Liberal League (United Kingdom)
The Liberal League was a grouping within the British Liberal Party from 1902 until 1910, with Lord Rosebery as its president and H. H. Asquith, Edward Grey, Henry Fowler as its vice-presidents.[1] It was made of Liberal Imperialists[2] and its purpose was to give unity to those Liberals who disliked the Liberal leader Henry Campbell-Bannerman's policies.[3]
A Liberal League candidate won the Leeds North by-election, 1902, overturning a Unionist majority of over 2,500 into a Liberal majority of nearly 800.[4]
By 1908 the League was almost moribund but on 12 March that year Rosebery tried to inject new life into it by making a speech in which he urged the League to rally to a programme of anti-socialism, anti-Home Rule, imperialism, free trade and reform of the House of Lords.[5] One member present said it was "the most dismal gathering he had ever attended; Lord Rosebery's audience was obviously ill at ease"; Rosebery himself wrote in his diary that his speech was "even worse than usual, partly from a clammy afternoon audience, partly from my being out of touch with politics".[6]
The Liberal government's revolutionary People's Budget of 1909 caused a storm of controversy. At League meetings of 25 and 28 June, members of the League were suspicious of following Rosebery in condemning the Budget due to his indecisive character and failure to lead.[7] On 9 September 1909 Rosebery resigned the presidency of the League. The next day he delivered a greatly anticipated speech in Glasgow in which he condemned the Budget as the "negation of faith, of family, of property, of monarchy, of Empire".[8] Asquith wrote to him the day after the speech, saying it was impossible to serve under Rosebery's presidency, not realising he had already resigned it.[9] It was formally dissolved in May 1910.[10]
Notes
References
- Robert Rhodes James, Rosebery (London: Phoenix, 1995).
- Leo McKinstry, Rosebery. Statesman in Turmoil (London: John Murray, 2006).