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H. H. Asquith

Herbert Henry Asquith, 1st Earl of Oxford and Asquith, KG, PC, KC, FRS (12 September 1852 – 15 February 1928), generally known as H. H. Asquith, was a British statesman and Liberal Party politician who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1908 to 1916. He was the last Liberal prime minister to command a majority government, and the most recent Liberal to have served as Leader of the Opposition. He played a major role in the design and passage of major liberal legislation and a reduction of the power of the House of Lords. In August 1914, Asquith took Great Britain and the British Empire into the First World War. During 1915, his government was vigorously attacked for a shortage of munitions and the failure of the Gallipoli Campaign. He formed a coalition government with other parties but failed to satisfy critics, was forced to resign in December 1916 and never regained power.

The Earl of Oxford and Asquith
Asquith c. 1910s
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
In office
5 April 1908 – 5 December 1916
Monarchs
Preceded byHenry Campbell-Bannerman
Succeeded byDavid Lloyd George
Leader of the Opposition
In office
12 February 1920 – 21 November 1922
MonarchGeorge V
Prime Minister
Preceded byDonald Maclean
Succeeded byRamsay MacDonald
In office
6 December 1916 – 14 December 1918
MonarchGeorge V
Prime MinisterDavid Lloyd George
Preceded bySir Edward Carson
Succeeded byDonald Maclean
Leader of the Liberal Party
In office
30 April 1908 – 14 October 1926
Preceded bySir Henry Campbell-Bannerman
Succeeded byDavid Lloyd George
Secretary of State for War
In office
30 March 1914 – 5 August 1914
MonarchGeorge V
Prime MinisterHimself
Preceded byJ. E. B. Seely
Succeeded byThe Earl Kitchener
Chancellor of the Exchequer
In office
10 December 1905 – 12 April 1908
MonarchEdward VII
Prime MinisterSir Henry Campbell-Bannerman
Preceded byAusten Chamberlain
Succeeded byDavid Lloyd George
Home Secretary
In office
18 August 1892 – 25 June 1895
MonarchVictoria
Prime Minister
Preceded byHenry Matthews
Succeeded byMatthew White Ridley
Member of the House of Lords
Lord Temporal
In office
10 February 1925 – 15 February 1928
Earl of Oxford and Asquith
Preceded byPeerage created
Succeeded byJulian Edward George Asquith
Parliamentary offices
Member of Parliament
for Paisley
In office
12 February 1920 – 9 October 1924
Preceded byJohn McCallum
Succeeded byEdward Mitchell
Member of Parliament
for East Fife
In office
27 July 1886 – 25 November 1918
Preceded byJohn Boyd Kinnear
Succeeded byAlexander Sprot
Personal details
Born
Herbert Asquith

(1852-09-12)12 September 1852
Morley, West Riding of Yorkshire, England
Died15 February 1928(1928-02-15) (aged 75)
Sutton Courtenay, Berkshire, England
Resting placeAll Saints' Church, Sutton Courtenay
Political partyLiberal
Spouses
  • Helen Kelsall Melland
    (m. 1877; died 1891)
  • (m. 1894)
Children10, including Raymond, Herbert, Arthur, Violet, Cyril, Elizabeth, and Anthony
EducationCity of London School
Alma mater
ProfessionBarrister
Signature

After attending Balliol College, Oxford, he became a successful barrister. In 1886 he was the Liberal candidate for East Fife, a seat he held for over thirty years. In 1892 he was appointed as Home Secretary in Gladstone's fourth ministry, remaining in the post until the Liberals lost the 1895 election. In the decade of opposition that followed Asquith became a major figure in the party, and when the Liberals regained power under Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman in 1905 Asquith was named Chancellor of the Exchequer. In 1908 Asquith succeeded him as prime minister. The Liberals were determined to advance their reform agenda. An impediment to this was the House of Lords, which rejected the People's Budget of 1909. Meanwhile, the South Africa Act 1909 passed. Asquith called an election for January 1910, and the Liberals won, though they were reduced to a minority government. After another general election in December 1910, he gained passage of the Parliament Act 1911, allowing a bill three times passed by the Commons in consecutive sessions to be enacted regardless of the Lords. Asquith was less successful in dealing with Irish Home Rule. Repeated crises led to gun running and violence, verging on civil war.

When Britain declared war on Germany in response to the German invasion of Belgium, high-profile domestic conflicts were suspended regarding Ireland and women's suffrage. Asquith was more of a committee chair than a dynamic leader. He oversaw national mobilization, the dispatch of the British Expeditionary Force to the Western Front, the creation of a mass army, and the development of an industrial strategy designed to support the country's war aims. The war became bogged down and the demand rose for better leadership. He was forced to form a coalition with the Conservatives and Labour early in 1915. He was weakened by his own indecision over strategy, conscription, and financing.[1] Lloyd George replaced him as prime minister in December 1916. They became bitter enemies and fought for control of the fast-declining Liberal Party. His role in creating the modern British welfare state (1906–1911) has been celebrated, but his weaknesses as a war leader and as a party leader after 1914 have been highlighted by historians. He remained the only Prime Minister between 1827 and 1979 to serve more than eight consecutive years in a single term.

