Abstract

ABSTRACTWhen the United Kingdom joined the European Community (EC) in January 1973 it did not simply join a ‘common market’ for industrial goods, it joined a Community with a fully developed protectionist common agricultural policy (CAP). The policy encompassed up to ninety percent of the EC budget to which Britain was due to become a net contributor at the end of the transition period in 1979. This article will analyse Britain’s tempestuous relationship with the CAP from the country’s accession to the end of the Labour government in 1979. Following accession, the country’s relationship with the EC became increasingly awkward as Labour leaders Harold Wilson and James Callaghan prioritised policies and favoured behaviour they deemed conducive to maintaining the unity of the Labour party. The perceived disadvantages of the CAP for Britain gave politicians additional justification for adopting a confrontational attitude towards the EC. The CAP, the article argues, can serve as a lens to shed light on the wider question of how Britain’s leading politicians adapted to Community membership politically, tactically and psychologically.

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