First Labour

original Labour First formed in 1980 as a grouping of MPs on the proper of the Labour Party who, while politically aligned with fellow Labour right faction, The Manifesto Group, desired a more collegiate party and thought that the bitter left-right factional battles of the 1970s and 1980s were damaging the party's electoral prospects. The group's chair was Brynmor John and its secretary was Edmund Marshall. By 1983 the grouping had effectively merged into the Labour Solidarity Campaign, the successor to The Manifesto Group.In late 1987, the Labour Solidarity Campaign was within the process of winding itself up, believing that it had won its fight against the hard left. A core of Labour Solidarity activists centred around John Spellar argued that there was a requirement to still organise and with Brynmor John's permission, continued under the Labour given name , thus founding the present incarnation of Labour First.he British Labour Party grew out of the union movement of the late 19th century and surpassed the Liberal Party because the main opposition to the Conservatives within the early 1920s. within the 1930s and 1940s, it stressed national planning, using nationalization of industry as a tool, in line with Clause IV of the first constitution of the Labour Party which involved the "common ownership of the means of production, distribution, and exchange, and therefore the best obtainable system of popular administration and control of every industry or service" (this clause was eventually revised in 1994).    

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