Early life and career: 1852–1908

Family background

 
Asquith (left) with his sister Emily and elder brother William, c. 1857

Asquith was born in Morley, in the West Riding of Yorkshire, the younger son of Joseph Dixon Asquith (1825–1860) and his wife Emily, née Willans (1828–1888). The couple also had three daughters, of whom only one survived infancy.[2][3][a] The Asquiths were an old Yorkshire family, with a long nonconformist tradition.[b] It was a matter of family pride, shared by Asquith, that an ancestor, Joseph Asquith, was imprisoned for his part in the pro-Roundhead Farnley Wood Plot of 1664.[4]

Both Asquith's parents came from families associated with the Yorkshire wool trade. Dixon Asquith inherited the Gillroyd Mill Company, founded by his father. Emily's father, William Willans, ran a successful wool-trading business in Huddersfield. Both families were middle-class, Congregationalist, and politically radical. Dixon was a mild man, cultivated and in his son's words "not cut out" for a business career.[2] He was described as "a man of high character who held Bible classes for young men".[5] Emily suffered persistent poor health, but was of strong character, and a formative influence on her sons.[6]

Childhood and schooling

In his younger days he was called Herbert ("Bertie" as a child) within the family, but his second wife called him Henry. His biographer Stephen Koss entitled the first chapter of his biography "From Herbert to Henry", referring to upward social mobility and his abandonment of his Yorkshire Nonconformist roots with his second marriage. However, in public, he was invariably referred to only as H. H. Asquith. "There have been few major national figures whose Christian names were less well known to the public" according to biographer Roy Jenkins.[2] He and his brother were educated at home by their parents until 1860, when Dixon Asquith died suddenly. William Willans took charge of the family, moved them to a house near his own, and arranged for the boys' schooling.[7] After a year at Huddersfield College they were sent as boarders to Fulneck School, a Moravian Church school near Leeds. In 1863 William Willans died, and the family came under the care of Emily's brother, John Willans. The boys went to live with him in London; when he moved back to Yorkshire in 1864 for business reasons, they remained in London and were lodged with various families. The biographer Naomi Levine writes that in effect Asquith was "treated like an orphan" for the rest of his childhood.[8] The departure of his uncle effectively severed Asquith's ties with his native Yorkshire, and he described himself thereafter as "to all intents and purposes a Londoner".[9] Another biographer, H. C. G. Matthew, writes that Asquith's northern nonconformist background continued to influence him: "It gave him a point of sturdy anti-establishmentarian reference, important to a man whose life in other respects was a long absorption into metropolitanism."[10]

The boys were sent to the City of London School as dayboys. Under the school's headmaster, E. A. Abbott, a distinguished classical scholar, Asquith became an outstanding pupil. He later said that he was under deeper obligations to his old headmaster than to any man living;[11] Abbott disclaimed credit for the boy's progress: "I never had a pupil who owed less to me and more to his own natural ability."[11][12] Asquith excelled in classics and English, was little interested in sports, read voraciously in the Guildhall Library, and became fascinated with oratory. He visited the public gallery of the House of Commons, studied the techniques of famous preachers, and honed his own skills in the school debating society.[13] Abbott remarked on the cogency and clarity of his pupil's speeches, qualities for which Asquith became celebrated throughout the rest of his life.[14][15] Asquith later recalled seeing, as a schoolboy, the corpses of five murderers left hanging outside Newgate.[16]

Oxford

 
Early press mention of Asquith, 1869

In November 1869 Asquith won a classical scholarship at Balliol College, Oxford, going up the following October. The college's prestige, already high, continued to rise under the recently elected Master, Benjamin Jowett. He sought to raise the standards of the college to the extent that its undergraduates shared what Asquith later called a "tranquil consciousness of effortless superiority".[17] Although Asquith admired Jowett, he was more influenced by T. H. Green, White's Professor of Moral Philosophy. The abstract side of philosophy did not greatly attract Asquith, whose outlook was always practical, but Green's progressive liberal political views appealed to him.[10]

Asquith's university career was distinguished—"striking without being sensational" in the words of his biographer, Roy Jenkins. An easy grasp of his studies left him ample time to indulge his liking for debate. In the first month at university he spoke at the Oxford Union. His official biographers, J. A. Spender and Cyril Asquith, commented that in his first months at Oxford "he voiced the orthodox Liberal view, speaking in support, inter alia, of the disestablishment of the Church of England, and of non-intervention in the Franco-Prussian War".[18] He sometimes debated against his Balliol contemporary Alfred Milner, who although then a Liberal was already an advocate of British imperialism.[19] He was elected Treasurer of the Union in 1872 but was defeated at his first attempt at the Presidency.[20] During the General Election in January and February 1874 he spoke against Lord Randolph Churchill, who was not yet a prominent politician, at nearby Woodstock.[21] He eventually became President of the Union in Trinity Term 1874, his last term as an undergraduate.[22][23]

Asquith was proxime accessit (runner-up) for the Hertford Prize in 1872, again proxime accessit for the Ireland Prize in 1873, and again for the Ireland in 1874, on that occasion coming so close that the examiners awarded him a special prize of books. However, he won the Craven Scholarship and graduated with what his biographers describe as an "easy" double first in Mods and Greats.[24] After graduating he was elected to a prize fellowship of Balliol.[25]

Early professional career

Perhaps because of his stark beginnings, Asquith was always attracted to the comforts and accoutrements that money can buy. He was personally extravagant, always enjoying the good life—good food, good companions, good conversation and attractive women.

