MacDonaldism

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See also: Macdonaldism

English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

MacDonald +‎ -ism after Ramsay MacDonald, founder of the British Labour Party.

Noun[edit]

MacDonaldism (uncountable)

  1. (chiefly UK) The centrist political policies of Ramsay MacDonald, especially after his split with the Labour Party in 1931.
    • 2012, Matt Cole, Political Parties in Britain, page 29:
      Initially substance was limited but, eventually, moves to resolve this issue came with the publication of For Socialism and Peace which proposed a move away from MacDonaldism towards a highly planned economy and large state.
    • 2014, John Campbell, Roy Jenkins:
      The allegation of 'MacDonaldism' would still be spat at Jenkins himself as late as the 1980s.
    • 2018, H. M. Drucker, Doctrine and Ethos in the Labour Party:
      In a sense this pretence is a form of 'intellectual MacDonaldism'. Where 'MacDonaldism' consists in the betrayal of the needs of the movement for personal position, the 'doctrine' commentators betray the party in a more subtle and more fundamental way.

Usage notes[edit]

Not to be confused with Macdonaldism or McDonaldization.

See also[edit]