Sir Ian Gilmour was one of the most prominent critics of the early years of Thatcherism. A memeber of her first cabinet and self-styled 'Wet' Conservative, he penned this missive in the twilight of the Thatcher era. A staunch Conservative of the older,patrician type, Gilmour believed that Thatcherism 'will be seen as an aberration in the long distinguished history of the Tory party'
That this book is entertaining is not in doubt, a highly educated man, Gilmour dissects the follies of some aspects of econmic policy initiatives (the maniacal commitment to a bastardised form of monetarist theory) with vim and considerable cogency. This he proceeds to so with virtually every aspect of her rule. Crime, Welfare, foreign policy and unemployment all come in for attack from his pen.
What does irritate however, is the rather vacuous nature of the philosophy underlying this work. Gilmour is committed to what he calls 'One-Nation' Toryism. In reality this seems to involve appeasing extreme left-wing lobby groups with as much good grace as possible, accepting a rather marxist look on the triumph of socialism as being inevitable. Thatcher, by contrast saw her role as rolling back the left-wing tide, a task which she undertook as vigorously as she could. That is not to deny that errors were made, but to argue that to have followed Gilmour's prescriptions would have left Britain mired in the rather depressing condition it was during much of the 1970's.
Nevertheless, this book is very useful for the researcher both of political history, and poltical philosophy - seeing the outlook of those Conservatives that preceded Thatcher and who are now an almost extinct breed - a sad day for politics and the country