Monday Club
The Conservative Monday Club was a British political pressure group, aligned with the Conservative Party, though not endorsed by it after 2001. It also had links to the Democratic Unionist Party and Ulster Unionist Party in Northern Ireland.
Founded in 1961, in reaction to Prime Minister Harold Macmillan's opposition to white minority rule in Southern Rhodesia, the club became embroiled in the decolonisation and immigration debate, inevitably highlighting the controversial issue of race, which has dominated its image ever since. The club was known for its fierce opposition to non-white immigration to Britain and its support for apartheid-era South Africa and Southern Rhodesia. By 1971, the club had 35 MPs, six of them ministers, and 35 peers, with membership totaling about 10,000.
In 1982, the constitution was re-written, with more emphasis on support for the Conservative Party, but it remained autonomous from the party. In-fighting over the club's traditional Tory agenda led to many resignations in 1991. In 2001, the Conservative Party formally severed relations with the club, which had ceased to exercise significant influence, with full membership below 600.
Following a vote of the Executive Council, the organisation was formally disbanded in July 2024.
History
Foundation and early years
The club was founded on 1 January 1961, by four young Conservative Party members, Paul Bristol, Ian Greig, Cedric Gunnery, and Anthony Maclaren. The club was formed "to force local party associations to discuss and debate party policy". Its first general policy statement deplored the tendency of recent Conservative governments to adopt policies based upon expediency and demanded that instead Tory principles should be the guiding influence. It believed that the principles needing to be reasserted included the preservation of the constitution and existing institutions, the freedom of the individual, the private ownership of property, and the need for Britain to play a leading part in world affairs.The club disliked what it regarded as the expediency, cynicism and materialism which motivated Harold Macmillan's government. In addition it was concerned that during this period "the left wing of the Party gained a predominant influence over policy" and that as a result the Conservative Party had shifted to the left, so that "the floating voter could not detect, as he should, major differences between it and the Socialists" and, furthermore, "loyal Conservatives had become disillusioned and dispirited". The club's published aims stated that it "seeks to evolve a dynamic application of traditional Tory principles".
The group brought together supporters of Rhodesia and South Africa; the main impetus for the group's formation was the Conservatives' new decolonisation policies, in particular as a general reaction to Macmillan's 'Wind of Change' speech made in South Africa. The club stated that Macmillan had "turned the Party Left", and its first pamphlet opposed these policies as indicative of the Conservative Party's move towards liberalism. The club is notable for having promoted a policy of voluntary, or assisted, repatriation for Commonwealth immigrants, a policy subsequently adopted in the 1970 Conservative Party manifesto.
The 5th Marquess of Salisbury, who had resigned from Macmillan's Cabinet over the Prime Minister's liberal direction, became its first president in January 1962, when he stated "there was never a greater need for true conservatism than there is today". By the end of 1963 there were eleven Members of Parliament in the Club, which then had an overall membership of about 300. The club was courted by many Conservative politicians, including the Conservative Party leader Alec Douglas-Home who was guest-of-honour at the club's annual dinners of 1964 and 1969, and Enoch Powell, who, in a speech in 1968, said that "it was due to the Monday Club that many are brought within the Conservative Party who might otherwise be estranged from it".
That year Alan Clark joined the club and was soon chairman of its Wiltshire branch. Under its chairman from 1964 to 1969, Paul Williams, who until 1964 had been MP for Sunderland South, the club enjoyed significant growth and influence. Some argued that the club had a disproportionate influence within Conservative circles, especially after six of its members who were MPs joined the Cabinet in 1970.
Harold Wilson, twice Labour Prime Minister, described the club as "the guardian of the Tory conscience". Oxford political scholar Roger Griffin referred to the club as practicing an anti-socialist and elitist form of conservatism.
