Winston Churchill in politics: 1900–39
Winston Churchill in politics: 1900 to 1939 documents the career of Winston Churchill in Parliament from its beginning in 1900 to the start of his term as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom in World War II.
Churchill entered Parliament as member for Oldham in 1900 as a Conservative. He changed parties in 1904 after increasing disagreement with the mainstream Conservative policy of protectionist tariffs preferentially favouring trade with the British Empire, joining the Liberals and winning the seat of Manchester North West. His political ascent was rapid, becoming successively Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies, President of the Board of Trade, Home Secretary, and First Lord of the Admiralty before he was 40 years old.
His career suffered a severe check in 1915, after his support for the failed Dardanelles Campaign during World War I, and the subsequent formation of the first Coalition. Temporarily leaving politics, he served on the Western Front before rejoining the Government after David Lloyd George had replaced H. H. Asquith as prime minister. He served as Minister of Munitions, Secretary of State for War, Secretary of State for Air, and Secretary of State for the Colonies before the downfall of the Coalition in 1922 when he also lost his seat in Parliament.
After contesting two seats unsuccessfully as an independent, he was elected to Epping in 1924 with the backing of local Conservatives, officially rejoining the Conservative Party the following year. He immediately became Chancellor of the Exchequer, retaining the post until the fall of the Conservative government in 1929, and presided over the return of the United Kingdom to the Gold Standard exchange rate system. In opposition after 1929, Churchill became isolated, opposing Indian independence, advocating the unpopular policy of rearmament in the face of a resurgent Germany, and supporting King Edward VIII in the abdication crisis. By 1939, he had been out of Cabinet for ten years, and his career seemed all but over.
Early years in Parliament
Entry into politics
Churchill discussed his political convictions in letters to his mother where he made a number of unflattering comments about the Conservative government and noted:
- Were it not for home rule [in Ireland] to which I will never consent – I would enter parliament as a Liberal. As it is – Tory Democracy will have to be the standard under which I shall range myself.
His beliefs were significantly affected by those of his father, Lord Randolph, after whose early death he wrote:
- All my dreams of companionship with him, of entering Parliament at his side and in his support were ended. There remained only for me to pursue his aims and vindicate his memory.[1]:62
Randolph had been a fervent supporter of Ulster Unionists, and had played a major part in formulating the policy of 'Tory Democracy', though he had chosen a career in the army for Churchill. After a few years of army life Churchill came to realise that he could not hope to support himself on army pay, and writing remained his main source of income during his life.[2]:15–16 His military career would be valuable for giving him the fame needed to enter politics, however: As Churchill wrote his mother,
A few months in South Africa would earn me the SA medal and in all probability the Company's Star. Thence hot-foot to Egypt—to return with two more decorations in a year or two—and beat my sword into an iron dispatch box.[2]:18–19
His first political appearance was at a meeting of the Conservative Primrose League, in Bath in 1897, while at home on leave from the army in India. Having discovered that the Conservative Party needed speakers, as he later commented: "I surveyed the prospect with the eye of an urchin looking through a pastrycook's window."[1]:21
The speech concerned the benefits to the working man of "Tory Democracy" and was reported in the Morning Post.[4]:26–27
Member for Oldham
His first attempt to enter Parliament was unsuccessful when in July 1899 he was defeated in a by-election for the seat of Oldham in Lancashire. The constituency returned two members of parliament, both Conservatives at the previous election. One of them was ill and sought to retire, and Churchill was chosen as the new candidate. However, before the election the second member died so that two new candidates stood against two respected Liberal candidates, at a time when the popularity of the Conservative government was in decline.[4]:47–49
Churchill looked about for a way to improve his public standing after the defeat. He arranged to travel as a war correspondent to South Africa, fortified by a letter of recommendation to the high commissioner, Alfred Milner, from the Colonial Secretary, Joseph Chamberlain, who had been a friend of his father, and by a promise of a military attachment. His reputation was considerably improved by his war reports published in national newspapers, and by his own military exploits, particularly his capture by and escape from the Boers.[4]:50–65
He stood again for Oldham in the 1900 general election, known as "the Khaki election" because the Conservative government greatly benefited from its success in the Boer war.[4]:23–24 This time he came second, pushing one of the Liberal candidates into third place, and was elected. In both of these elections, his campaign expenses were paid for by his cousin the 9th Duke of Marlborough.[5]:37
Churchill chose not to attend the opening of Parliament in December 1900 and instead embarked on a speaking tour throughout Britain and the United States. With the success of his tour and through his prolific writing in various journals and books, he earned £10,000 for himself in 1899 and 1900 (equivalent to around £500,000 in 2001).[4]:69–70 Members of Parliament were unpaid and Churchill had inherited almost no money; the income he did inherit from his father's estate, he assigned to his mother in 1903.[5]:26 He took his seat in parliament in February 1901.
Crossing the floor
In Parliament, Churchill became associated with a group of Tory dissidents led by Lord Hugh Cecil called the Hughligans, a play on words with "hooligans". His first major speech in Parliament was an attack on the proposal of Secretary of State for War St John Broderick to expand the army to six corps, three of which would be free to form an expeditionary force overseas. Churchill had prepared his speech for over six weeks and spoke for an hour without notes. The speech showed his rhetorical powers and was compared by commentators at the time to that of his father's first success – also an attack on a cabinet minister of his own party.[6] Churchill maintained the campaign in and out of Parliament for some time.[nb 1]
In 1902, Churchill revealed some of his views in an interview at the University of Michigan only published six decades later. In the interview, he spoke candidly about his desire for "the ultimate partition of China", as "the Aryan stock is bound to triumph." He also expressed lack of concern for Russian expansion towards China and India, as "Russia has a justifiable ambition to possess a warm water port. It is really embarrassing to think that 100,000,000 people are without one" - an unusual view during the era of the Great Game.[8]
By 1903, he was drawing away from Lord Hugh's views, although they remained friends – Lord Hugh was Churchill's best man in 1908. He also opposed the Liberal Unionist leader Joseph Chamberlain, whose party was in coalition with the Conservatives. Chamberlain proposed extensive tariffs intended to protect Britain's economic dominance. Churchill then and later supported free trade. In this he was supported by Lord Hugh and other Conservatives, including the then Chancellor of the Exchequer C. T. Ritchie. Chamberlain's Tariff Reform movement gained strength splitting the Conservative-Unionist alliance. Churchill's attacks on the Conservatives continued on a number of topics, his dissatisfaction had many causes.[9]:ch 2 His dissatisfaction grew, he made personal attacks on some of the leaders, including Chamberlain, and was reciprocated; Conservative backbenchers staged a walkout once while he was speaking.[4]:86 and many were personally hostile to him.[6]:28 His own constituency effectively deselected him, the Conservative Association passing a resolution that he "had forfeited their confidence in him."[10] Oldham was an important cotton-spinning centre whose electorate favoured the Unionist policy of Protectionism, which advocated duties on cheap foreign textiles. He continued to sit for Oldham until the next general election.
In 1904, Churchill's dissatisfaction had grown so strong that, on returning from the Whitsun recess, he crossed the floor of the House of Commons to sit as a member of the Liberal Party. His cousin Ivor Guest followed him. Suggested reasons for Churchill's changing sides have included the prospect of a ministerial post and salary,[5]:27 a desire to eliminate poverty, and concerns for the working class, [nb 2] but the immediately preceding events were the rift with the Conservative Party over trade tariffs.[13] He may simply have been more sympathetic to the Liberals, despite being personally conservative and traditionalist; in 1962 he reportedly told another MP "I'm a Liberal. Always have been."[2]:24 As a Liberal, he continued to campaign for free trade.[nb 3]
Contemporaries noted that Churchill seemed very like his father, W. S. Blunt writing:
- In mind and manner he is a strange replica of his father, with all his father's suddenness and awareness, and I should say, more than his father's ability.[15]:40
That resemblance went far; Churchill dressed like his father, and the Hughiglans have been seen as the recreation of Lord Randolph’s Fourth Party.[16]
From 1903 until 1905, Churchill was also engaged in writing Lord Randolph Churchill, a two-volume biography of his father which was published in 1906 and received much critical acclaim.[4]:102–103[17] However, filial devotion caused him to soften some of his father's less attractive aspects.[4]:101 Theodore Roosevelt, who had known Lord Randolph, reviewed the book as "a clever, tactful, and rather cheap and vulgar life of that clever, tactful, and rather cheap and vulgar egotist".[5]:47 Historians suggest Churchill used the book in part to vindicate his own career and in particular to justify crossing the floor.[5]:41[6]:34–35 Churchill himself later wrote that studying his father's life was a major cause of his disenchantment with the Conservatives.[6]:40
Growing prominence
When the Liberals took office, with Henry Campbell-Bannerman as Prime Minister, in December 1905, Churchill became Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies.[nb 4] Serving under the Secretary of State for the Colonies, Victor Bruce, 9th Earl of Elgin, Churchill dealt with the adoption of constitutions for the defeated Boer republics of the Transvaal and Orange River Colony and with the issue of 'Chinese slavery' in South African mines. His first speech after taking office, in which he tried to defend Lord Milner while opposing his policies was a failure. Churchill had prepared it in advance, he had rehearsed it before his private secretary. While the speech reads well, it was not suited to the mood of the House, and the Conservatives proclaimed that Churchill was finished.[19]:19[6]:38–39 It was a failure of his technique of writing his speeches in advance. But he learned from his mistakes. His speech in which he vainly sought Conservative support for the Boer Constitutions was perhaps his strongest yet:
There is a higher authority which we should earnestly desire to obtain. I make no appeal, but I address myself particularly to the Hon. gentlemen opposite, who are long versed in public affairs, and who will not be able all their lives to escape from a heavy South African responsibility. They are the accepted guides of a Party which though a minority in this House, nevertheless embodies nearly half the nation. I will ask them seriously whether they will not pause before they commit themselves to violent or rash denunciation of this great arrangement...with all our majority we can only make it a gift of a Party, they can make it the gift of England.[6]:42
In the 1906 general election, he won the seat of Manchester North West (carefully selected for him by the party). His electoral expenses were paid for by his uncle Lord Tweedmouth, a senior Liberal.[5]:3
Churchill had become one of the most prominent members of the Government outside the Cabinet. Indeed, Campbell-Bannerman had proposed his promotion to the Cabinet while Churchill was still Undersecretary, but the King vetoed his appointment.[20]:181 When Campbell-Bannerman was succeeded by Herbert Henry Asquith in 1908, he was promoted to the Cabinet as President of the Board of Trade. Under the law at the time, a newly appointed Cabinet Minister was obliged to seek re-election at a by-election. Churchill lost his Manchester seat to the Conservative William Joynson-Hicks. Almost one third of the seat were Jewish and many others were Roman Catholic. The Liberals' adoption of the Alien Act and Churchill's refusal to commit to Home Rule together with Churchill's concentration on national rather than local issues are given as the reason for his defeat.[21] He was soon elected in another by-election at Dundee constituency.