Naomi Levine, in a 1991 biography[26]

After his graduation in 1874, Asquith spent several months coaching Viscount Lymington, the 18-year-old son and heir of the Earl of Portsmouth. He found the experience of aristocratic country-house life agreeable.[27][28] He liked less the austere side of the nonconformist Liberal tradition, with its strong temperance movement. He was proud of ridding himself of "the Puritanism in which I was bred".[29] His fondness for fine wines and spirits, which began at this period, eventually earned him the sobriquet "Squiffy".[30]

Returning to Oxford, Asquith spent the first year of his seven-year fellowship in residence there. But he had no wish to pursue a career as a don; the traditional route for politically ambitious but unmoneyed young men was through the law.[28] While still at Oxford Asquith had already entered Lincoln's Inn to train as a barrister, and in 1875 he served a pupillage under Charles Bowen.[31] He was called to the bar in June 1876.[32]

There followed what Jenkins calls "seven extremely lean years".[31] Asquith set up a legal practice with two other junior barristers. With no personal contacts with solicitors, he received few briefs.[c] Those that came his way he argued capably, but he was too fastidious to learn the wilier tricks of the legal trade: "he was constitutionally incapable of making a discreet fog … nor could he prevail on himself to dispense the conventional patter".[33] He did not allow his lack of money to stop him marrying. His bride, Helen Kelsall Melland (1854–1891), was the daughter of Frederick Melland, a physician in Manchester. She and Asquith had met through friends of his mother's.[33] The two had been in love for several years, but it was not until 1877 that Asquith sought her father's consent to their marriage. Despite Asquith's limited income—practically nothing from the bar and a small stipend from his fellowship—Melland consented after making inquiries about the young man's potential. Helen had a private income of several hundred pounds a year, and the couple lived in modest comfort in Hampstead. They had five children:

 
Asquith in 1876

Between 1876 and 1884 Asquith supplemented his income by writing regularly for The Spectator, which at that time had a broadly Liberal outlook. Matthew comments that the articles Asquith wrote for the magazine give a good overview of his political views as a young man. He was staunchly radical, but as unconvinced by extreme left-wing views as by Toryism. Among the topics that caused debate among Liberals were British imperialism, the union of Great Britain and Ireland, and female suffrage. Asquith was a strong, though not jingoistic, proponent of the Empire, and, after initial caution, came to support home rule for Ireland. He opposed votes for women for most of his political career.[d] There was also an element of party interest: Asquith believed that votes for women would disproportionately benefit the Conservatives. In a 2001 study of the extension of the franchise between 1832 and 1931, Bob Whitfield concluded that Asquith's surmise about the electoral impact was correct.[34] In addition to his work for The Spectator, he was retained as a leader writer by The Economist, taught at evening classes, and marked examination papers.[35]

Asquith's career as a barrister began to flourish in 1883 when R. S. Wright invited him to join his chambers at the Inner Temple. Wright was the Junior Counsel to the Treasury, a post often known as "the Attorney General's devil",[36] whose function included giving legal advice to ministers and government departments.[36] One of Asquith's first jobs in working for Wright was to prepare a memorandum for the prime minister, W. E. Gladstone, on the status of the parliamentary oath in the wake of the Bradlaugh case. Both Gladstone and the Attorney General, Sir Henry James, were impressed. This raised Asquith's profile, though not greatly enhancing his finances. Much more remunerative were his new contacts with solicitors who regularly instructed Wright and now also began to instruct Asquith.[37]

Member of Parliament and Queen's Counsel

In June 1886, with the Liberal party split on the question of Irish Home Rule, Gladstone called a general election.[38] There was a last-minute vacancy at East Fife, where the sitting Liberal member, John Boyd Kinnear, had been deselected by his local Liberal Association for voting against Irish Home Rule. Richard Haldane, a close friend of Asquith's and also a struggling young barrister, had been Liberal MP for the nearby Haddingtonshire constituency since December 1885. He put Asquith's name forward as a replacement for Kinnear, and only ten days before polling Asquith was formally nominated in a vote of the local Liberals.[39] The Conservatives did not contest the seat, putting their support behind Kinnear, who stood against Asquith as a Liberal Unionist. Asquith was elected with 2,863 votes to Kinnear's 2,489.[40]

The Liberals lost the 1886 election, and Asquith joined the House of Commons as an opposition backbencher. He waited until March 1887 to make his maiden speech, which opposed the Conservative administration's proposal to give special priority to an Irish Crimes Bill.[41][42] From the start of his parliamentary career Asquith impressed other MPs with his air of authority as well as his lucidity of expression.[43] For the remainder of this Parliament, which lasted until 1892, Asquith spoke occasionally but effectively, mostly on Irish matters.[44][45]

Asquith's legal practice was flourishing, and took up much of his time. In the late 1880s Anthony Hope, who later gave up the bar to become a novelist, was his pupil. Asquith disliked arguing in front of a jury because of the repetitiveness and "platitudes" required, but excelled at arguing fine points of civil law before a judge or in front of courts of appeal.[46] These cases, in which his clients were generally large businesses, were unspectacular but financially rewarding.[47]

 
Asquith, caricatured by Spy, in Vanity Fair, 1891

From time to time Asquith appeared in high-profile criminal cases. In 1887 and 1888 he defended the radical Liberal MP, Cunninghame Graham, who was charged with assaulting police officers when they attempted to break up a demonstration in Trafalgar Square.[48] Graham was later convicted of the lesser charge of unlawful assembly.[49] In what Jenkins calls "a less liberal cause", Asquith appeared for the prosecution in the trial of Henry Vizetelly for publishing "obscene libels"—the first English versions of Zola's novels Nana, Pot-Bouille and La Terre, which Asquith described in court as "the three most immoral books ever published".[50]

