Federation of Conservative Students

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"Back in the 1980s, at the high noon of Thatcherism, tomorrow seemed to belong to her young zealots. Radical libertarianism captivated the youth wing of the Tory party, the Federation of Conservative Students. Some of the most prominent of them believed in taking the philosophy of personal freedom to what they saw as its logical conclusion, arguing for the legalisation of heroin and a free market in sexual services. That was too much for Margaret Thatcher as it was for her party chairman, Norman Tebbit, who, after an antic too many, closed down the FCS." [1]   Lord Harris of High Cross funded Neil Hamilton in the mid-Eighties to sue "the BBC over a documentary, Maggie's Militant Tendency, which suggested that the Conservatives were experiencing entryism from the extreme right." [2]

The FCS was replaced by the Conservative Collegiate Forum.

History

  • Tim Evans, Conservative Radicalism: A Sociology of Conservative Party Youth Structures and Libertarianism 1970-1992 (Berghahn Books, 1996).

Resources and articles

Related Sourcewatch

References

  1. BBC A burst of freedom, organizational web page, accessed May 26, 2013.
  2. independent The Hamilton Affair: The cost - Right-wing donors united by their loathing of Fayed, organizational web page, accessed May 26, 2013.