As President of the Board of Trade he supported David Lloyd George, the newly appointed Chancellor of the Exchequer, in opposing the 1908-9 naval estimates. The First Lord of the Admiralty, Reginald McKenna proposed six dreadnoughts. Lloyd George, with Churchill's support wanted only four. But a public campaign led by the Conservatives with covert support from First Sea Lord Jackie Fisher, who was a Liberal appointment, forced the government to order eight. Churchill gave speeches on this issue, referring to his father's campaign for economy, and circulated open letters to his constituents (again following his father's practise).[6]:41–42
Also as President of the Board of Trade, Churchill took an active role in bringing about the radical social reforms which have become known as the Liberal reforms. The first of these, passed while Churchill was still Colonial Undersecretary, the Trade Disputes Act 1906 overturned the Taff Vale Case by providing that unions were not liable for damages caused by strike action.[4]:147
His direct achievements at the Board of Trade were considerable particularly in employment law. He was responsible for the Mines Act 1908, which provided for an 8-hour day in all mines; the Trades Boards Act 1909, which established the first minimum wage system in Britain, mandating rates for both time- and piece-work for 200,000 workers in several industries (Churchill was able to get Conservative support for this and the Bill "passed without a division."[22]) and the Labour Exchanges Act 1909, setting up offices to help unemployed people find work.[4]:150–151 As Home Secretary he continued these reforms with the National Insurance Act 1911, providing sickness and unemployment benefits.[4]
As a Cabinet Minister he had three outstanding qualities: he worked hard, he carried his proposals through Cabinet and Parliament, and he carried his department with him. These qualities, the historian, parliamentary clerk, and politician Robert Rhodes James notes, are not as common as they should be.[6]:43 Churchill himself put his advancement to his submissions to Cabinet, not to his speeches[23]
Churchill's most important indirect role in these reforms was his assistance in passing the People's Budget and the Parliament Act of 1911.[4]:157–166 The Budget included the introduction of new taxes on the wealthy to fund new social welfare programmes. Churchill biographer William Manchester called the People's Budget "a revolutionary concept" because it was the first budget in British history with the expressed intent of redistributing wealth to the British public.[24] When the Budget was discussed in 1909 he did feel some ambiguity over it.[4]:159 But despite his doubts about its effectiveness, he launched himself into the fight for the budget and accepted the presidency of the Budget League, an organisation set up in response to the opposition's "Budget Protest League".[4]:161
After the budget was sent to the Commons in 1909 and passed, it went to the House of Lords, where it was subsequently vetoed. The Liberals than fought and won two general elections in January and December 1910 to gain a mandate for their reforms. In these campaigns which resulted in the curbing of the Lords' veto by the Parliament Act, Churchill was again to the fore, adding humour in his speeches:
"All civilisation," said Lord Curzon quoting Renan, "is the work of aristocracies." They liked that in Oldham. There was not a duke, not an earl, not a marquis, not a viscount in Oldham who did not think that a compliment had been paid to him. "All civilisation is the work of aristocracies." It would be more true to say "The upkeep of aristocracies has been the hard work of all civilisations."[6]:38
In 1909 Churchill published a collection of speeches with a foreword under the title Liberalism and the Social Problem.[25] In it he argued for maintaining much of the social order and for gradualism in reform. He wanted to make the existing society work better and more humanely so as to preserve it better. Churchill, it was said, wanted a society where the upper class remained in control, distributing benefits to a grateful and industrious working class.[6]:44–46 He was then compared with Lloyd George who was seen as Churchill's mentor[26] and from whom Churchill learned much, but who, unlike Churchill, wanted to change some of the fundamental structures of society. Churchill was one of very few Liberals who pressed for the expansion of the House of Lords whether or not the Parliament Act was passed.[4]:223
Home Secretary
In 1910, Churchill was promoted to Home Secretary. His term was marked by three main controversies: a violent Rhondda coalminers' strike and industrial relations issues generally, his responses to the Siege of Sidney Street and the suffragettes agitation.
In 1910, coalminers in the Rhondda Valley began what has come to be known as the Tonypandy Riots. Initially, the chief constable of Glamorgan requested that troops be sent in to help police quell the rioting. Churchill, when he learned that they had been sent, allowed them to go as far as Swindon and Cardiff and authorised the commanding general to advance further if he should judge it necessary. Churchill, who had already forbidden the use of forces in another industrial dispute at Newport, did not favour deployment of troops, fearing a repeat of the 1887 Bloody Sunday in Trafalgar Square. In particular, Churchill forbade the use of troops as strike breakers.[6]:48 On 9 November, the Times leader criticised this decision, saying that responsibility for the "renewed rioting late last night...will lie with the Home Secretary [Churchill]" for countermanding the chief constable's request for troops. In spite of this, the rumour persisted that Churchill had ordered troops to attack, and Churchill's reputation in Wales and in Labour circles never recovered.[27]
In early January 1911, Churchill arrived at the "Siege of Sidney Street" in London. He gave his own account of the incident in his book Thoughts and Adventures. There is some uncertainty as to whether Churchill attempted to give operational commands. Biographer Roy Jenkins comments that the reason he went was because "he could not resist going to see the fun himself" and that he did not issue commands.[4]:194 A famous photograph from the time shows Churchill at the scene, peering around a corner to view the gun battle between cornered anarchists and Scots Guards. His role and presence attracted much criticism. The building under siege caught fire, and Churchill supported the decision to deny the fire brigade access, forcing the criminals to choose surrender or death. After an inquest, Arthur Balfour remarked, "He [Churchill] and a photographer were both risking valuable lives. I understand what the photographer was doing but what was the Right Honourable gentleman doing?"[4]:195 The significance was that the whole highly publicised affair increased Churchill's already incipient reputation for being a frenetic and far-from-calm Home Secretary.[4]
While still at the Board of Trade in 1909, Churchill was accosted with a whip by suffragette Theresa Garnett.[4]:186[28]:237 Churchill's proposed solution was a referendum on the issue but this found no favour with Herbert Henry Asquith and women's suffrage remained unresolved until after World War I.[28]:186
First Lord of the Admiralty
In 1911, Churchill was transferred to the office of the First Lord of the Admiralty, a post he held into World War I. This was the year of the Agadir Crisis, with which Churchill opens The World Crisis, his account of World War One. His first major act was to replace all but one of the Sea Lords, the senior naval officers who administered the Admiralty. With the aid of the new First Sea Lord Sir Francis Bridgeman he created a war staff,[29]:ch IV gave impetus to reform efforts, including development of naval aviation (he undertook flying lessons himself),[30] the use of the 15" gun as the main armament of battleships, the development of the fast battleship (which found shape in the Queen Elizabeth class) and of the 6" gunned light cruiser (which found shape in the Arethusa class) concepts,[29]:ch 4, 6 and the switch from coal to oil in the Royal Navy, a massive engineering task, which depended on securing oil supplies in Mesopotamia.[31] In 1912, in response to the German Naval Law of that year, Churchill brought forward Naval Estimates based on a principle of building two British battleships to every one German, which became known as 'two keels to one."
Churchill was influenced in these reforms by the (then-retired) Admiral of the Fleet Lord Fisher, who had been for many years a driving force for innovation in the Royal Navy. The two men had become very close at Biarritz in April 1907. In 1909, Fisher had been First Sea Lord and on the opposite side to Churchill in the debates over the Naval Estimates. However this was a temporary tension, and the friendship persisted. Fisher remained in close touch with naval affairs after his retirement from the Admiralty in January 1910, and Churchill consulted him almost instantly upon taking up the office of First Lord.[32]:431–32 Many of the ideas Churchill took up, like oil propulsion and ever-bigger battleships with ever-bigger guns, were causes Fisher backed with his peculiar drive; however other Fisher proposals, like an expansion of the submarine fleet or the introduction of diesel engines to capital ships, got nowhere.[32]:435–37
In 1912 the Liberal Government, since the elections in 1910 dependent upon Irish National support, introduced what became the Home Rule Act 1914. The Unionists (the Conservatives and Liberal Unionists had united in 1911) bitterly opposed this, demanding that Ulster be excluded from the Home Rule Parliament. Privately Churchill sought a compromise.[6]:57 Publicly (and particularly after Sir Edward Carson's Ulster Covenant by which over half a million men pledged to oppose Home Rule by 'all means which shall be found necessary' and the formation of the Ulster Volunteers), he campaigned for the Bill by speeches in Ulster and England and open letters.[6]:58 This caused great anger among the Unionists because Lord Randolph had been the champion of Ulster against Parnell's original Home Rule campaign.
As the crisis deepened, with the Ulster Volunteers drilling openly, Churchill arranged for a Royal Naval battleship squadron to cruise off Belfast[33]:148 without first raising the issue in Cabinet. Asquith cancelled the move two days later.[6]:63 The cancellation is not mentioned in The Gathering Storm. It appeared to the Unionist leaders that Churchill and his friend War Secretary John Seely were seeking to provoke the Unionists into some outward act that would allow Ulster to be placed under some form of military rule.[34] The attempts to move troops led to the Curragh Incident, Seely's resignation, a backdown by the Government, and negotiations brokered by King George V.[35]
This incident revealed for the first time that Churchill was not prepared to negotiate under pressure, that while he would compromise behind the scenes and be magnanimous in victory, when confronted by a foe he stood his ground. This was an attitude he maintained through his career As he wrote in My Early Life p. 327[1]
I have always urged fighting wars and other contentions with might and main till overwhelming victory and then extending the hand of friendship to the vanquished. Thus I have always been against the Pacifists during the quarrel and the Jingoist at its close...I thought we should have conquered the Irish then given them Home Rule...and that after smashing the General Strike we should have met the grievances of the miners.
