1. The Cabinet Office, Tony Benn and the Renegotiation of Britain's Terms of Entry into the European Community, 1974-1975.
- Author
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Collins, Aoife
- Subjects
- *
CABINET officers , *INTERNATIONAL relations ,BRITISH politics & government, 1964-1979 - Abstract
This article demonstrates how the Cabinet Office was able to isolate rogue ministers as a means of reinforcing collective Cabinet responsibility and enforcing the will of the Prime Minister and the Cabinet. Harold Wilson returned to Number 10 Downing Street in 1974 promising to renegotiate the terms of Britain's entry into the European Community. The renegotiation effort was coordinated by the Cabinet Office's European division, which aligned itself to Wilson's strategy of engineering the renegotiation to ensure Britain would remain a member of the Community. Benn was opposed to Community membership and in his capacity as Secretary of State for Industry sought to use the renegotiation items of regional development and the steel industry to cause its disruption. The Cabinet Office, in close collaboration with Wilson and Foreign Secretary Jim Callaghan, frustrated his attempts by utilising the machinery of government it operated against him to help push their preferred policy through. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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