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Labour and Radicals in English Politics Party Formation, Suffrage, and Ireland, 1870-1914 Practical and Intellectual Context • Trades Union Congress –est. 1868 • No real radicals—goal of workers was to become more successful in capitalism—not to transform capitalism • Fabian Society—evolutionary change by ascertaining direction toward which society and economy is moving and making pro-active adjustments. • Sidney Webb & Beatrice Webb, History of the English Poor Law Sidney (1859-1947); Beatrice (1858-1943) So what? • The Webbs and other Fabians had access to those who ran England and their research data could identify areas in need of reform. • Their work helped transform the reforming impulse, that had been done initially to prevent revolution, then out of religiouslybased morality, into a more data-driven, empirically-based enterprise. Labour Party: The Challenge • 1871 Trade Unions Act exempted railroad union from corporate responsibility. • Taff-Vale Case (1900)—Labour recognized need to change law making their members responsible for business losses during a strike—need to have political party. • Osborne Case (1909)—Union funds can’t be used for political purposes. Labour Party: The Success • Labour M. P.s and workers generally supported Liberals in 1909 Budget Crisis • Liberals pass Trade Union Amendment Act in 1911—Union Funds can be used for political purposes • Strikes in 1911-1912 embitter labor-management relations • WWI—Labor is patriotic but demands post-war reforms and Labour constitutes itself a separate party in the wake of the demise of the Liberal Party. Kier Hardie (1856-1915) Women’s Suffrage • Emmeline Pankhurst—Women’s Social and Political Union—1903 • Disrupted political meetings, demanding votes for women • 1908—arrested for disrupting Commons—hunger strikes while in prison • March 1, 1912—Oxford and Regent Street windows smashed • June 4, 1913—Emily Davison at Epson Derby • February 1913--Lloyd George’s house burned by WSPU Emmiline Pankhurst Force-feeding a Suffragette The Ghost of Emily Davison Emily Davison being toppled by Anmer, June 4, 1913 Ireland • Home Rule forces had money and arms from Irish relatives in the U. S. • Irish Protestants in Ulster armed themselves and were determined to resist Home Rule • Edward Carson (1854-1935) led Irish Unionists; railed against evils of Catholicism • Soldiers said that they would not contribute to Home Rule; if forced, they’d quit the army and join the Irish Unionists • Violence in Ireland Increases. Edward Carson