Skip to main content
Logo icon
Lord Lexden

Main navigation

  • About
  • Articles & Reviews
  • Letters
  • News
  • Parliament
  • Publications
  • Contact
Logo icon
Lord Lexden

The Second Festival of Britain

  • Tweet
Wednesday, 2 September, 2020
  • Articles
fest

2022 is the date that has been fixed for it, just over 70 years after the first Festival of Britain in 1951. On August 31, The Daily Telegraph reported that the Government was bogged down in wholly unproductive discussions about plans for the Festival with the SNP administration in Edinburgh. A letter from Alistair Lexden in response to the report was published in the paper on September 2.
 

SIR - It is alarming that the Government is wasting time trying to reach agreement with the SNP in Edinburgh (“National festival must not mention ‘Britain’ or ‘UK’, SNP tells PM”, August 31) about how our country should be celebrated at the second Festival of Britain, which is planned for 2022.

Those who want to destroy our national unity should be excluded from the festival, the first of which, in 1951, was inspired by Prince Albert’s Great Exhibition of 1851.

The new venture was announced as an occasion to strengthen the union of all four parts of our kingdom. Boris Johnson has made himself Minister for the Union, but it has been conspicuously weakened on his watch. His Government must now formulate a plan that will enable us to restate our national pride in terms that are appropriate to the times.

Speaking in Glasgow in the year of the first Festival of Britain, Churchill recalled the “liberal trend of British history across three centuries, and the message and guidance that the British people have always given to the world”. These are the themes that need to be recaptured in 2022.

Lord Lexden (Con)
London SW1

You may also be interested in

tree

Labour's schools tax raid sums don't add up

Monday, 16 June, 2025
The following letter was published in The Daily Telegraph on 16 June in slightly edited form.SIR – At the spending review, Rachel Reeves boasted  proudly that she had ended “the tax loophole which exempted private schools from VAT”, a grossly misleading description of the tax exemptio

Show only

  • Articles
  • Recent News
  • Speeches

Image: Festival of Britain Exhibition, South Bank, London 1951. Dome of Discovery to left, Skylon centre and Transport Pavilion to right. In the distance, across the River Thames, the building of the National Liberal Club is visible.

CC Attribution Share-alike license 2.0, from geograph.org.uk; 
Author Ben Brooksbank

Lord Lexden OBE

Footer

  • About RSS
  • Accessibility
  • Cookies
  • Privacy
  • About Lord Lexden
  • Articles and Reviews
  • Letters
  • Parliament
  • Publications
Promoted by Alan Mabbutt on behalf of Lord Lexden, both at 4 Matthew Parker Street, London, SW1H 9HQ
Copyright 2025 Lord Lexden OBE . All rights reserved.
Powered by Bluetree