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One Nation Labour refers to the theme and branding of theBritish Labour Party adopted by the party in 2012 underthe leadership ofEd Miliband.[1] Miliband described the "One Nation" term as being related to British Conservative Prime MinisterBenjamin Disraeli's idea ofOne Nation conservatism. Disraeli claimed a need for government to reduceeconomic inequality, which he believed was splitting Britain into two nations of rich and poor people.[2] Miliband stated that the theme of One Nation was shared by Labour Prime MinisterClement Attlee.[2] Miliband has declared inspiration from Disraeli's and Attlee's One Nation theme, in that it challenges social barriers of class and promotes the unity of Britain.[2]
One Nation Labour had been described by its proponents as the successor toNew Labour.[3] Miliband both commended and criticized elements of New Labour. He commended New Labour for challengingOld Labour's appeal to sectional interests by widening the party's appeal,[3] but also criticized New Labour, saying that "although New Labour often started with the right intentions, over time it did not do enough to change the balance of power in this country", "New Labour was right to talk about rights and responsibilities but was too timid in enforcing them, especially at the top of society", and that "we have to move on from New Labour".[3]
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One Nation Labour supported an economy that rebalances society by rebalancing Britain's economy to: secure northern Britain's interests, help low- and middle-income earners, initiate long-term investment, and promote manufacturing.[1]
It emphasised the need for promotingtechnical education for what is called "the forgotten 50 percent".[1] Miliband claimed that long-term economic sustainability requires this, saying that university graduates should care just as much as those of the 50 percent because the country's economic future depends on those with mid-level skills.[1]
One Nation Labour declared the need to equalize life chances and for people to be able to lead valuable lives even in a financially unequal society.[1]
Miliband said One Nation society cannot be one where CEO salaries boom while others' pay is stagnant, where corporations owned and operated in Britain do not pay taxes in Britain, and where those at the top of elite institutions believe that the rules do not apply to them.[3] As such, Miliband said that while responsibility should apply to those usingsocial security, that responsibility also matters at the top of society.[3]
One Nation Labour supported openness and tolerance to be a core of British identity and heritage while also declaring that immigration policy must be designed around the economic interests of the British people - and especially those at the bottom of the labour market.[4] Miliband addressed the issue ofemigration affecting Britain, with British people leaving Britain to search for opportunities elsewhere.[3]
Miliband said "I am proud to celebrate the multi-ethnic, diverse nature of Britain", while also saying that the previous Labour government did not do enough to address the issue of migration saying that "high levels of migration were having huge effects on the lives of people in our country".[3]
One Nation Labour supporteddevolution of powers to a local government representingEngland like that done withScotland andWales under the previous Labour government.[3] Miliband has said "If devolution to Scotland and Wales is right, so it must be right that the next Labour government devolves power to local government in England."[3]

One Nation Labour challenged some of theThird Way policy developments created by New Labour while accepting and modifying others.[5]
New Labour under Prime MinisterTony Blair sought to distance the Labour Party from the conventional definition ofsocialism. Blair said "My kind of socialism is a set of values based around notions ofsocial justice ... Socialism as a rigid form of economic determinism has ended, and rightly".[6] Blair referred to it as "social-ism" that involves politics that recognized individuals as socially interdependent, and advocated social justice, social cohesion, equal worth of each citizen, and equal opportunity.[7] Third Way social democratic theorist and Labour Party memberAnthony Giddens has said that the Third Way rejects the traditional conception of socialism, and instead accepts the conception of socialism as conceived of byAnthony Crosland as anethical doctrine that views social democratic governments as having achieved a viable ethical socialism by removing the unjust elements ofcapitalism by providing social welfare and other policies, and that contemporary socialism has outgrown the Marxian claim for the need of the abolition of capitalism.[8]
New Labour in practice however sought to avoid regular public use of the word "socialism" even in the Third Way definition, out of concerns that the word would remind the British electorate of the strongly left-wing political strategy of the Labour Party in the early 1980s.[5]
Like New Labour, One Nation Labour endorsed Third Way capitalism and advocated a non-conventional definition of socialism, with Miliband declaring support for a form of "capitalism that works for the people" while declaring support for a "form of socialism, which is a fairer, more just, more equal society".[5] Unlike New Labour, One Nation Labour used the term "socialism" more publicly.[5]