Great War- transformation of social and political attitudes Flashcards
changes in public politics post WW1
Polity became more democratic, but communication between politicians and public became less so
Jon Lawrence quote on politicians’ attitudes to polity post WW1
Politicians “conciously sought to remould popular involvement in the political process by denigrating nation assertive and irreverent demonstrations of popular feeling and championing an alternative vision of the public as peaceable, rational and above all unassertive”
James Vernon opinion on post WW1 politics
golden age of politics. no longer ‘active, participatory crowds’
left-wing politics post WW1
the emergence of “Lib-Lab politics” and Labour became an official parliamentary power, creating a change from prior to WW1 when the commons was “heavily skewed towards, land, business and the armed services” - Jon Lawrence
Liberal views to public politics prior to WW1
they embraced populist tactics in cries such as “Chinese Slavery” and the free trade plump loaf in contrast to small tariff reform loaf
A. Lowell on politics prior to WW1
the English regarded “ an ordinary political meeting as a demonstration, rather than a place for serious discussion” and stated it was unlikely to die out soon
Acts on public politics prior to WW1
1908- Robert Cecil introduced a bill legislating against disruption of ‘set-piece, ticketed meetings’
1883 Corrupt practices act- evidence of a candidates role in breaking up a meeting would constitute an ‘illegal practice’ and the candidate could be unseated through a petition, however, police were not given powers of arrest in this until 1914 and until 1936 they could not demand the details of the individual who broke the meeting up
the written word in politics prior to WW1
two main parties produced 10s of millions of leaflets during the 1906 and 1910 election. during the 1910 election, the manchester federation alone claimed to have distributed almost 1/2 million pamphlets and handbills
Meetings during the war
party truce led to by-election contests as well as the 1915 general election being cancelled and so fewer meetings, however unlike in Germany, meetings were not banned as this would breach ‘peace under defence of the realm act’
Single ticket independents winning seats
Noel Billing won Hertford in 1916 on air defence ticket and Ben Tillet won Salford North in 1917 on a pro-war, pro-Labour campaign
how many first time voters in 1918
15 million
new parties that ran in 1918
National Party
Labour Party
Pankhurt’s women’s party
National Democratic party
electoral turnout post-war
10 million electors didnt vote and turnout averaged at 57.2% even in contested seats
official party journal - Labour organiser on post-war politics
Britsh people now wanted “higher things than… the old-time election methods’; they wanted ‘reasoned argument’ devoid of shouting
Conservative Agent’s journal on ‘law and order at public meetings’
just before 1923 election- “prevention of free speech is a fine ‘gag’ to use during an election”
Conservative campaign journal on public politics
“disruption was yet another sinister aspect of the much-vaunted socialist menace” and that “rowdyism was the special work of aliens”. by this they meant Bolsheviks. Britain was being subjected to “terrorism”
quantitative analysis of a decline in ‘rowdiness’
a study based on press accounts of election meetings in 11 randomly chosen English constituencies found that disruption rose from 1895-1910, but post WW1 ‘fell sharply’. at least 1/3 of elections faced opposition from the floor in Jan 1910- 3x the level in 1922
decline in canvassing post WW1
Conservatives in London reported having undertaken “practically no canvassing in 1918 and in 1922, “some managed to reach less than 10% of electors”
violent riots post WW1
Jan- Aug 1919: bloody riots containing predominantly soldiers and ex-servicemen. in response, the Conservatives wanted to ‘arm the peaceable manpower’ to protect Britain from Bolshevism
Susan Kingsley Kent on soldier violence post WW1
“front soldiers returned home in a violent frame of mind” which manifested in violence and “innumerable accounts of sexual attacks upon women”
Henry De Man on violence post WW1
war awakened “the brutish delight of killing” especially in “ignorant peasants and laborers”