Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Lloyd-George 1916-1922
- Post War Crisis
- Positives
- improved living standards
- New consumer goods
- new opportunities in leisure and mass
entertainment
- Negatives
- Failure of Stapled Industries - Gold Standard, Over
investment bad industrial relations, Wall Street Crash
- Mass casualties
- Awkward demographic problems
- demobalisation of men and absorbing them
back into peacetime economy
- crippled by war debts
- wartime to peacetime
- international trade disrupted
- unemployment remained high
- Post War Coalition - Opposition to the new post war coalition was weak
Liberals - 28 seats Sinn Fein - 73 seats but refused to participate in
westminster politics and set up their own parliament - Dail
- No choice - With Liberals split and Labour refusing to join the coalition
Lloyd-George had to turn to the Conservatives Conservative still stood by LG as
'the man who won the war' as they felt they would benefit from an alliance with him
- Scare of Communism - Conservatives respected LGs leadership skills,
imagination and drive and believed that his work with social reforms
would prevent the spread of communism to Britain
- Lloyd-George's Failures
- Chanak Affair - Didn't consult the cabinet over the
Turkish crisis Included dominions without consulting them
which lead to the Independance of Canada
- Home Rule
- Sent the 'black and tans' which was brutal and
inhumane Liberals and Labour Parties were appauled
by their methods of dealing with the situation
- Conservative blamed them him
for the breaking up of Ireland
- First Solution - Unionist rule in Ulster, Autonomy in Southern
Ireland Council of Ireland to encourage cooperation between the
two areas Ulster had it's own parliament - rejected by Sin Fein
- Second Solution - Ireland a self-governing domain of the British
Empire - Convinced Sinn Fein - Ulster was so small and unviable it
would soon join the rest of Ireland in becoming independant
- Civil war caused by divide in Sinn Fein Ended when
Michael Collins was murded Partition confirmed
- Honours Scandal - Accused of
selling peerages to finance his
own political party
- Out of his control
- Coalition - Lloyd-George ran a coalition with a
Conservative majority, Conservatives could
easily withdraw their support
- Ireland - Final Solution had been
handled well Finally came to an
agreement with the Irish in 1923 - made
the best compromise he could
- IRA - Sinn Fein took over INP British rule
challenged by the rising of the IRA and Dail
Led to Anglo-Irish War
- Treaty of Versailles - 2 conflicting parties
as well as two other national
representatives to please made the best
compromise
- Geddes Cuts - spending cut of £86million in education
and public health Lloyd George managed to reduce this
to £64 million however working class people felt that the
promise of 'a land fit for heroes' had been betrayed
- Competition from rising industrial powers
such Japan, Germany and the United
States
- War Aftermaths - demobalising 5 million
men dislocation of trade and industry
- Social Reforms
- Addison's Housing Act 1919
- 200,000 good quality council
houses built for working class
- Fishers Education Act
- Raised school leaving age to
14 Part-time education up to 18
- Old Aged Pensions Act
- Extended and War widow
pensions introduced
- National Insurance Act
- extended unemployment benefits to cover a
further 8 million workers earning less than the
average wage