Asquith's law career received a great and unforeseen boost in 1889 when he was named junior counsel to Sir Charles Russell at the Parnell Commission of Enquiry. The commission had been set up in the aftermath of damaging statements in The Times, based on forged letters, that Irish MP Charles Stuart Parnell had expressed approval of Dublin's Phoenix Park killings. When the manager of The Times, J. C. Macdonald, was called to give evidence Russell, feeling tired, surprised Asquith by asking him to conduct the cross-examination.[51] Under Asquith's questioning, it became plain that in accepting the forgeries as genuine, without making any check, Macdonald had, in Jenkins's phrase, behaved "with a credulity which would have been childlike had it not been criminally negligent".[52] The Manchester Guardian reported that under Asquith's cross-examination, Macdonald "squirmed and wriggled through a dozen half-formed phrases in an attempt at explanation, and finished none".[53] The accusations against Parnell were shown to be false, The Times was obliged to make a full apology, and Asquith's reputation was assured.[54][55] Within a year he had gained advancement to the senior rank of the bar, Queen's Counsel.[56]

Asquith appeared in two important cases in the early 1890s. He played an effective low-key role in the sensational Tranby Croft libel trial (1891), helping to show that the plaintiff had not been libelled. He was on the losing side in Carlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Co (1892), a landmark English contract law case that established that a company was obliged to meet its advertised pledges.[57][58]

Widower and cabinet minister

In September 1891 Helen Asquith died of typhoid fever following a few days' illness while the family were on holiday in Scotland.[59] Asquith bought a house in Surrey, and hired nannies and other domestic staff. He sold the Hampstead property and took a flat in Mount Street, Mayfair, where he lived during the working week.[60]

 
Margot Asquith at about the time of her marriage

The general election of July 1892 returned Gladstone and the Liberals to office, with intermittent support from the Irish Nationalist MPs. Asquith, who was then only 39 and had never served as a junior minister, accepted the post of Home Secretary, a senior Cabinet position. The Conservatives and Liberal Unionists jointly outnumbered the Liberals in the Commons, which, together with a permanent Unionist majority in the House of Lords, restricted the government's capacity to put reforming measures in place. Asquith failed to secure a majority for a bill to disestablish the Church of Wales, and another to protect workers injured at work, but he built up a reputation as a capable and fair minister.[10]

In 1893, Asquith responded to a request from Magistrates in the Wakefield area for reinforcements to police a mining strike. Asquith sent 400 Metropolitan policeman. After two civilians were killed in Featherstone when soldiers opened fire on a crowd, Asquith was subject to protests at public meetings for a period. He responded to a taunt, "Why did you murder the miners at Featherstone in '92?" by saying, "It was not '92, it was '93."[61]

When Gladstone retired in March 1894, Queen Victoria chose the Foreign Secretary, Lord Rosebery, as the new prime minister. Asquith thought Rosebery preferable to the other possible candidate, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Sir William Harcourt, whom he deemed too anti-imperialist—one of the so-called "Little Englanders"—and too abrasive.[62] Asquith remained at the Home Office until the government fell in 1895.[10]

Asquith had known Margot Tennant slightly since before his wife's death, and grew increasingly attached to her in his years as a widower. On 10 May 1894 they were married at St George's, Hanover Square. Asquith became a son in law of Sir Charles Tennant, 1st Baronet. Margot was in many respects the opposite of Asquith's first wife, being outgoing, impulsive, extravagant and opinionated.[63] Despite the misgivings of many of Asquith's friends and colleagues the marriage proved to be a success. Margot got on, if sometimes stormily, with her step-children and she and Asquith had five children of their own, only two of whom survived infancy.:[63]

  • Anthony Asquith (9 November 1902 – 21 February 1968)
  • Elizabeth Asquith (26 February 1897 – 7 April 1945), she married Prince Antoine Bibesco on 30 April 1919. They had one daughter.

Out of office, 1895–1905

The general election of July 1895 was disastrous for the Liberals, and the Conservatives under Lord Salisbury won a majority of 152. With no government post, Asquith divided his time between politics and the bar.[e] Jenkins comments that in this period Asquith earned a substantial, though not stellar, income and was never worse off and often much higher-paid than when in office.[64] Matthew writes that his income as a QC in the following years was around £5,000 to £10,000 per annum (around £500,000–£1,000,000 at 2015 prices).[10][65] According to Haldane, on returning to government in 1905 Asquith had to give up a £10,000 brief to act for the Khedive of Egypt.[66] Margot later claimed (in the 1920s, when they were short of money) that he could have made £50,000 per annum had he remained at the bar.[67]

 
Campbell-Bannerman, Liberal leader from 1899

The Liberal Party, with a leadership—Harcourt in the Commons and Rosebery in the Lords—who detested each other, once again suffered factional divisions. Rosebery resigned in October 1896 and Harcourt followed him in December 1898.[68][69] Asquith came under strong pressure to accept the nomination to take over as Liberal leader, but the post of Leader of the Opposition, though full-time, was then unpaid, and he could not afford to give up his income as a barrister. He and others prevailed on the former Secretary of State for War, Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman to accept the post.[70]

