Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Constitutional and Political Reform
- Lords Powers - House of Lords were still
ran by Conservative Aristocrats and they
still have the power to veto any law that the
Liberals tried to pass
- Vetoing has already proven an issue before - 1892-1895 dozens of
'blackwoodsmen' who never bothered to attend the Lords showed
up to vote against he Liberals Legislation for Home Rule
- Vetoed Legislations
- Education Bill 1906
- Scottish Land Bill
- Abolition of Plural Voting Bill
- Licensing Bill 1908
- People's Budget 1909-10
- Why?
- Lloyd-George Chancellor of
the Exchequer needed to find
£15million to provide social
reforms
- What?
- Increased income tax from 1s to 1s2p for
those who earned over £3000 a year
- New super tax incomes over £5000
- Increased death duties on estates over £5000
- - new land taxes, taxi on profits made by those who earned it
just from owning the land - tax for those who prevented
development on land for when the value increased
- Indirect tax on luxury goods
- petrol, cars, cigarettes,
alcohol - this also effected
the lower classes
- Budget Protest League set up
- denounced the taxes
as confiscation and
robbery 'a class war'
- Jan 1910 Vote
- Why?
- The Liberals decided to hold a
general election in order to deduce
the Lords powers
- Results
- Liberals won narrowly 275:273 seats. Irish
nationalists 80 and Labour 40 joined with the Liberals
to over-rule the Conservatives and Lords
- Lloyd Georges Argument
- Peers vs People Lords
were selfish, aristocratic
rich and unpatriotic
- Conservative argument
- Other ways of getting the money - Tariff
Reforms. Lords job to prevent the
government making sweeping choices that
could seriously break the Nation
- Parliament Act 1911
- Why
- Liberals never wanted the Lords to be
able to veto a Commons legislation
ever again
- Conditions
- Never Reject Budgets
- delay no longer than 2 years
- not allowed to veto
- Maximum period between general elections
was to be reduced from seven to five
- Asquiths Solution
- Asquith asked King Edward to create
more Liberal Peers to outvote the
Conservatives but he didn't approve
- King Edward died May 1910
- King George V wanted the Conservatives and
Liberals to come to an agreement. Constitutional
Conference hed in June and November
- Conservative Solution - Offered reform of the
position of the Lords Still thought Lords reserved the
right to veto change in consititution unless allowed in
referendum.
- Break-down of Conference - After the Conference
broke-down King George agree to create more
Liberal peers as long as the Liberals won in a
general election
- December 1910 vote
- Results - The Liberal won, this
time only because of the support
of the IN and Labour Party
- Nicknames
- 'the rats' - Lords that wanted to
cooperate with the Commons
- 'the hedgers' - led by Lord
Lansdowne were undecided
- 'ditchers' - led by Lord
Willoughby de Broke
determined to oppose
the Parliament Bill
- Resignitioin of Arthur Balfour - After the split in
Conservatives over the Parliament act Arthur Balfour
was forced into resignition and was succeeded by
Andrew Bonar-Law
- Other Political Reforms
- Labour's Reforms
- Brought in to keep on side
Labour - 1906 Workmens
comepensation act - 1906
Trades Dispute Act
- Osbourne Case - Didn't want some of his yearly
subscription to the Liberals going to the Labour House of
Lords agreed Labour almost collapsed, depended on
Trade Unions for funding
- Payment of MP's act 1911
- - only private income could afford to be MP's New Act
provided £400 per year so more working class men could
be Members of Parliament
- Trade Union Act 1913
- Impose 'political levy' as part of
membership fees Members could
contract out
- Still no movement on votes for women
- Home Rule Bill 1912
- Irish Matter - Moderate
Gave Ireland its own
parliament Only Irish matters
- British Matters -
Foreign Policy, Defence
Trade, Pensions,
National Insurance
- Conservative Opposition
- Liberals had no right to change the
constitution of the UK because it had not
been an issue in the 1910 elections
- Undermine Britain's powers
by breaking up the UK Break
up the great British Empire
- Industrial - Ulster was the only industrial part of Ireland Did
not want loose their control over this wealth Did not want their
industries heavily taxed to help poorer rural parts of Ireland
- Before and After 1912
- Before - Relied on Conservative
Lords to veto Home Rule
- After
- Ulster Covenant - 200,000 Ulstermen signed, some in
their own blood Purpose to frighten off Liberals
government to attempt Home Rule over Ulster
- Ulster Volunteer Force - Set up after Home
Rule 1913 30,000 riffles smuggled in 1914 3
million rounds of ammunition
- Curragh Mutiny - British officers in Ireland
threatened to resign rather than fight against
this Ulster Unionist resistance
- Irish Volunteers - Formed after the threat of resign
of British officer Also smuggled riffles and
ammunitions Threat of civil war