of a realignment in British politics with the Conservatives presenting themselves as the new party of redistribution. This is not primarily concerned with redistribution between social classes, or even between regions, but rather targets communities that feel they have lost their centrality and standing. This seemingly surprising manoeuvre is facilitated by voters’ distrust of politics, a geography of discontent that reflects uneven patterns of social and economic development, and the Conservative Party’s capacity for pragmatic shifts in ideological direction. Yet the sustainability of this project is uncertain. Levelling-up creates opportunities for high-profile initiatives and symbols of change through which the government can craft a narrative of success. It may also help the Conservatives appeal to voters that lean one way on economics but another on social issues by targeting attention and interventions in specific places – in a way that speaks to some voters’ feelings of having been neglected over many decades and having lost status to other groups in society. The tensions in delivering levelling-up reflect the complexity of the changes wrought by globalisation and technological change but the challenge for progressive forces is to develop a better alternative, a far from easy task.
Text
Levelling Up - PQ accepted manuscript
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 6 May 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 18 May 2021
Published date: June 2021
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 449824
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/449824
ISSN: 0032-3179
PURE UUID: e11ece66-48e9-4c5c-b1db-5963ce251dec
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Date deposited: 18 Jun 2021 16:31
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 06:38
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