World War I
The start of the war
On 31 July 1914, Churchill ordered the seizure of the two Turkish battleships then under construction in Britain. Although this decision was probably a wise one,[6]:74 the way the order was carried out was not. The ships were boarded without negotiations with Turkey or compensation, and the British placed guards on one of the battleships to prevent Turkish sailors from boarding. The order probably helped propel Turkey into alliance with Germany. (Two German warships arriving in Turkey were portrayed as replaacements.) Churchill later defended himself referring to the negotiations that the Germans were starting with the Young Turks.[29]:169 But Britain was also negotiating with Turkey at the same time and on 18 August Turkey declared neutrality.[36]
In September 1914, Joffre suggested that the British create a 'demonstration' at Dunkirk to distract German forces from Joffre's plans which culminated in the Battle of the Marne. Churchill at Kitchener's suggestion took charge of a mixed force of Yeomanry and Marines. He arranged for 50 London buses to be used for extra mobility and the troops were used in general operations for a few weeks until the "Circus" was wound up.
On 5 October 1914, Churchill went to Antwerp, which the Belgian government proposed to evacuate and surrender to the Germans. The Royal Marine Brigade was there, and at Churchill’s urgings the 1st and 2nd Naval Brigades were also committed. Churchill proposed to resign from the Admiralty and take executive command of the newly formed Royal Naval Division, which incorporated the Marine and Naval Brigades. His offer, supported by Kitchener, who wanted to commit an Anglo-French expeditionary force to secure Antwerp,[29]:320 was rejected by the Cabinet. Antwerp fell on 10 October 1914 with the loss of 2,500 men.
At the time Churchill was attacked for squandering resources. His defence was that the British force had prolonged resistance in Antwerp by five days and occupied five German divisions.[29]:323 It is more likely that his actions prolonged the resistance by a week (Belgium had proposed surrendering Antwerp on 3 October), and that this delay saved Calais and Dunkirk.[6]:80 The more damaging attack, made inside and outside the Cabinet, was that Churchill was seeking publicity instead of running his department.[37]:293
He was also unpopular within the Navy itself for the replacement of Sir George Callaghan by Sir John Jellicoe as commander of the Grand Fleet and for bowing to public pressure and dismissing Prince Louis of Battenberg as First Sea Lord, although he was one of the last members of the government to concede that Battenberg had to be replaced.[38]:82–88
Early development of the tank
Churchill sponsored the development of the tank, which was financed from naval research funds. After witnessing a demonstration in which an armoured tractor successfully cut through a barbed wire entanglement, Churchill and Lloyd George decided that tanks could prove useful.[39] Churchill then headed the Landships Committee which was responsible for creating the first tank corps and, although a decade later development of the battle tank would be seen as a tactical victory, at the time it was seen as misappropriation of funds.[39] The tank was deployed too early and in too small numbers, much to Churchill's annoyance. He wanted a fleet of tanks used to surprise the Germans under cover of smoke, and to open a large section of the trenches by crushing barbed wire and creating a breakthrough sector.[4]:243–253
Dardanelles Campaign
In early 1915, Churchill campaigned for an amphibious assault on the Belgian coast in 1914, which was opposed by Lord Kitchener at the War Office and Sir John French commanding the British Expeditionary Force.[40] Churchill then became one of the political and military engineers of the disastrous Gallipoli Campaign.[41]
In 1911, Churchill had written that "it is no longer possible to force the Dardanelles".[6]:82 Nonetheless, Churchill and others in the Admiralty, including Admiral Oliver, the Chief of the Naval Staff, were impressed by the German bombardment of Belgian fortresses in the Battle of Liège at the start of the war. As early as August 1914, he had ordered an appreciation of "a plan for the seizure of the Gallipoli peninsula, by a Greek army of adequate strength, with a view to admitting a British fleet to the Sea of Marmara." This was some three months before Turkey was at war and more than two years before Greece entered the war. Although later in August Greece did offer to attack Turkey, the offer was not accepted by Britain due to complaints from its ally Russia, and was withdrawn before Turkey entered the war in October.[42]:10
Churchill pressed the issue at successive meetings of the War Council in 1914. After an exchange of telegrams with Admiral Sackville Carden, the Commander in the Aegean, he tabled his plan for forcing the Straits by naval bombardment at a further meeting of the Council in January 1915. He had not sought the view of the Naval Staff, and those senior naval officers with whom he had discussed the plan were dubious or opposed to the scheme.[6]:85 The concept was flawed. The first attacks by the Navy in February 1915 were successful but were not pressed home (partly because of bad weather) and no troops were available to secure the gains made. Instead marines blew up the outer forts, which were reoccupied and rebuilt when the marines left.[42]:163 The War Council had discussed using the 29th Division (then in Britain) and the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (then in Egypt) but no decision had been made when the naval attacks began.[6]:89 At the time, Churchill claimed the navy could do the job alone and the troops would be needed - if at all – as an occupying force once the Straits were forced.[6]:90
Carden's attack was slowed because the inner forts were concealed from the ships and few aircraft were available for spotting purposes (the seaplane tender HMS Ark Royal which supported the fleet carried just five seaplanes of an older design lacking sufficient range). Carden asked to discontinue the attack until there were more available.
Churchill refused, requiring the attack to continue,[43] and Carden planned to continue but then collapsed from a rupturing ulcer. His second in command, Admiral John de Robeck took over and pressed a further attack on 18 March, but this failed when the trawler minesweepers crewed by Royal Naval Volunteer Reserves (i.e. civilian seamen) came under attack and then the battleships ran into a mine field (three were sunk). De Robeck did not repeat the attacks, later giving his reason as concerns over what would happen if his ships succeeded in clearing a way through the strait, but then became trapped in the Sea of Marmora without any troops to occupy captured territory.[38]:252 Churchill had anticipated the loss of ships: the battleships were mainly chosen because they were obsolete and unfit to face modern German ships, and he believed that the attack should have continued.[29]:vol.2 670–690 Commodore Roger Keyes (Carden's chief of staff) believed that with destroyers fitted for minesweeping, and with naval personnel manning the trawlers, the mines could have been removed. These improvements were carried out, but never tried against the defences. It was also reported at the time that the defences were short of ammunition, and now seems likely that at least some of guns, particularly the largest, would have been forced to cease firing the following day.[44]
The landings by the ANZAC, the 29th and Royal Naval divisions, and a French division were delayed until 25 April because of lack of preparations, by which time the Turks had deployed six divisions and created barbed wire and trench defences on likely landing sites. The landings failed.
Churchill was widely blamed for the fiasco. He was probably right in saying that had the naval attacks been pressed the Turks, short of ammunition and low in morale would have had to abandon the forts and the Fleet could have occupied the Sea of Marmora and with it Constantinople.[42]:165 But it is even more likely that had the Fleet been properly equipped with spotter planes and destroyer minesweepers, the attack on 18 March would have been successful. It is almost certain that a Fleet so equipped and supported by the four divisions made available in April would have cleared the Strait with almost no loss. As the minister responsible, Churchill was the one who did not provide the resources needed.[6]:97–99 Clement Attlee, who served in the army at Gallipoli, described the campaign as "an immortal gamble that did not come off... Sir Winston had the one strategic idea in the war. He did not believe in throwing away masses of people to be massacred".[38]:260
The Asquith Coalition, the Dardanelles Committee
The Liberal government was weakened by the failure of the naval attacks and the first landings in Gallipoli, by the failure of the offensive at Neuve Chapelle, and by the Shell Crisis. The Cabinet was bickering and some members plotted against others. Churchill himself aimed to replace Sir Edward Grey as Foreign Secretary with Balfour.[37]:304[nb 5] The historian Stephen Koss has argued that Churchill himself created the Shell Crisis. He states that during a visit to BEF Headquarters on 8 May he arranged with Colonel Charles à Court Repington, the Times correspondent there to publish the reports of the lack of shells.[45] James discounts this argument.[6]:184 On 15 May Fisher resigned as First Sea Lord. He presented the Cabinet with a list of demands; if these were satisfied he would return to office. The first of these was that Churchill would be dismissed from Cabinet altogether. Fisher's demands were extreme, the King saying that Fisher should be hung from the yardarm,[46] but his resignation precipitated a Cabinet crisis.[47]
Prime Minister Asquith formed an all-party coalition government. The Conservatives demanded Churchill's demotion as the price for entry.[4]:282–288 He had little support in Cabinet or in the Liberal Party as a whole. Many thought the same as Lloyd George: that Churchill's ambition had led him to override his professional advisers and his record was a succession of grisly failures.[37]:309 Others, including Mrs Asquith, blamed him for breaking the Cabinet and forcing the Coalition.[6]:103–04 However Sir Max Aitken interceded unsuccessfully with his close friend the Conservative Leader Andrew Bonar Law and later wrote of Churchill:
His attitude from August 1914 was a noble one, too noble to be wise. He cared for the success of the British aims, especially insofar as they could be achieved by the Admiralty, and for nothing else. His passion for this aim was pure, self-devoted, and all-devouring. He failed to remember he was a politician.[48]
Churchill was demoted to the sinecure of Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster and became a member of the newly formed Dardanelles Committee. Churchill blamed Asquith for the demotion,[49] but in fact Asquith and Lloyd George attempted to make Churchill Colonial Secretary.[37]:309[nb 6]
In June and again in July, with Kitchener's support he argued for increased forces to be sent to Gallipoli. This led to the despatch of the 2nd Australian Division and the IX Corps to Gallipoli and to the landing at Suvla Bay. The attacks on Churchill redoubled when this landing failed. The Committee appointed General Sir Charles Monro as Commander. He advised evacuation. Churchill bitterly opposed this.[29]:ch. XXXIII The Committee despatched Kitchener to report. He too advised evacuation. Before this took place, the Dardanelles Committee was replaced by a War Committee on 11 November. Churchill was not appointed to this Committee. On 15 November, Churchill resigned from his post, feeling his energies were not being used.[4]:287
During Churchill's time on the Dardanelles Committee he was the sole Liberal supporter of Lloyd George's campaign for conscription. This served to separate him further from the majority of the Liberal Party without healing his breach with the Conservatives, though many of them supported conscription.[37]:326–29
Upon resigning he rejoined the army, though remaining an MP, and served for several months on the Western Front as commander of the 6th Battalion of the Royal Scots Fusiliers, with the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel. During this period, his second-in-command was a young Archibald Sinclair who later led the Liberal Party. Although Churchill did spend some time behind the front, visiting leaders such as Field Marshal Sir John French, Churchill led his battalion into the trenches on 27 January 1916.[4]:301 In March, Churchill returned to Britain after he had become restless in France and wished to speak again in the House of Commons.[4]:309 Sir Edward Carson encouraged him to do so.[50]
Return to power
When he returned to Parliament in summer 1916 Churchill sat on the opposition benches. The opposition at this time was largely dissatisfied Conservatives who were not in the Coalition and was headed by Carson. This changed in December 1916, when Asquith resigned as Prime Minister being replaced by Lloyd George.[51] From then on the opposition was largely the Liberal supporters of Asquith. Churchill was a member of neither group.[6]:114–16[52]:125–29 He was mainly occupied in giving evidence before the Dardanelles Commission, though at Balfour's request he wrote a semi-official statement on the Battle of Jutland.[6]:116
In July 1917, Churchill was appointed Minister of Munitions. For some months Lloyd George had feared that Churchill might challenge his leadership,[37]:407 and after a masterly speech by Churchill in a secret session of the Commons on 10 May, Lloyd George approached him seeking his assistance.[52]:130 The Conservatives and The Times objected to Lloyd George's first proposal - that Churchill be appointed to head the Air Board. Lloyd George then asked Beaverbrook to obtain Bonar Law's agreement to Churchill's appointment (which Lloyd George had already determined upon) to the Ministry of Munitions.[52]:311 Bonar Law said correctly "Lloyd George's throne will shake." Churchill's own account mentions the important part Freddie Guest (then chief Coalition Liberal whip) played in this but does not disclose that Guest was Churchill's cousin.[29]:1112 This episode, with its behind-the-scenes negotiations, shows how unpopular Churchill remained at this stage. As Minister, Churchill reorganised the department, arbitrated between the various services' demands for weapons, and repeated his advocacy for tanks,[53] but most of his work was administering an already functioning department. He was a "competent, energetic, and efficient" minister.[6]:118
Post-war coalition
War and Air Secretary
In January 1919, after the 1918 Coupon election, Churchill became Secretary of State for War and Secretary of State for Air. He was not a member of the War Cabinet, which continued until November 1919.[37]:478–79 Churchill had pressed for appointment as Minister of Defence, combining all three service departments and the Ministry of Munitions (now renamed the Ministry of Supply and with a seat in Cabinet). He was unsuccessful.