During the Boer War of 1899–1902 Liberal opinion divided along pro-imperialist and "Little England" lines, with Campbell-Bannerman striving to maintain party unity. Asquith was less inclined than his leader and many in the party to censure the Conservative government for its conduct, though he regarded the war as an unnecessary distraction.[10] Joseph Chamberlain, a former Liberal minister, now an ally of the Conservatives, campaigned for tariffs to shield British industry from cheaper foreign competition. Asquith's advocacy of traditional Liberal free trade policies helped to make Chamberlain's proposals the central question in British politics in the early years of the 20th century. In Matthew's view, "Asquith's forensic skills quickly exposed deficiencies and self-contradictions in Chamberlain's arguments."[10] The question divided the Conservatives, while the Liberals were united under the banner of "free fooders" against those in the government who countenanced a tax on imported essentials.[71]

Chancellor of the Exchequer, 1905–1908

 
Asquith as Chancellor of the Exchequer, in the House of Commons

Salisbury's Conservative successor as Prime Minister, Arthur Balfour, resigned in December 1905, but did not seek a dissolution of Parliament and a general election.[f] King Edward VII invited Campbell-Bannerman to form a minority government. Asquith and his close political allies Haldane and Sir Edward Grey tried to pressure him into taking a peerage to become a figurehead Prime Minister in the House of Lords, giving the pro-empire wing of the party greater dominance in the House of Commons. Campbell-Bannerman called their bluff and refused to move.[72][73] Asquith was appointed Chancellor of the Exchequer. He held the post for over two years, and introduced three budgets.[74][75]

A month after taking office, Campbell-Bannerman called a general election, in which the Liberals gained a landslide majority of 132.[76] However, Asquith's first budget, in 1906, was constrained by the annual income and expenditure plans he had inherited from his predecessor Austen Chamberlain. The only income for which Chamberlain had over-budgeted was the duty from sales of alcohol.[g][77] With a balanced budget, and a realistic assessment of future public expenditure, Asquith was able, in his second and third budgets, to lay the foundations for limited redistribution of wealth and welfare provisions for the poor. Blocked at first by Treasury officials from setting a variable rate of income tax with higher rates on those with high incomes, he set up a committee under Sir Charles Dilke which recommended not only variable income tax rates but also a supertax on incomes of more than £5,000 a year. Asquith also introduced a distinction between earned and unearned income, taxing the latter at a higher rate. He used the increased revenues to fund old-age pensions, the first time a British government had provided them. Reductions in selective taxes, such as that on sugar, were aimed at benefiting the poor.[78]

Asquith planned the 1908 budget, but by the time he presented it to the Commons he was no longer Chancellor. Campbell-Bannerman's health had been failing for nearly a year. After a series of heart attacks he resigned on 3 April 1908, less than three weeks before he died.[79] Asquith was universally accepted as the natural successor.[80] King Edward, who was on holiday in Biarritz, sent for Asquith, who took the boat train to France and kissed hands as prime minister in the Hôtel du Palais, Biarritz, on 8 April.[81]

Peacetime prime minister: 1908–1914

Appointments and cabinet

 
Asquith in 1908

On Asquith's return from Biarritz, his leadership of the Liberals was affirmed by a party meeting (the first time this had been done for a prime minister).[10] He initiated a cabinet reshuffle. Lloyd George was promoted to be Asquith's replacement as chancellor. Winston Churchill succeeded Lloyd George as President of the Board of Trade, entering the Cabinet despite his youth (aged 33) and the fact that he had crossed the floor to become a Liberal only four years previously.[82]

Asquith demoted or dismissed a number of Campbell-Bannerman's cabinet ministers. Lord Tweedmouth, the First Lord of the Admiralty, was relegated to the nominal post of Lord President of the Council. Lord Elgin was sacked from the Colonial Office and the Earl of Portsmouth (whom Asquith had tutored) was too, as undersecretary at the War Office. The abruptness of their dismissals caused hard feelings; Elgin wrote to Tweedmouth, "I venture to think that even a prime minister may have some regard for the usages common among gentlemen ... I feel that even a housemaid gets a better warning."[h][83]

Historian Cameron Hazlehurst wrote that "the new men, with the old, made a powerful team".[84] The cabinet choices balanced the competing factions in the party; the appointments of Lloyd George and Churchill satisfied the radicals, while the whiggish element favoured Reginald McKenna's appointment as First Lord.[10]

Prime minister at leisure

Possessed of "a faculty for working quickly",[85] Asquith had considerable time for leisure. Reading[86] the classics, poetry and a vast range of English literature consumed much of his time. So did correspondence; intensely disliking the telephone, Asquith was a prolific letter writer.[87] Travelling, often to country houses owned by members of Margot's family, was almost constant, Asquith being a devoted "weekender".[88] He spent part of each summer in Scotland, with golf, constituency matters, and time at Balmoral as duty minister.[10] He and Margot divided their time between Downing Street and The Wharf,[89] a country house at Sutton Courtenay in Berkshire which they bought in 1912;[90] their London mansion, 20 Cavendish Square,[91] was let during his premiership. He was addicted to Contract bridge.[92]

Above all else, Asquith thrived on company and conversation. A clubbable man, he enjoyed "the companionship of clever and attractive women" even more.[93] Throughout his life, Asquith had a circle of close female friends, which Margot termed his "harem".[94] In 1912, one of these, Venetia Stanley became much closer. Meeting first in 1909–1910, by 1912 she was Asquith's constant correspondent and companion. Between that point and 1915, he wrote her some 560 letters, at a rate of up to four a day.[95] Although it remains uncertain whether or not they were lovers,[96] she became of central importance to him.[97] Asquith's thorough enjoyment of "comfort and luxury"[93] during peacetime, and his unwillingness to adjust his behaviour during conflict,[98] ultimately contributed to the impression of a man out of touch. Lady Tree's teasing question, asked at the height of the conflict, "Tell me, Mr Asquith, do you take an interest in the war?",[99] conveyed a commonly held view.

