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938350
Labour in power
Description
A mind map summarising all the key details of the Labour government following the war for EdExcel GCSE History A Unit 3: Modern World Source Enquiry - War and the transformation of British society 1931-51.
No tags specified
history
a-level
Mind Map by
Matthew T
, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by
Matthew T
over 10 years ago
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Resource summary
Labour in power
1945 general election
Unpopularity of Conservatives
Churchill's lack of sympathy in General Strike put people off
Churchill's comment that Labour would need "some sort of Gestapo"
Association with depression + appeasement
Opposition to the welfare state
Reliance on Churchill in campaigns + smear campaign against Labour
Appeal of Labour
People wanted reform
Not as tired as Conservatives
Attlee was calm + confident
Labour's important role in wartime government (Morrison, Bevin, Cripps)
Promised change - no mistakes
Beveridge Report 1942
Want - lack of basic needs
Squalor - poor living conditions (introduction of new houses)
Ignorance - lack of education (education reform 1944, introduction of tripartite system)
Disease - poor healthcare
Idleness - unemployment (large job schemes)
Five giant problems
Attack on want
Family allowance: 1945 - 5 shillings/week for additional children to 16 or in work (no means test)
National insurance: 1946 - taxpayers paid, sickness benefit indefinitely, unemployment benefit for 6 months
Industrial Injuries Act, 1946: tribunals to determine compensation for injuries at work
National Assistance Act 1948: prevented extreme poverty, minimum income for all
Origins of the NHS
National Health Service Act 1946
Aneurin Bevan Minister of Health
Free medical, dental, hospital, ophthalmological treatment
Free medicine, spectacles, false teeth
Hospitals in government control
Councils provided midwives, home nurses + ambulances
Paid for by tax
Doctors paid by NHS
BMA opposition of losing independence, so allowed to treat private patients
Began 5 Jul 1948
Consequences of the NHS
Successes
Improvements in medicine (fall in infant mortality)
Better provision for elderly
Ante-natal clinics + maternity benefit
Reduction of disease
Massive use of dental treatment
Failures
Expensive (£400mn in first year)
Taxpayers thought money squandered
System abused
Double standards of private practice
Charges introduced - Bevan resigned
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