His first challenge was demobilisation. He inherited a scheme whereby those men required most for industry would be demobilised first. In practise this meant that those who had served in the forces the shortest were being released from the forces first. Soldiers rioted, at one time burning Luton Town Hall. Churchill scrapped the system, instead releasing those who had served longest first.[6]:130–32 The soldiers' unrest was but one domestic problem: there were strikes and riots in Glasgow, and a proposed national miners strike. Churchill suggested using four divisions of the Rhine Army as strikebreakers.[6]
He was the main architect of the Ten Year Rule, a principle that allowed the Treasury to dominate and control strategic, foreign, and financial policies under the assumption that "there would be no great European war for the next five or ten years".[54] He substantially reduced the RAF – so that it would have four Home and eighteen Imperial squadrons, and he rejected proposals for government support of civil aviation. Liddell Hart commented: "He was anxious to make a fresh start in current political affairs, and the best chance lay in the post-war retrenchment of expenditure."[55]
A major preoccupation of his tenure in the War Office was the Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War. British forces were already in Russia, at Murmansk, in Siberia, and guarding the Baku railway before Churchill took charge at the War Office. The Cabinet was divided, without a clear policy. While Lloyd George proposed negotiations between all the Russian groups, which led to U.S. President Woodrow Wilson's abortive Prinkipo Plan, Red Army attacks on the British positions led the Cabinet to approve 'forward defence".[6]:137
Churchill was a staunch advocate of foreign intervention, declaring that Bolshevism must be "strangled in its cradle".[56] He secured, from a divided and loosely organised Cabinet,[6]:143–150[37]:495–519 intensification and prolongation of the British involvement beyond the wishes of any major group in Parliament or the nation – and in the face of the bitter hostility of the Labour Party. On 14 January 1919 Churchill circulated a Most urgent and secret memorandum to all commanders of British forces asking whether their forces would serve overseas and particularly in Russia, whether they would serve as strikebreakers and the soldiers' attitude to trade unions. A copy was leaked to and published in the Daily Herald.[6]:139 In February he attempted to get American and then general Allied support for protracted large-scale intervention. In April he pushed for an offensive, rather than a defensive role for the North Russia force. Claiming the scheme was that of General Ironside and that it was essential for a subsequent evacuation, he wanted the force to link up with Admiral Aleksandr Kolchak's forces to the east.[37]:502 In May after failing to get Cabinet approval to expand the British-Slavo Legion, he decided this was a purely War Office decision, expanded the Legion, and reported this to the Cabinet, which merely 'noted' the matter.[6]:144 In July, when Kolchak's force was retreating rapidly, he told the cabinet that a White defeat would allow the Bolsheviks to threaten Poland, Romania, and Czechoslovakia.[6]:152 From then until the final evacuation, Churchill continued to argue for support for the White forces. In 1920, after the last British forces had been withdrawn, Churchill was instrumental in having arms sent to the Poles when they invaded Ukraine.
Churchill's actions in supporting the White forces led to a break with Lloyd George which was never completely healed,[37]:502–504[52]:180–83:180–83 criticism by the Press[52]:165 and further distrust from Labour.[6]:158–59
Churchill was responsible for establishing both the Auxiliary Division and the Black and Tans during the Irish War of Independence. He defended their activities, saying they enjoyed the same freedom as police in Chicago or New York in dealing with armed gangs. He initially advocated the military defeat of the IRA and its supporters. By summer 1921, however, as the Colonial Secretary he was pressing for negotiations. His desired negotiating position was to offer a measure of Irish self-government from a position of strength: he "wished to couple a tremendous onslaught with the fairest offer."[57]
In 1920, as Secretary of State for War and Air, Churchill was responsible for quelling rebellions in British Somaliland and the uprising of Kurds and Arabs in British-occupied Mesopotamia. In each case the rebellions were crushed by co-ordinated air force and army operations.[58] Churchill told the Commons that whereas an army campaign in Somalia would have cost £6,000,000 the air force expedition had cost £70,000. It had involved 6 Airco DH9 bombers and a total of less than 250 aircrew.[59]:218
Colonial Secretary
Churchill became Secretary of State for the Colonies in 1921 and was a signatory of the Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1921, which established the Irish Free State. Churchill was involved in the lengthy negotiations of the treaty. To protect British maritime interests, he caused the agreement to include three Treaty Ports (Queenstown (Cobh), Berehaven, and Lough Swilly), which could be used as Atlantic bases by the Royal Navy.[4]:361–365 (The bases were ceded to Ireland in 1938, under the terms of the Anglo-Irish Trade Agreement.) The Irish Civil War broke out after the signing of the Treaty, Churchill supported the government of the Free State with arms and ordered the British forces still in Ireland to assist the Irish National Army against the Republican Army.[nb 7][6]:170–172
Churchill's other main concern while Colonial Secretary was the Middle East. He wanted Egypt (then administered by the Foreign Office) to be brought under his department's control.[6]:174 He was faced with continuing riots and communal violence in those parts of the former Ottoman Empire that British forces occupied after World War I. Most of these riots were against the British occupation. Churchill did not want to give the complete independence that some of the Arabs had been promised. Rather, his aims were to reduce the British forces in the region and to ensure that British interests, particularly in the air route to India and the oil fields, were protected. The local population was a less important issue.[nb 8]
After setting up a Middle Eastern Department within the Colonial Office, Churchill convened a conference in Cairo in March 1921, attended by T. E. Lawrence, Gertrude Bell, Sir Hugh Trenchard, Sir John Salmond, and Sir Percy Cox. No Arabs were invited to the conference.[60]
The method recommended by the Conference and chosen by Churchill, summarised by Sir Henry Wilson as 'hot air aeroplanes and Arabs', was the creation of the Kingdom of Iraq with Lawrence's friend Faisal as King, and the Emirate of Transjordan with Faisal's brother Abdullah as Emir. The boundaries of the two countries were joined in what is sometimes known as Winston's Hiccup. This was intentionally designed to ensure that the air route to India passed over the areas controlled by or friendly to Britain.
Churchill's creation of Iraq from three the Ottoman Vilayets of Basra, Baghdad, and Mosul has been criticised as making an artificial state which inevitably would break down.[61] He has also been criticised for advocating the use of gas as a weapon against Arab and Kurdish 'insurgents'. His defenders show that what he intended was the use of generally non-lethal (tear) gas,[62] but those gases were known to kill children and the ill.[63] His policy was to control Iraq with the minimum expenses, so he refused to authorise such projects as a hospital in Iraq.[59]:239
Second crossing of the floor
In October 1922, Churchill underwent an operation to remove his appendix. While he was still in hospital, Lloyd George resigned as prime minister with a general election to be held on 15 November. Churchill was not sufficiently well to travel to his constituency in Dundee until 11 November, causing him great difficulties campaigning. Once there he was still not sufficiently well to stand to address an audience, but had to address meetings where he was heckled and unable to finish speaking.[64] Clementine travelled to the constituency earlier with other friends, but generally the campaign was poorly managed in Churchill's absence.