Asquith enjoyed alcohol and his drinking was the subject of considerable gossip. His relaxed attitude to drink disappointed the temperance element in the Liberal coalition[100] and some authors have suggested it affected his decision-making, for example in his opposition to Lloyd George's wartime attacks on the liquor trade.[101] The Conservative leader Bonar Law quipped "Asquith drunk can make a better speech than any of us sober". [102] His reputation suffered, especially as wartime crises demanded the full alert attention of the prime minister.[103] David Owen writes that Asquith was ordered by his doctor to rein in his consumption after a near-collapse in April 1911, but it is unclear whether he actually did so. Owen, a medical doctor by training, states that "by modern diagnostic standards, Asquith became an alcoholic while Prime Minister." Witnesses often remarked on his weight gain and red, bloated face.[104]

Domestic policy

Reforming the House of Lords

Asquith hoped to act as a mediator between members of his cabinet as they pushed Liberal legislation through Parliament. Events, including conflict with the House of Lords, forced him to the front from the start of his premiership. Despite the Liberals's massive majority in the House of Commons, the Conservatives had overwhelming support in the unelected upper chamber.[105][i] Campbell-Bannerman had favoured reforming the Lords by providing that a bill thrice passed by the Commons at least six months apart could become law without the Lords' consent, while diminishing the power of the Commons by reducing the maximum term of a parliament from seven to five years.[106] Asquith, as chancellor, had served on a cabinet committee that had written a plan to resolve legislative stalemates by a joint sitting of the Commons as a body with 100 of the peers.[107] The Commons passed a number of pieces of legislation in 1908 which were defeated or heavily amended in the Lords, including a Licensing Bill, a Scottish Small Landholders' Bill, and a Scottish Land Values Bill.[105]

None of these bills were important enough to dissolve parliament and seek a new mandate at a general election.[10] Asquith and Lloyd George believed the peers would back down if presented with Liberal objectives contained within a finance bill—the Lords had not obstructed a money bill since the 17th century, and after initially blocking Gladstone's attempt (as chancellor) to repeal Paper Duties, had yielded in 1861 when it was submitted again in a finance bill. Accordingly, the Liberal leadership expected that after much objection from the Conservative peers, the Lords would yield to policy changes wrapped within a budget bill.[108]

1909: People's Budget

 
This 1909 Punch cartoon suggests the Liberals were delighted when the Lords forced an election. Back row: Haldane, Churchill with arms up, being hugged by his ally Lloyd George. Asquith standing at right. Bottom row: McKenna, Lord Crewe (with moustache), Augustine Birrell leaning back

In a major speech in December 1908, Asquith announced that the upcoming budget would reflect the Liberals' policy agenda, and the People's Budget that was submitted to Parliament by Lloyd George the following year greatly expanded social welfare programmes. To pay for them, it significantly increased both direct and indirect taxes.[10] These included a 20 per cent tax on the unearned increase in value in land, payable at death of the owner or sale of the land. There would also be a tax of 12d in the pound[j] on undeveloped land. A graduated income tax was imposed, and there were increases in imposts on tobacco, beer and spirits.[109] A tax on petrol was introduced despite Treasury concerns that it could not work in practice. Although Asquith held fourteen cabinet meetings to assure unity amongst his ministers,[10] there was opposition from some Liberals; Rosebery described the budget as "inquisitorial, tyrannical, and Socialistic".[110]

The budget divided the country and provoked bitter debate through the summer of 1909.[111] The Northcliffe Press (The Times and the Daily Mail) urged rejection of the budget to give tariff reform (indirect taxes on imported goods which, it was felt, would encourage British industry and trade within the Empire) a chance; there were many public meetings, some of them organised by dukes, in protest at the budget.[112] Many Liberal politicians attacked the peers, including Lloyd George in his Newcastle upon Tyne speech, in which he said "a fully-equipped duke costs as much to keep up as two Dreadnoughts; and dukes are just as great a terror and they last longer".[113] King Edward privately urged Conservative leaders Balfour and Lord Lansdowne to pass the Budget (this was not unusual, as Queen Victoria had helped to broker agreement between the two Houses over the Irish Church Act 1869 and the Third Reform Act in 1884).[114] From July it became increasingly clear that the Conservative peers would reject the budget, partly in the hope of forcing an election.[115] If they rejected it, Asquith determined, he would have to ask the King to dissolve Parliament, four years into a seven-year term,[10] as it would mean the legislature had refused supply.[k] The budget passed the Commons on 4 November 1909, but was voted down in the Lords on the 30th, the Lords passing a resolution by Lord Lansdowne stating that they were entitled to oppose the finance bill as it lacked an electoral mandate.[116] Asquith had Parliament prorogued three days later for an election beginning on 15 January 1910, with the Commons first passing a resolution deeming the Lords' vote to be an attack on the constitution.[117]

1910: election and constitutional deadlock

The January 1910 general election was dominated by talk of removing the Lords' veto.[10][118] A possible solution was to threaten to have King Edward pack the House of Lords with freshly minted Liberal peers, who would override the Lords's veto; Asquith's talk of safeguards was taken by many to mean that he had secured the King's agreement to this. They were mistaken; the King had informed Asquith that he would not consider a mass creation of peers until after a second general election.[10]

