ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1971, this book traces the revival, triumph, division and decline of the British Liberal Party in the late 19th & 20th centuries. It does so by focusing on the career of David Lloyd George, itself the decisive agent for change in this period. The first part of the book is an extended critical essay; the second part consists of primary documentary material which is intimately linked to the commentary in the first section. The major phases of the period are covered: The tension between the Old Liberalism and the New; the challenges confronting the Liberal government of 1905-15; the impact of world war and Lloyd George’s wartime premiership; the Lloyd George coalition in 1918-22 and the reasons for its downfall; and the slow decline of the Liberals between 1922 and 1929.

part I|96 pages

The Age of Lloyd George

chapter 2|20 pages

The Liberals in Power, 1905–15

chapter 3|19 pages

The Crisis of War, 1915–18

chapter 4|19 pages

The Lloyd George Coalition, 1918–22

chapter 5|15 pages

The Liberal Decline, 1923–9

part II|114 pages

Selected Documents

chapter a|13 pages

The Old Liberalism

chapter b|18 pages

The New Liberalism

chapter B|20 pages

The Liberals in Power (1905–15)

chapter a|15 pages

Welfare State and Political Crisis

chapter b|5 pages

The Coming of War

chapter C|32 pages

The Crisis of War, (1915–18)

chapter a|5 pages

The Liberal Party and the War, 1913–16

chapter b|14 pages

The Downfall of Asquith, December 1916

chapter c|13 pages

Lloyd George as Prime Minister

chapter D|14 pages

The Lloyd George Coalition (1918–22)

chapter a|6 pages

The Coalition and Party Politics

chapter b|8 pages

The Decline and Fall of Lloyd George

chapter E|15 pages

The Liberal Decline (1923–9)

chapter a|3 pages

Liberal Reunion

chapter b|12 pages

The Failure of the Last Crusade