The constituency had a significantly working-class composition, so that his principal opponents were a candidate for the steadily rising Labour Party, E. D. Morel, and a local prohibitionist, Edwin Scrymgeour, who had stood unsuccessfully in the constituency many times, but steadily increasing his vote each time. The Dundee constituency returned two members, so Scrymgeour and Morel worked in partnership, each lending his factional support to the other. Churchill was partnered by another National Liberal, but they were opposed by an Asquithian Liberal candidate following the split in the party. The result was that Scrymgeour and Morel won, with Churchill relegated to fourth place behind his running mate.[4]:370–375 Churchill quipped later that he left Dundee "without an office, without a seat, without a party, and without an appendix".[65] The result of the general election was the first non-coalition Conservative government since 1900. The Liberal Party never recovered the position in politics which it had once enjoyed.
Churchill stood for the Liberals again in the 1923 general election, losing in Leicester, but over the next few months he moved towards the Conservative Party in all but name. His first electoral contest as an independent candidate, fought under the label of "Independent Anti-Socialist", was a narrow loss in a by-election in the Westminster Abbey constituency – his third electoral defeat in fewer than two years. However, he stood for election yet again several months later in the general election of 1924, again as an independent candidate, this time under the label of "Constitutionalist" although with Conservative backing, and was finally elected to represent Epping. The following year, he formally rejoined the Conservative Party, commenting wryly that "Anyone can rat, but it takes a certain ingenuity to re-rat."[66]
Chancellor of the Exchequer
Churchill was appointed Chancellor of the Exchequer in 1924 under Stanley Baldwin and oversaw Britain's disastrous return to the gold standard, which resulted in deflation, unemployment, and the miners' strike that led to the General Strike of 1926.[67] His decision, announced in the 1924 budget, came after long consultation with treasury officials, various economists, and the board of the Bank of England. Churchill was sceptical about the benefits of returning to the gold standard, and widely questioned the almost unanimous advice he was receiving that it was necessary. The governor of the Bank of England, Montagu Norman, said that 'there was no alternative to a return to gold'. The permanent secretary to the treasury, Sir Otto Niemeyer said that not to do so would show Britain had never 'meant business' about the gold standard, and that 'our nerve had failed'. The parliamentary joint select committee on Currency and Banking under its chairman Lord Bradbury (former permanent secretary to the treasury) supported a return, as did the Labour shadow chancellor, Snowden.[4]:398–399
Churchill held a dinner at which the principal opponents of a return, economist John Maynard Keynes and former chancellor and chairman of the Midland Bank Reginald McKenna, were encouraged to argue out their case with Niemeyer and Bradbury. The dinner continued into the early hours of the morning but, in the end, Keynes's academic arguments proved unconvincing, and McKenna conceded that Churchill had little political choice except to return to gold.[4]:400 This decision later prompted Keynes to write The Economic Consequences of Mr. Churchill, arguing that the return to the gold standard at the pre-war parity in 1925 (£1=$4.86) would lead to a world depression. Interestingly, the pamphlet did not criticise the decision to return to the gold standard per se. The decision was generally popular and seen as 'sound economics' although it was opposed by Lord Beaverbrook and the Federation of British Industries.[6]:207
Churchill later regarded this as the greatest mistake of his life; in discussions with McKenna, he acknowledged that the return to the gold standard and the resulting 'dear money' policy was economically bad. In those discussions, he maintained the policy as fundamentally political—a return to the pre-war conditions in which he believed.[6]:206 In his speech on the bill he said "I will tell you what it [the return to the gold standard] will shackle us to. It will shackle us to reality."[68] Writing about the events in his biography of Churchill, Roy Jenkins argued that, although Churchill had challenged the proposal to return to the gold standard in the face of almost unanimous political and institutional support, he had been the only person who could have prevented the return to gold and its consequences, so responsibility remained with him for the decision.[4]:401
The return to the pre-war exchange rate and to the gold standard depressed industries, the most affected being coal mining. Already suffering from declining output as shipping switched to oil, and basic British industries like cotton came under more competition in export markets, the return to the pre-war exchange was estimated to add up to 10% in costs to the industry. In July 1925 a commission of inquiry reported generally favouring the miners', rather than the mine owners' position.[4]:405 Attached to the report was a memorandum from Sir Josiah Stamp stating that the increased difficulties in the coal industry could be entirely explained by the "immediate and necessary effects of the return to gold".[4]:391–417
Baldwin, with Churchill's support, proposed a subsidy to the industry while a royal commission prepared a further report. During the general strike of 1926, Churchill was reported to have suggested that machine guns be used on the striking miners. Churchill edited the government's newspaper, the British Gazette, and, during the dispute, he argued that "either the country will break the general strike, or the general strike will break the country." Furthermore, he controversially claimed that the fascism of Benito Mussolini had "rendered a service to the whole world," showing, as it had, "a way to combat subversive forces" — that is, he considered Mussolini's regime to be a bulwark against the perceived threat of Communist revolution. At one point, Churchill went as far as to call Mussolini the "Roman genius... the greatest lawgiver among men."[69]:78
It was not only the return to the gold standard that later economists, as well as those at the time, criticised in Churchill's time at the treasury. Rather it was his budget measures which, even given the consensus at the time that the budgets should be balanced, were attacked as assisting the generally prosperous rentier banking and salaried classes (to which Churchill and his associates generally belonged) at the expense of manufacturers and exporters which were known then to be suffering from imports and from competition in traditional export markets.[70] However his 1925 budget was well received by the public and enhanced Churchill's prestige.[4]:404 Churchill had served in two of the four Great Offices of State and several other positions, no one had more experience in government, and he could expect another high office in the next Conservative ministry.[71]
Political isolation
The Conservative government was defeated in the 1929 General Election. Churchill did not seek election to the Conservative Business Committee, the official leadership of the Conservative MPs. Over the next two years, Churchill became estranged from the Conservative leadership over the issues of protective tariffs and Indian Home Rule, which he bitterly opposed. He further distanced himself from the party as a whole by his political views and by his friendships with press barons, financiers, and people whose characters were seen as dubious. When Ramsay MacDonald formed the National Government in 1931, Churchill was not invited to join the Cabinet. He was at the low point in his career, in a period known as "the wilderness years".[72]
He spent much of the next few years concentrating on his writing, including Marlborough: His Life and Times – a biography of his ancestor John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough – and A History of the English Speaking Peoples (though the latter was not published until well after World War II).[72] Churchill's depiction of Marlborough in Marlborough: His Life and Times had shown close parallels to his own stand against appeasement. Both were war leaders advocating firm policies, but surrounded by an attacking public and hostile politicians.[5]:402[6]:395–400 In doing so they echo public comments at the time. The Daily Express referred to Churchill's speech in October 1938 against the Munich agreement as "an alarmist oration by a man whose mind is soaked in the conquests of Marlborough".
Though badly hurt when he was struck by a car in New York City on a North American speaking tour, he wrote a profitable article about the experience. He wrote many other articles, collections of speeches, and several books - some such as his Great Contemporaries of lasting worth. He supported himself largely by his writing and was one of the best paid writers of his time.[72]
Nevertheless, he was still in financial difficulties, having lost most of his American investments in the Wall Street Crash. He was criticised for holidaying in the Riviera and America as the guest of such people as Beaverbrook and William Randolph Hearst, and for drinking and gambling with people such as Brendan Bracken and, until his early death, Lord Birkenhead.[5]:31–36 These attacks were not new; in 1922 Churchill had brought a successful libel action against Lord Alfred Douglas who had accused Churchill of giving a deliberately false account of the Battle of Jutland at the request of Sir Ernest Cassel. During the trial it emerged that Cassell, whose company remained Churchill's publisher, had paid for some of the furnishings of Churchill's London residence.[4]
His political views, set forth in his 1930 Romanes Election and published as Parliamentary Government and the Economic Problem (republished in 1932 in his collection of essays "Thoughts and Adventures") involved abandoning universal suffrage, a return to a property franchise, proportional representation for the major cities, and an economic 'sub-parliament'.[73]
Indian independence
During the first half of the 1930s, outspoken opposition towards the granting of Dominion status to India became one of Churchill's major political focuses. Churchill was one of the founders of the India Defence League, a group dedicated to the preservation of British power in India. In speeches and press articles in this period, he forecast widespread British unemployment and civil strife in India should independence be granted.[6]:260 The Viceroy, Lord Irwin, who had been appointed by the prior Conservative Government, engaged in the Round Table Conference in early 1931 and then announced the Government's policy that India should be granted Dominion Status. In this the Government was supported by the Liberal Party and, officially at least, by the Conservative Party.
Churchill denounced the Round Table Conference. He spoke at public meetings in Manchester and Liverpool in January and February 1931, respectively. At both he forecast widespread unemployment into the millions and other social and economic problems in the United Kingdom if India became self-governing.[6]:259 Though he would come to respect Mohandas Gandhi, especially after Gandhi "stood up for the untouchables",[74]:618 at a meeting of the West Essex Conservative Association specially convened so Churchill could explain his position he said, "It is alarming and also nauseating to see Mr Gandhi, a seditious Middle-Temple lawyer, now posing as a fakir of a type well-known in the East, striding half-naked up the steps of the Vice-regal palace... to parley on equal terms with the representative of the King-Emperor."[74]:390 He called the Indian Congress leaders "Brahmins who mouth and patter principles of Western Liberalism."[6]:254
In Parliament on 26 January 1931, he attacked the Government's policy, saying that the Round Table Conference "was a frightful prospect" and that he would support "effective and real organisms of provisional and local government in the provinces."[75] He returned to the Parliamentary attack on 13 March. Baldwin answered him by quoting Churchill's own speech in winding up the debate for the Lloyd George Coalition government on Amritsar massacre, in which Churchill defended the cashiering of General Reginald Dyer. Baldwin continued by challenging Churchill and his other critics to depose him as leader of the Conservative Party.[76]
There were two incidents which damaged Churchill's reputation greatly within the Conservative Party in the period. Both were seen at the time as attacks on the Conservative leadership and as an attempt to undermine those Conservatives - and Baldwin in particular - who supported granting Dominion status to India.