Lloyd George and Churchill were the leading forces in the Liberals' appeal to the voters; Asquith, clearly tired, took to the hustings for a total of two weeks during the campaign, and when the polls began, journeyed to Cannes with such speed that he neglected an engagement with the King, to the monarch's annoyance.[citation needed] The result was a hung parliament. The Liberals lost heavily from their great majority of 1906, but still finished with two more seats than the Conservatives. With Irish Nationalist and Labour support, the government would have ample support on most issues, and Asquith stated that his majority compared favourably with those enjoyed by Palmerston and Lord John Russell.[119]

 
Asquith caricatured in Vanity Fair, 1910

Immediate further pressure to remove the Lords' veto now came from the Irish MPs, who wanted to remove the Lords' ability to block the introduction of Irish Home Rule. They threatened to vote against the Budget unless they had their way.[120][l] With another general election likely before long, Asquith had to make clear the Liberal policy on constitutional change to the country without alienating the Irish and Labour. This initially proved difficult, and the King's speech opening Parliament was vague on what was to be done to neutralise the Lords' veto. Asquith dispirited his supporters by stating in Parliament that he had neither asked for nor received a commitment from the King to create peers.[10] The cabinet considered resigning and leaving it up to Balfour to try to form a Conservative government.[121]

The budget passed the Commons again, and—now that it had an electoral mandate—it was approved by the Lords in April without a division.[122] The cabinet finally decided to back a plan based on Campbell-Bannerman's, that a bill passed by the Commons in three consecutive annual sessions would become law notwithstanding the Lords' objections. Unless the King guaranteed that he would create enough Liberal peers to pass the bill, ministers would resign and allow Balfour to form a government, leaving the matter to be debated at the ensuing general election.[123] On 14 April 1910, the Commons passed resolutions that would become the basis of the eventual Parliament Act 1911: to remove the power of the Lords to veto money bills, to reduce blocking of other bills to a two-year power of delay, and also to reduce the term of a parliament from seven years to five.[124] In that debate Asquith also hinted—in part to ensure the support of the Irish MPs—that he would ask the King to break the deadlock "in that Parliament" (i.e. that he would ask for the mass creation of peers, contrary to the King's earlier stipulation that there be a second election).[125][m]

These plans were scuttled by the death of Edward VII on 6 May 1910. Asquith and his ministers were initially reluctant to press the new king, George V, in mourning for his father, for commitments on constitutional change, and the monarch's views were not yet known. With a strong feeling in the country that the parties should compromise, Asquith and other Liberals met with Conservative leaders in a number of conferences through much of the remainder of 1910. These talks failed in November over Conservative insistence that there be no limits on the Lords's ability to veto Irish Home Rule.[10] When the Parliament Bill was submitted to the Lords, they made amendments that were not acceptable to the government.[126]

1910–1911: second election and Parliament Act
 
Punch 1911 cartoon shows Asquith and Lloyd George preparing coronets for 500 new peers

On 11 November, Asquith asked King George to dissolve Parliament for another general election in December, and on the 14th met again with the King and demanded assurances the monarch would create an adequate number of Liberal peers to carry the Parliament Bill. The King was slow to agree, and Asquith and his cabinet informed him they would resign if he did not make the commitment. Balfour had told King Edward that he would form a Conservative government if the Liberals left office but the new King did not know this. The King reluctantly gave in to Asquith's demand, writing in his diary that, "I disliked having to do this very much, but agreed that this was the only alternative to the Cabinet resigning, which at this moment would be disastrous".[127]

Asquith dominated the short election campaign, focusing on the Lords' veto in calm speeches, compared by his biographer Stephen Koss to the "wild irresponsibility" of other major campaigners.[128] In a speech at Hull, he stated that the Liberals' purpose was to remove the obstruction, not establish an ideal upper house, "I have always got to deal—the country has got to deal—with things here and now. We need an instrument [of constitutional change] that can be set to work at once, which will get rid of deadlocks, and give us the fair and even chance in legislation to which we are entitled, and which is all that we demand."[129]

 
Samuel Begg's depiction of the passing of the Parliament Bill in the House of Lords, 1911

The election resulted in little change to the party strengths (the Liberal and Conservative parties were exactly equal in size; by 1914 the Conservative Party would actually be larger owing to by-election victories). Nevertheless, Asquith remained in Number Ten, with a large majority in the Commons on the issue of the House of Lords. The Parliament Bill again passed the House of Commons in April 1911, and was heavily amended in the Lords. Asquith advised King George that the monarch would be called upon to create the peers, and the King agreed, asking that his pledge be made public, and that the Lords be allowed to reconsider their opposition. Once it was, there was a raging internal debate within the Conservatives on whether to give in, or to continue to vote no even when outnumbered by hundreds of newly created peers. After lengthy debate, on 10 August 1911 the Lords voted narrowly not to insist on their amendments, with many Conservative peers abstaining and a few voting in favour of the government; the bill was passed into law.[130]

According to Jenkins, although Asquith had at times moved slowly during the crisis, "on the whole, Asquith's slow moulding of events had amounted to a masterly display of political nerve and patient determination. Compared with [the Conservatives], his leadership was outstanding."[131] Churchill wrote to Asquith after the second 1910 election, "your leadership was the main and conspicuous feature of the whole fight".[128] Matthew, in his article on Asquith, found that, "the episode was the zenith of Asquith's prime ministerial career. In the British Liberal tradition, he patched rather than reformulated the constitution."[10]