Membership
By 1970, eighteen Members of Parliament were club members:- Geoffrey Rippon
- Julian Amery
- Ronald Bell QC
- Harold Gurden
- Teddy Taylor
- John Peyton
- Paul Williams
- Duncan Sandys
- Joseph Hiley
- John Biggs-Davison
- Stephen Hastings
- Victor Goodhew
- Wilfred Baker
- Jasper More
- Jill Knight
- Patrick Wall
- Mark Woodnutt
- Sir Jerry Wiggin
- Geoffrey Stewart-Smith
- Patrick Cormack
- Anthony Fell
- Robert Boscawen
- Harold Soref
- William Benyon
- Roger White
- Peter Rost
- Norman Tebbit
- Piers Dixon
- David James
- John Heydon Stokes
- Alan Clark
- Harvey Proctor
- Sir Stephen McAdden
- Richard Body
- Sir Ronald Russell
- George Gardiner
- William Craig
- Gerald Howarth
- Evelyn King
- John Carlisle
- Rhodes Boyson
- The Hon. Archibald Hamilton
- Tim Janman
- Peter Bottomley
- Colin Campbell Mitchell
- Bernard Braine
- James Molyneaux
- John Taylor
- Neil Hamilton
- Robert Taylor
- Nicholas Winterton
- Ann Winterton
- Iain Murray, 10th Duke of Atholl
- Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 5th Marquess of Salisbury
- Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 6th Marquess of Salisbury
- Dermot Chichester, 7th Marquess of Donegall
- Patrick Maitland, 17th Earl of Lauderdale
- Victor Montagu, 10th Earl of Sandwich
- Charles Carnegie, 11th Earl of Southesk
- John Wodehouse, 4th Earl of Kimberley
- George Jellicoe, 2nd Earl Jellicoe
- John Whyte-Melville-Skeffington, 13th Viscount Massereene
- John Skeffington, 14th Viscount Massereene
- Alan Lennox-Boyd, 1st Viscount Boyd of Merton
- Merlin Hanbury-Tracy, 7th Baron Sudeley
- Jonathan Guinness, 3rd Baron Moyne
- Vernon Willey, 2nd Baron Barnby
- Wavell Wakefield, 1st Baron Wakefield of Kendal
- General Sir Walter Walker
- Sir Adrian FitzGerald, 24th Knight of Kerry
- Sir Horace Cutler – Leader of Greater London Council from 1977 to 1981
- Sir James Goldsmith
- Sir Victor Raikes, former Conservative MP for Liverpool Garston
- Commander Anthony Courtney, former Conservative MP for Harrow East
By 1971, the club "undoubtedly had the largest membership of any conservative group and included 55 different groups in universities and colleges, 35 Members of Parliament with six in the government, and 35 Peers". At the club's Annual General Meeting on 26 April 1971, in Westminster Central Hall, the chairman, George Pole, announced that "our membership, including national, branches and universities is around 10,000."
MP John Biggs-Davison, in his foreword to Robert Copping's second book on the history of the club, stated that "by its principles has kept alive true Tory beliefs and held within its ranks many who contemplated defecting from the Conservative and Unionist Party". The club's chairman in June 1981, David Storey, described it as "an anchor to a ship", referring to the Conservative Party.
The Thatcher years
The club's revised constitution stated that "the objects of the Club are to support the Conservative & Unionist Party in those policies designed:- to maintain loyalty to the Crown and to uphold the sovereignty of Parliament, the security of the realm, and defence of the nation against external aggression and internal subversion;
- to safeguard the liberty of the subject and integrity of the family in accordance with the customs, traditions, and character of the British people;
- to maintain the British constitution in obedience and respect for the laws of the land, freedom of worship and our national heritage;
- to promote an economy consistent with national aspirations and Tory ideals;
- to encourage members of the club to play an active part, at all levels, in the affairs of the Conservative and Unionist Party."
During the period that Margaret Thatcher led the Conservative Party, the Monday Club were prolific publishers of booklets, pamphlets, policy papers, an occasional newspaper, Right Ahead, and a magazine Monday World edited for some years by Sir Adrian FitzGerald, Bart., Sam Swerling, and later, Eleanor Dodd. In the October 1982 edition, MP Harvey Proctor called for the scrapping of the Commission for Racial Equality, Sir Patrick Wall commented on the Falklands War, James Molyneaux had an article "What Future for Ulster", and Dr. Harvey Ward had an article on "Zimbabwe Today". The September 1984 edition of Monday News carried the headline "Kinnock Talks to Terrorists", quoting Labour Party leader Neil Kinnock's declaration to the African National Congress's Oliver Tambo that the ANC in South Africa could expect financial and material assistance from a future Labour government. Other attacks were made upon then-Greater London Council leader Ken Livingstone inviting Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams to visit London in 1982.
An early member, in his Diaries, Alan Clark describes speaking later to a county-branch of the Monday Club in 1982: "I really cannot bear the Monday Club. They are all mad, quite different from its heyday, when it was a right-wing pressure group at the time of Ted Heath's Government. Now they are a prickly residue in the body politic, a nasty sort of gallstone."
The playwright David Edgar described the Monday Club, in 1986, as "proselytis the ancient and venerable conservative traditions of paternalism, imperialism and racism."