The first was his speech on the eve of the St George by-election in April 1931. In a secure Conservative seat, official Conservative candidate Duff Cooper was opposed by an independent Conservative. The independent was supported by Lord Rothermere, Lord Beaverbrook, and their respective newspapers. Both press barons had tried to urge specific policies on the Conservative Party: Rothermere opposed Indian home rule, and Beaverbrook pressed for tariff reform under the slogan Empire Free Trade. Churchill's speech at the Albert Hall had been arranged before the date of the by-election had been set.[6]:262 But he made no attempt to change the date and his speech was seen as a part of the press barons' campaign against Baldwin. This was reinforced by Churchill's personal friendship with both, but especially with Beaverbrook, who wrote "The primary issue of the by-election will be the leadership of the Conservative Party. If... (the independent candidate wins) Baldwin must go."[52]:304 Baldwin's position was strengthened when Duff Cooper won and when the civil disobedience campaign in India ceased with the Gandhi-Irwin Pact.
The second issue also affected Churchill's reputation. On 16 April 1934 Churchill claimed in Parliament that Sir Samuel Hoare and Lord Derby had pressured the Manchester Chamber of Commerce to change evidence it had given to the Joint Select Committee considering the Government of India Bill in June 1933. On 18 April he successfully moved that the matter be referred to the House of Commons Privilege Committee. He tried to cross-examine witnesses before the Committee, contrary to normal procedure. Churchill himself gave evidence and Austen Chamberlain criticised the manner in which he gave it. Churchill's evidence was little and the inquiry reported to the House that there had been no breach.[6]:269–272 The report was debated on 13 June. Churchill was unable to find a single supporter in the House and the debate ended without a division. Leo Amery accused him of pressing the matter to bring the government down stating "at all costs he had to be faithful to his chosen motto: ;'Fiat justicia, ruat caelum." Churchill responded "Translate it!" Amery then remarked "I will translate it into the vernacular: 'If I can trip up Sam [Hoare] the government's bust'."[6]:269–272
Churchill permanently broke with Stanley Baldwin over Indian independence and did not again hold any office while Baldwin was Prime Minister. In the index to The Gathering Storm, Churchill's first volume of his history of World War II, he records Baldwin "admitting to putting party before country" for his alleged admission that he would not have won the 1935 Election if he had pursued a more aggressive policy of rearmament.[6]:343 Churchill selectively quotes a speech in the Commons by Baldwin and gives the false impression that Baldwin is speaking of the general election when he was speaking of a by-election in 1933, and omits altogether Baldwin's actual comments about the 1935 election: "we got from the country, a mandate for doing a thing [a substantial rearmament programme] that no one, twelve months before, would have believed possible." This canard had been first put forward in the first edition of Guilty Men but in subsequent editions (including those before Churchill wrote The Gathering Storm) had been corrected.[77]
Churchill continued his campaign against any further transfer of power to Indian natives. He continued to predict conflict in India and mass unemployment at home. His speeches often quoted nineteenth-century politicians and his own policy was to maintain the existing Raj. In pursuing this campaign Churchill cut himself off from the mainstream of Conservative politics as much as from the rest of the political world. Younger Conservatives such as Duff Cooper, who later described Churchill's campaign as the most unfortunate event that occurred between the two wars,[78] and Harold Macmillan saw Churchill as a reactionary, someone who was completely out of touch and at base, undemocratic - leaning towards the totalitarian regimes. Churchill's public comments often seemed that way.
Elections, even in the most educated democracies are regarded as a misfortune and as a disturbance, of social, moral, and economic progress, even as a danger to international peace. Why at this moment should we force upon the untutored races of India that very system the inconveniences of which are now felt even in the most highly developed nations: the United States, Germany, France, and England herself[6]:274
Some historians see his basic attitude to India as being set out in his book My Early Life (1930) and as being unchanged since his military service before he entered parliament. In so saying they note his references in his speeches on India to late Victorian politicians such as John Morley.[6]:258 Historians also dispute his motives in maintaining his opposition. Some see him as trying to destabilise the National Government. In this they follow Amery (see above) and Lloyd George, who believed that with MacDonald ill and Churchill leading the Conservative right-wing, Baldwin would have to form a new Coalition in which both he and Churchill would have had key ministries.[37]:710–712
Some historians also draw a parallel between Churchill's attitudes to India and those towards the Nazis. For example, Manfred Weidhorn in the introduction to the American edition of India (a collection of Churchill’s speeches on the topic) writes.
"... Machiavelli sheds light on Churchill. The Italian notes that virtues and vices are often symbiotic rather than antithetical. Thus people say, 'Hannibal was a great general – too bad he was cruel', when the likelihood is that Hannibal was great in part because he was cruel. So here we have to consider the probability that Churchill was great in 1940 in part because he was too pugnacious, stubborn, deluded, and conservative (in the deepest sense) to be able to adjust to the New Order in Europe – traits he had shown in the matter of India."[79]
German rearmament
Churchill was wary of Adolf Hitler's potential danger as early as 1930. More than two years before Hitler took power in January 1933, Churchill warned at a dinner at the German Embassy that Hitler and his followers would start a war as soon as possible.[80] Beginning in 1932, when he opposed those who advocated giving Germany the right to military parity with France, Churchill spoke often of the dangers of German rearmament.[6]:285–86 Later, particularly in The Gathering Storm, he tried to portray himself as being for a time, a lone voice calling on Britain to strengthen itself against Germany.[69]:75 However Lord Lloyd was the first to so agitate.[81] Churchill also tried to portray himself as warning against German rearmament as early as 1930 and as opposing what he saw as British disarmament at and before that time.[82] He omits the fact that as Chancellor of the Exchequer he had imposed the heavy defence cuts referred to above.
Churchill's attitude toward fascist (and quasi-fascist) rulers was ambiguous. In 1931 he warned against the League of Nations opposing the Japanese in Manchuria: "I hope we shall try in England to understand the position of Japan an ancient state.... On the one side they have the dark menace of Soviet Russia. On the other the chaos of China four or five provinces of which are being tortured under Communist rule".[6]:329 In contemporary newspaper articles he referred to the Spanish Republican government as a Communist front, and Franco's army as the "Anti red movement" and writing "revivified Fascist Spain in closest sympathy with Italy and Germany is one kind of disaster. A Communist Spain reaching its snaky tentacles through Portugal and France is another, and many will think the worse."[6]:408 He supported the Hoare-Laval Pact and continued up until 1937 to praise Benito Mussolini.[52]:375 In his 1937 book Great Contemporaries, Churchill expressed a hope that despite Hitler's apparent dictatorial tendencies, he would use his power to rebuild Germany into a worthy member of the world community writing
Although no subsequent political action can condone wrong deeds, history is replete with examples of men who have risen to power by employing stern, grim, and even frightful methods, but who, nevertheless when their life is revealed as a whole, have been regarded as great figures whose lives have enriched the story of mankind. So may it be with Hitler.[83]
Churchill's first major speech on defence on 7 February 1934 stressed the need to rebuild the Royal Air Force and to create a Ministry of Defence; his second, on 13 July, urged a renewed role for the League of Nations. These three topics remained his themes until early 1936. In 1935 he was one of the founding members of "Focus", a group which also included Sir Archibald Sinclair, Lady Violet Bonham Carter, Wickham Steed, and Professor Gilbert Murray. Focus brought together people of differing political backgrounds and occupations who were united in seeking 'the defence of freedom and peace'.[84] Focus led to the formation of the much wider Arms and the Covenant Movement in 1936.
When the Germany reoccupied the Rhineland in February 1936, Churchill was holidaying in Spain, and returned to a divided Britain. Labour opposition was adamant in opposing sanctions and the National Government was divided between advocates of economic sanctions and those who said that even these would lead to a humiliating backdown by Britain, as France would not support any intervention.[nb 9] Churchill's speech on 9 March was measured and praised by Neville Chamberlain as constructive. But within weeks Churchill was passed over for the post of Minister for Co-ordination of Defence in favour of the Attorney General, Sir Thomas Inskip.[6]:333–337
This surprising appointment—it surprised Inskip as much as anyone, and A. J. P. Taylor later wrote of "an appointment rightly described as the most extraordinary since Caligula made his horse a consul"[86]—came despite advice to Baldwin to broaden his cabinet. Historians have variously seen it as Baldwin's caution in not wanting to appoint someone as controversial as Churchill, as avoiding giving Germany any sign that the United Kingdom was preparing for war, and as avoiding someone who had few allies in the Conservative Party and was opposed as a war monger by some people in the United Kingdom.[nb 10] Whatever the reason, it was a severe blow to Churchill.[72]
In June 1936 Churchill organised a deputation of senior Conservatives who shared his concern to see Baldwin, Chamberlain, and Halifax. He had tried to include delegates from the other two parties, and later wrote "If the leaders of the Labour and Liberal oppositions had come with us there might have been a political situation so intense as to enforce remedial action."[33]:276 As it was the meeting achieved little, Baldwin arguing that the Government was doing all it could given the anti-war feeling of the electorate. But it showed that more Conservatives shared Churchill's views—he was less isolated then he had been earlier.[72] John Gunther wrote that year that he "may still become prime minister ... Churchill's judgment is faulty, people say; he is too impetuous and 'unstable'; but most people agree that in a great upheaval he would emerge as Britain's national leader."[88]
Abdication crisis
In June 1936, Walter Monckton told Churchill that the rumours that King Edward VIII intended to marry Mrs Wallis Simpson were true. Churchill then advised against the marriage and said he regarded Mrs Simpson's existing marriage as a 'safeguard'.[89] In November he declined Lord Salisbury's invitation to be part of a delegation of senior Conservative backbenchers which met with Baldwin to discuss the matter. On 25 November he, Clement Attlee, and Sinclair met with Baldwin and were told officially of the King's intention and asked whether they would form an administration if Baldwin and the National Government resigned should the King not take the Ministry's advice. Both Attlee and Sinclair said they would not take office if invited to do so. Churchill's reply was that his attitude was a little different but he would support the government.[90] One reason why Churchill was invited to a meeting otherwise attended only by the leaders of the three political parties was that at the time of the Crisis Churchill was seen as an alternative leader. As Lord Beaverbrook wrote "he has emerged as a leader of a big armaments anti-German movement in politics, hostile to the Government".[52]:372
The abdication crisis became public in the first fortnight of December 1936. At this time Churchill publicly gave his support to the King. The first public meeting of the Arms and the Covenant Movement was on 3 December. Churchill was a major speaker and later wrote that in replying to the Vote of Thanks, he made a declaration 'on the spur of the moment' asking for delay before any decision was made by either the King or his Cabinet.[33]:170–71 Others including Citrine, who chaired the meeting, wrote that Churchill did not make such a speech.[91] Later that night, Churchill saw the draft of the King's proposed wireless broadcast, and spoke with Beaverbrook and the King's solicitor about it.
