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BRITISH CONSERVATISM AND THE PRIMROSE LEAGUE ... - ideals

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23<br />

at the meetings of .the Habitation. During any public <br />

election the Habitation will meet every evening, each <br />

Knight bringing a report of his proceedings during the <br />

day. Monthly reports to the Habitations, and during <br />

election time daily reports shall be forwarded by the <br />

Ruling Councils of the Habitations to the Registrar.21 <br />

Statute twelve made clear that any Knight or Councillor found <br />

guilty of corrupt or illegal<br />

practices was to be "degraded and expelled <br />

from the League."22<br />

His name was to be erased from the Habitation roll <br />

and Ruling Council rolls and the reason stated for his removal. <br />

The statutes give the impression of a fairly well formulated <br />

organization emanating from the center to. the "periphery."23<br />

j n f ac t <br />

little more existed by December than the bare-bones structure of the <br />

League, fortified by the personal<br />

support and enthusiasm of Churchill's <br />

close allies.<br />

No Habitations were formed as yet; membership was <br />

confined to personal<br />

persuasion; and the fees were generally beyond the <br />

means of the working class.<br />

Political clauses relating to canvassing <br />

remained, for the moment, fantasy and swagger; a dream and a boast of a <br />

grass-roots organization then unknown to the public.<br />

These claims <br />

likewise served as a potential smokescreen of official aims and <br />

21 Robb, The Primrose League, p. 223, statute ten.<br />

22 Ibid., statute twelve.<br />

23 The terms "center" and "periphery" were also utilized by<br />

Feuchtwanger in explaining the transformation of the Conservative party <br />

in the mid-1880's from an elitist organization to one based on the <br />

popular support, above all, of the middle classes. For him the process <br />

was one of dictation from the center outward with little influence <br />

exerted at the level of the local constituency, despite its affiliation <br />

with the National Union. Thus it would seem that the Primrose League <br />

duplicated the essential framework of its parent party, but with a <br />

larger popular base. E.J. Feuchtwager, Disraeli, Democracy and the <br />

Tory Party (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1968), p. 190.

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