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The Long Shadows of Dominant Leaders

As two of Britain’s ruling political parties adjust, with difficulty, to life under new leadership, Jonathan Freedland takes The Long View of the vacuum left by dominant leaders.

Two of Britain’s ruling political parties find themselves without the strong, charismatic leaders who won them a handsome election victory – and now they’re struggling. At Westminster, it’s the Tories who are emerging, with difficulty, from the shadow of Boris Johnson. At Holyrood, it’s the Scottish National Party getting used to life without Nicola Sturgeon. Both were once riding high – yet this month, both the Conservatives and the SNP lost closely-watched byelection contests to Labour, those Tory defeats coming in Tamworth and mid-Bedfordshire just a few days ago. But the hole left after a once-dominant leader departs the stage is not new – not in Westminster and not in Edinburgh.

.Jonathan Freedland takes The Long View of the void left by once-dominant leaders - to the fall-out from the demise of Sir Robert Peel in the middle of the 19th century and the way Tory politics was upended by the exit of the man who had all but created the modern Conservative Party; and the power vacuum that was left by the sudden death of King James V of Scotland in 1542.

The Guests
Dr Luke Blaxill, political historian at Hertford College, Oxford
Dr Amy Blakeway, Senior Lecturer in Scottish History at St Andrews

Readers
Michael Bertenshaw
Kenny Blyth

Assistant Producer: Olivia Sopel
Production Coordinator: Shan Pillay

Producer: Mohini Patel

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28 minutes

Last on

Tue 24 Oct 2023 21:30

Broadcasts

  • Tue 24 Oct 2023 09:00
  • Tue 24 Oct 2023 21:30

Podcast