The Bow Group was founded by a group of students with the aim of providing an effective counter to
socialism and the
Fabian Society. Since then, it has expanded under chairmen such as
Geoffrey Howe,
Leon Brittan,
Norman Lamont,
Michael Howard,
Peter Lilley,
Christopher Bland, and
David Campbell Bannerman. Much of the group's thought can be categorised as conservatism supporting both a
market economy and
social responsibility. The reputation of the group was founded on the need for innovative conservative thinking to address the pressing problems of the day. In keeping with this trend, it was The Bow Group which promoted the idea of a World Refugee Year in the late 1950s. In the 1960s, the group attracted significant controversy in Conservative circles over its support for
Kenyan independence. In the 1970s and early 1980s, the group was closely associated with the development of
post-Keynesian economics and government policy for
the Arts etc. The publication in 1973 of Peter Lilley's
Alternative Manifesto marked the beginnings of the intellectual shift from the policies of the
Heath government. The group was later in the vanguard of developing policy on privatisation and new enterprise zones, and promoting the extension of share ownership. The group continued to publish pamphlets on a wide range of issues during the 1980s, 1990s and 2000s. In July 2012, the Bow Group, reflecting on 60 years of its history in British politics, appointed former British Prime Minister
John Major as its President and Lords Howe, Howard and Lamont as its Senior Patrons to serve on the advisory board of the organisation. In 2014 the conservative academics
David Starkey and
Roger Scruton joined the advisory board, with Scruton addressing the Group on the difference between modern Conservatism and ideological
conservatism. In 2015
Norman Tebbit, former
Conservative Party chairman and long-term confidant of
Margaret Thatcher, also joined the board. Addressing the organisation at a lecture prior to his appointment he criticised the centrism and lack of ideological clarity in the modern Conservative Party, and called for an end to the "
Bedroom Tax". However, this suggestion of
tactical voting was opposed by Bow Group
patrons
Lords
Heseltine,
Howard and
Lamont, in a joint statement. In 2015, Lord Tebbit was appointed as the Bow Group's President, replacing Sir John Major who had stepped down in 2014.
Policies The Bow Group was a supporter of
Brexit and worked with both pro-Brexit campaigns to support Britain's exit from the EU. In 2016, long-standing member Heseltine was removed from the organisation on the basis that he did not support conservative ideals. He was criticised by the group's then-President, Lord Tebbit, for being a "backstabber" and betraying Britain in favour of the European Union. ==Chairmen of the Bow Group==