Skelton was a talented journalist and wrote frequently for
The Spectator, including four articles in 1923 under the heading "Constructive Conservatism". These lively articles set out his political philosophy—chiefly the pursuit of a property-owning democracy, the division of land into small-holdings, co-partnership and share options to improve industrial relations and finally the use of referendums to resolve disputes between the House of Commons and House of Lords—as well as urge the Unionists to compete with Labour on more typically socialist issues like pensions and housing. The four
Spectator articles were republished in 1924 as a pamphlet, which had a lasting influence, particularly among younger Tory MPs. Ben Jackson, a historian at the
University of Oxford, suggests that Skelton's views may have been influenced by
Hilaire Belloc, particularly the views expounded in
The Servile State. == YMCA ==