On 4 December, he met with the King and again urged delay in any decision about abdication. On 5 December, he issued a lengthy statement implying that the Ministry was applying unconstitutional pressure on the King to force him to make a hasty decision.[6]:349–351 On 7 December, he tried to address the Commons to plead for delay. He was shouted down. Seemingly staggered by the unanimous hostility of all Members, he left.[92]
Churchill's reputation in Parliament and the United Kingdom as a whole was badly damaged. Some such as Alistair Cooke saw him as trying to build a King's Party.[93] Others like Harold Macmillan were dismayed by the damage Churchill's support for the King had done to the Arms and the Covenant Movement.[94] Churchill himself later wrote "I was myself smitten in public opinion that it was the almost universal view that my political life was ended."[33]:171
One unresolved issue is the amount of Churchill's involvement with the King's address, the first draft of which the Cabinet refused to let the King air - it was rightly said to be the King seeking to appeal to the people against the Ministry. The King (by then Duke of Windsor) acknowledged Churchill's help in writing the speech,[95] but some historians say that Churchill wrote it all.[96]
Historians are divided about Churchill's motives in his support for Edward VIII. Some, such as A.J.P. Taylor, see it as being an attempt to 'overthrow the government of feeble men'.[97] Others, such as James, see Churchill's motives as entirely honourable and disinterested, indicating that he felt deeply for the King.[6]:353
Return from exile
Churchill later sought to portray himself as an isolated voice warning of the need to rearm against Germany. While it is true that he had little following in the House of Commons during much of the 1930s, he was given considerable privileges by the government. The "Churchill group" in the latter half of the decade consisted only of him, Duncan Sandys, and Brendan Bracken. It was isolated from the other main factions within the Conservative Party pressing for faster rearmament and a stronger foreign policy.[nb 11] In some senses the ‘exile’ was more apparent then real. Churchill continued to be consulted on many matters by the government or seen as an alternative leader. [nb 12]
Even while Churchill was campaigning against Indian independence, he received official and otherwise secret information. From 1932, Churchill’s neighbour, Major Desmond Morton, with Ramsay MacDonald's approval, gave Churchill information on German air power.[6]:302 From 1930 onwards Morton headed a department of the Committee of Imperial Defence charged with researching the defence preparedness of other nations. Lord Swinton, the Secretary of State for Air, with Baldwin’s approval in 1934 gave Churchill access to official and otherwise secret information. Swinton did so, knowing Churchill would remain a critic of the government but believing that an informed critic was better than one relying on rumour and hearsay.[6]:316–318
When Chamberlain replaced Baldwin as prime minister in May 1937 he did not bring Churchill into the government; besides the appeasement issue, Chamberlain told Churchill supporter Leslie Hore-Belisha that "[i]f I take him into the Cabinet he will dominate it. He won't give others the chance of even talking."[71] Churchill was a fierce critic of Neville Chamberlain's appeasement of Hitler[69]:149–150 and in private letters to Lloyd George (13 August) and Lord Moyne (11 September) just before the Munich Agreement, he wrote that the government was faced with a choice between "war and shame" and that, having chosen shame, would later get war on less favourable terms.[98][99][100] Churchill's reputation was probably at its lowest point in 1937-1938, but by 1939, after Germany had absorbed Austria and conquered Czechoslovakia, he was seen as having been proven right. When Germany invaded Poland in September 1939, Chamberlain appointed Churchill to the Cabinet as the First Lord of the Admiralty.[80]
Notes
- ↑ He published a collection of his speeches on this topic as Mr Brodrick's Army[7]
- ↑ Hill sees Churchill’s position on free trade land taxation as being the way to remove poverty as correct.[11][12]
- ↑ He published For Free Trade, a collection of his speeches on the topic.[14]
- ↑ For more details of this period see Hyam,[18]
- ↑ Rowland gives details of some other plots - McKenna accused Lloyd George of plotting to overthrow Asquith and leaked information to the Morning Chronicle on 29 March; Sir John French sent his ADC Freddie Guest (who was also an MP and Churchill's first cousin) to Lloyd George, Balfour, and Bonar Law on 12 May complaining about Lord Kitchener; and Kitchener and Lloyd George were disputing the control of munitions manufacturing.[37]:304–08
- ↑ The exchange between Churchill and Lloyd George is revealing: Churchill: "You don't care what becomes of me. You don't care if I am trampled underfoot. You don't care for my personal reputation." Lloyd George: "No. I don't care for my own at the present moment. All I care about is that we win the war."
- ↑ The offer went as far as ordering the British artillery in Phoenix Park to bombard the Republicans in the Four Courts in Dublin.[6]:170–172
- ↑ Asquith's questions in the Commons about Arabs hanged as 'traitors' exposes Churchill's dilemma Why are Arabs rebels? To whom traitors?[59]:225
- ↑ Harold Nicholson's letter to his wife on 13 March summed up the situation: "If we send an ultimatum to Germany she ought in all reason to climb down. But then she will not climb down and we shall have war.... The people of this country absolutely refuse to have a war. We would be faced with a general strike if we suggested such a thing. We shall therefore have to climb down ignominiously." [85]
- ↑ A. P. Herbert for example wrote "I did think he rather enjoyed a war and after three years in the trenches in Gallipoli and France, I did not." [87]:108
- ↑ These factions were headed by Anthony Eden and Leo Amery.[6]:428
- ↑ He was so consulted and so regarded during the abdication crisis. See footnotes above.
References
- 1 2 3 Churchill, Winston. My Early Life.
- 1 2 3 Johnson, Paul (2009). Churchill. Viking. ISBN 978-1-101-14929-4.
- ↑ In fact he received for his service the former but not the latter medal; he was never present in the siege of Kimberley.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 Jenkins, Roy (2001). Churchill: A Biography. MacMillan.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Cannadine, David (2006). The Aristocratic Adventurer. Penguin. Originally an essay entitled "Churchill: The Aristocratic Adventurer" in Aspects of Aristocracy. Penguin 1998.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 James, Robert Rhodes (1973). Churchill: a Study in Failure 1900–1939. Harmondsworth, London: Pelican (Penguin). pp. 26, 33–34., reprint of the 1970 edition by Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London
- ↑ "Mr. Brodrick's Army". Retrieved 26 June 2013.
- ↑ http://www.winstonchurchill.org/publications/finest-hour/finest-hour-159/wsc-a-midnight-interview-1902
- ↑ Churchill, Randolph S. (1967). Winston Churchill II. Heinemann.
- ↑ "All the Elections Churchill Ever Contested".
- ↑ Hill, Malcolm (1999). Churchill: His Radical Decade. London: Othila Press.
- ↑ Grafstein, Q.C., Senator Jerry S. (27 October 1993). Churchill as Liberal (Speech). University Club of Toronto.
- ↑ Martin Gilbert (2000). Churchill: a life. Pimlico. pp. 152–165. ISBN 0-7126-6725-3.
- ↑ "The Works of WSC – For Free Trade". Savrola. Retrieved 24 January 2008.
- ↑ James, R. R. (1973). Churchill A study in Failure 1900–1939. Pelican.
- ↑ Rhodri Williams Defending the Empire: The Conservative Party and British Defence Policy
- ↑ "The Works of WSC – Lord Randolph Churchill". Savrola. Retrieved 24 January 2008.
- ↑ Hyam, Ronald (1968). Elgin and Churchill at the Colonial Office 1905–1908. London and New York: Macmillan (UK) and St. Martin's Press (US).
- ↑ Turnour, 6th Earl Winterton, Edward. Churchill by his Contemporaries: "Churchill the Parliamentarian" (ed. Charles Eade ed.).
- ↑ Jenkins, Roy (1964). Asquith:Portrait of a Man and an Era Chilmark Press.
- ↑ Elections Churchill Contested – The Churchill Centre
- ↑ Churchill, Randolph. Winston S. Churchill: Young Statesman. (c) 1967 C & T Publications: pp. 287–9
- ↑ Churchill 'Asquith' in Great Contemporaries Mandarin edition p85
- ↑ Manchester, William (1983). The Last Lion: Winston Spencer Churchill, Visions of Glory 1874–1932. pp. 408–409. ISBN 0385313489.
- ↑ For more details including a short summary see "Liberalism and the Social Problem". Savrola.co.uk. 6 June 2008. Retrieved 1 August 2010.
- ↑ Asquith’s daughter, then and later Churchill’s friend and colleague, wrote "From Lloyd George he was to learn the language of radicalism. It was Lloyd George’s native tongue but it was not his own." Violet Bonham Carter, Baroness Asquith of Yarnbury Winston Churchill as I knew him Eyre & Spottiswoode London 1965 p161 Such comparison continues today. See for example Richard Toye, Lloyd George and Churchill: Rivals for Greatness. Macmillan London 2007
- ↑ Churchill, Randolph. Winston S. Churchill: Young Statesman. William Heinemann, London, 1967, pp. 359–65
- 1 2 Elizabeth, Crawford (2001). The Women's Suffrage Movement: A Reference Guide, 1866–1928. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-23926-4.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 The World Crisis New Edition Odhams 1938
- ↑ Churchill took flying lessons, 1911, The Aerodrome.com
- ↑ Naval innovation: from coal to oil, Erik J. Dahl, Joint Force Quarterly, 2000
- 1 2 Mackay, Ruddock Fisher of Kilverstone, Clarendon, Oxford, 1973
- 1 2 3 4 The Gathering Storm Vol 1
- ↑ H. Montgomery Hyde Carson
- ↑ K Rose King George V p 156-8
- ↑ Declaration of Neutrality. Google Books. 26 October 2005. Retrieved 1 August 2010.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Rowland, Peter (1975). Lloyd George. Barrie & Jenkins.
- 1 2 3 Marder, A. J. (1961). From Dreadnought to Scapa Flow II. Oxford University Press.
- 1 2 "The First World War, The development of the Tank, sponsored by Winston Churchill". Retrieved 16 December 2007.
- ↑ Phillip Magnus Kitchener, Portrait of an Imperialist E P Dutton and Co (1968)
- ↑ Callwell, C.E. (2005). Dardanelles, a study of the strategical and certain tactical aspects of the Dardanelles campaign. London: Naval & Military Press Ltd. ISBN 978-1-84574-273-7.
- 1 2 3 Hart, B. H. Liddell. History of the First World War Pan 1972
- ↑ War in the Mediterranean 1915 Archived 11 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ Carlyon, p.72
- ↑ Journal of Modern History Volume 40, No 2, page 357.
- ↑ Kenneth Rose King George V p. 189
- ↑ That Fisher's resignation, rather than the Shell Crisis, did so is shown by Lord Beaverbrook Politicians and the War Vol 1 p 142
- ↑ Aitken, Max. Politicians and the War' Vol 1 p125
- ↑ Great Contemporaries p92
- ↑ Beaverbrook Men and Power p 113
- ↑ For Churchill's own account of this, and of the Conscription issues and of his own exclusion from the Ministry see The World Crisis p1098-1111
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Taylor, A J P. Beaverbrook Hamish Hamilton 1972
- ↑ For his own account see The World Crisis p1140-1156
- ↑ Ferris, John. "Treasury Control, the Ten Year Rule, and British Service Policies, 1919–1924". The Historical Journal, Vol. 30, No. 4. (December 1987), pp. 859–883.
- ↑ "The Military Strategist" in Churchill: Four faces and the Man p 180
- ↑ Jeffrey Wallin with Juan Williams (4 September 2001). "Cover Story: Churchill's Greatness.". Churchill Centre. Retrieved 26 February 2007.
- ↑ Churchill, The Aftermath p 291.
- ↑ "RAF History pp 63–66" (PDF). Retrieved 1 August 2010.
- 1 2 3 Wilson, A N. After the Victorians Hutchinson 2005
- ↑ Martin Gilbert Winston S Churchill Vol IV p557; Gilbert quotes contemporary sources on how unpopular Churchill was in Cairo.
- ↑ Christopher Catherwood. Churchill's Folly: How Winston Churchill Created Iraq Carroll and Graf, USA 2004: Constable UK in 2004. For an alternate view, see John Lukas, HNN.us Winston Churchill's Role In The Middle East And Iraq.
- ↑ Winstonchurchill.org
- ↑ Omissi, D. E. Air Power and Colonial Control: The RAF 1919–1939 Manchester University Press 1990 p. 160 For more details on RAF policing in Iraq, see RAF.mod.ukThe Royal Air Force – a history p. 65.
- ↑ "Churchill Howled Down". Churchill the Evidence. 14 November 1922.
- ↑ Hall, Douglas J. (1950). "All the Elections Churchill Ever Contested". Churchill and... Politics. The Churchill Centre. Retrieved 26 February 2007.
- ↑ Happold, Tom (6 April 2005). "Labour defector asks to return". The Guardian (London). Retrieved 13 July 2007.
- ↑ Budget Blunders: Mr Churchill and the Gold Standard (1925), BBC News. Retrieved 2 December 2007.
- ↑ "Speeches – Gold Standard Bill". The Churchill Centre. 4 May 1925. Retrieved 12 January 2008.
- 1 2 3 Picknett, Lynn; Prince, Clive; Prior, Stephen; Brydon, Robert (2002). War of the Windsors: A Century of Unconstitutional Monarchy. Mainstream Publishing. ISBN 1-84018-631-3.
- ↑ Henderson, H. The Interwar Years and other papers. Clarendon Press
- 1 2 Blake, Robert (1993). "How Churchill Became Prime MInister". In Blake, Robert B.; Louis, William Roger. Churchill. Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 257, 259. ISBN 0-19-820626-7.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Gilbert, Martin (2004). Winston Churchill: The Wilderness Years. London: Pimlico. ISBN 978-1-84413-418-2.
- ↑ Books Written by Winston Churchill (see Amid these Storms, The Churchill Centre, 2007
- 1 2 Gilbert, Martin (1977). Winston S. Churchill: Volume V * 1922–1939: The Prophet of Truth. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. OCLC 10540324.
- ↑ 247 House of Commons Debates 5s col 755
- ↑ Martin, Hugh (1932). Battle: The life story of the Rt. Hon. Winston S. Churchill. London: Sampson Low. p. 229.
- ↑ For full discussion see R Basset "Telling the truth to the People: the myth of the Baldwin 'confession'". Cambridge Journal November 1948
- ↑ Cooper, Duff. Old Men Forget p171 Harte Davis 1954
- ↑ Churchill. India Thornton Butterworth, London 1931; facsimile edition with introduction by M Weidhorn Dragonwyck Publishing 1990
- 1 2 Lukacs, John (1999). Five Days in London: May 1940. Yale University Press. pp. 7–11. ISBN 0-300-08030-1.
- ↑ Charmley. J. Lord Lloyd and the decline of the British Empire pp. 1, 2, 213ff
- ↑ 'Hitler' in Great Contemporaries 1939 edition p 167-8
- ↑ Carlton, David (2001). "Churchill and the Two 'Evil Empires'". Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 11: 331–351. doi:10.1017/s0080440101000172. The first quote is omitted from later editions of Great Contemporaries the second remains. See Great Contemporaries revised 1939 edition p 165
- ↑ For a history of Focus see E Spier Focus Wolff 1963
- ↑ Nicholson, Harold. Diaries and Letters 1930–1939.:249
- ↑ The Origins of the Second World War p. 153.
- ↑ Herbert, A. P. Independent Member.
- ↑ Gunther, John (1936). Inside Europe. Harper & Brothers. p. 255.
- ↑ Frederick Smith, 2nd Earl of Birkenhead. Walter Monckton Weidenfield and Nicholson 1969 p. 129.
- ↑ Middlemas, K. R. and Barnes, J. Stanley Baldwin Weidenfield and Nicholson 1969 p. 999.
- ↑ Citrine. Men and Work. Hutchinson 1964 p. 357.
- ↑ Lord Beaverbrook; A. J. P. Taylor, editor. (1966). The Abdication of King Edward VIII. London: Hamish Hamilton.
- ↑ Cooke, Alistair. "Edward VIII" in Six Men. Bodley Head 1977
- ↑ Macmillan, Harold. The Blast of War Macmillan 1970
- ↑ Monday, May. 22, 1950 (22 May 1950). "Edward & Wallis ''Time'' 22nd May 1950". Time. Retrieved 1 August 2010.
- ↑ Pearson, J/. Citadel of the Heart: Winston and the Churchill Dynasty p269 Pan 1993
- ↑ Taylor, A.J.P. English History (1914–1945) Hamish Hamilton 1961 p. 404.
- ↑ Current Biography 1942, p. 155
- ↑ Gilbert, Martin. Winston S. Churchill: Prophet of Truth: 1923–1939. (c) 1977: p. 972.
- ↑ Langworth 2008, pp. 256–57
Primary sources
Aitken, Max (Lord Beaverbrook). Politicians and the War Vol 1 1928, Vol 2 1932, Butterworth. (A single-volume edition was published in 1960.) Described as the most authoritative account of the formation of the Lloyd George Coalition.
Churchill, Winston.
- The World Crisis (six volumes, 1923–1931), 1-vol edition (2005); on World War I (the references in this article are to the 4-volume 'new edition' Odhams 1938)
- Great Contemporaries
- My Early Life
Speeches by Winston Churchill Churchill published several volumes of his speeches, usually with an introduction. Most are out of print though some have been reissued. A complete listing of these books, publication details and, in some cases, a short commentary is available. The volumes relevant to this period are as follows:
- Mr. Brodrick's Army (1903)
- For Free Trade (1906)
- Liberalism and the Social Problem (1910)
- The People's Rights (1910)
- India (1931)
- Arms and the Covenant / While England Slept (1938) (introduction by Randolph S. Churchill)
- James, Robert Rhodes, ed. Winston S. Churchill: His Complete Speeches, 1897–1963. 8 vols. London: Chelsea, 1974. 8,917 pp.
Secondary sources
The list below refers only to sources relevant to this period in Churchill's life.
- Cannadine, David. The Aristocratic Adventurer, Penguin (2006). Originally an essay entitled "Churchill: The Aristocratic Adventurer" in Aspects of Aristocracy.
- Carter, Violet Bonham, Baroness Asquith of Yarnbury. Winston Churchill as I knew him. Eyre & Spottiswoode London (1965)
- Catherwood, Christopher. Churchill's Folly: How Winston Churchill Created Iraq. Carroll and Graf, USA (2004)
- Churchill, Randolph. Winston S. Churchill: Young Statesman. This is the first volume of the authorised biography which was continued by Martin Gilbert after Randolph Churchill's death. C & T Publications (1967)
- Eade, Charles. Churchill by his Contemporaries. Hutchinson (1953)
- Gilbert, Sir Martin. Churchill. Authorised biography, as above. The volume relevant here is Prophet of Truth 1922–1939.
- James, Sir Robert Rhodes. Churchill: a Study in Failure 1900–1939. Pelican 1973. This is a sympathetic yet critical study from a Conservative MP who knew Churchill personally—a major source.
- Jenkins, Roy. Churchill: A Biography.
- Langworth, Richard, ed. Churchill in his own Words. Ebury Press, 2008. ISBN 978-0-09-193336-4
- Manchester, William (1983). The Last Lion: Winston Spencer Churchill; Visions of Glory: 1874–1932. Boston: Little, Brown, and Company.
- Manchester, William (1988). The Last Lion: Winston Spencer Churchill; Alone: 1932–1940. Boston: Little, Brown, and Company.
- Pearson, John. Citadel of the Heart, Winston and the Churchill Dynasty. Pan (1993)
- Rowland, P. Lloyd George. Barrie & Jenkins (1975)
- Taylor, A. J. P. Beaverbrook. Hamish Hamilton (1972)