Social, religious and labour matters

Despite the distraction of the problem of the House of Lords, Asquith and his government moved ahead with a number of pieces of reforming legislation. According to Matthew, "no peacetime premier has been a more effective enabler. Labour exchanges, the introduction of unemployment and health insurance … reflected the reforms the government was able to achieve despite the problem of the Lords. Asquith was not himself a 'new Liberal', but he saw the need for a change in assumptions about the individual's relationship to the state, and he was fully aware of the political risk to the Liberals of a Labour Party on its left flank."[10] Keen to keep the support of the Labour Party, the Asquith government passed bills urged by that party, including the Trade Union Act 1913 (reversing the Osborne judgment) and in 1911 granting MPs a salary, making it more feasible for working-class people to serve in the House of Commons.[132]

Asquith had as chancellor placed money aside for the provision of non-contributory old-age pensions; the bill authorising them passed in 1908, during his premiership, despite some objection in the Lords.[133] Jenkins noted that the scheme (which provided five shillings a week to single pensioners aged seventy and over, and slightly less than twice that to married couples) "to modern ears sounds cautious and meagre. But it was violently criticised at the time for showing a reckless generosity."[134]

Asquith's new government became embroiled in a controversy over the Eucharistic Congress of 1908, held in London. Following the Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829, the Roman Catholic Church had seen a resurgence in Britain, and a large procession displaying the Blessed Sacrament was planned to allow the laity to participate. Although such an event was forbidden by the 1829 act, planners counted on the British reputation for religious tolerance,[135] and Francis Cardinal Bourne, the Archbishop of Westminster, had obtained permission from the Metropolitan Police. When the plans became widely known, King Edward objected, as did many other Protestants. Asquith received inconsistent advice from his Home Secretary, Herbert Gladstone, and successfully pressed the organisers to cancel the religious aspects of the procession, though it cost him the resignation of his only Catholic cabinet minister, Lord Ripon.[136]

Disestablishment of the Welsh Church was a Liberal priority, but despite support by most Welsh MPs, there was opposition in the Lords. Asquith was an authority on Welsh disestablishment from his time under Gladstone, but had little to do with the passage of the bill. It was twice rejected by the Lords, in 1912 and 1913, but having been forced through under the Parliament Act received royal assent in September 1914, with the provisions suspended until war's end.[10][137]

Votes for women

 
Early 20th century suffragist lapel pin

Asquith had opposed votes for women as early as 1882, and he remained well known as an adversary throughout his time as prime minister.[138] He took a detached view of the women's suffrage question, believing it should be judged on whether extending the franchise would improve the system of government, rather than as a question of rights. He did not understand—Jenkins ascribed it to a failure of imagination—why passions were raised on both sides over the issue. He told the House of Commons in 1913, while complaining of the "exaggerated language" on both sides, "I am sometimes tempted to think, as one listens to the arguments of supporters of women's suffrage, that there is nothing to be said for it, and I am sometimes tempted to think, as I listen to the arguments of the opponents of women's suffrage, that there is nothing to be said against it."[139]

In 1906 suffragettes Annie Kenney, Adelaide Knight, and Jane Sbarborough were arrested when they tried to obtain an audience with Asquith.[140][141] Offered either six weeks in prison or giving up campaigning for one year, the women all chose prison.[140] Asquith was a target for militant suffragettes as they abandoned hope of achieving the vote through peaceful means. He was several times the subject of their tactics: approached (to his annoyance) arriving at 10 Downing Street (by Olive Fargus and Catherine Corbett whom he called 'silly women',[142] confronted at evening parties, accosted on the golf course, and ambushed while driving to Stirling to dedicate a memorial to Campbell-Bannerman. On the last occasion, his top hat proved adequate protection against the dog whips wielded by the women. These incidents left him unmoved, as he did not believe them a true manifestation of public opinion.[143]

With a growing majority of the Cabinet, including Lloyd George and Churchill, in favour of women's suffrage, Asquith was pressed to allow consideration of a private member's bill to give women the vote. The majority of Liberal MPs were also in favour.[144] Jenkins deemed him one of the two main prewar obstacles to women gaining the vote, the other being the suffragists's own militancy. In 1912, Asquith reluctantly agreed to permit a free vote on an amendment to a pending reform bill, allowing women the vote on the same terms as men. This would have satisfied Liberal suffrage supporters, and many suffragists, but the Speaker in January 1913 ruled that the amendment changed the nature of the bill, which would have to be withdrawn. Asquith was loud in his complaints against the Speaker, but was privately relieved.[145]

Asquith belatedly came around to support women's suffrage in 1917,[146] by which time he was out of office. Women over the age of thirty were eventually given the vote by Lloyd George's government under the Representation of the People Act 1918. Asquith's reforms to the House of Lords eased the way for the passage of the bill.[147]

Irish Home Rule

 
Members of the Ulster Volunteer Force march through Belfast, 1914

As a minority party after 1910 elections, the Liberals depended on the Irish vote, controlled by John Redmond. To gain Irish support for the budget and the parliament bill, Asquith promised Redmond that Irish Home Rule would be the highest priority.[148] It proved much more complex and time-consuming than expected.[149] Support for self-government for Ireland had been a tenet of the Liberal Party since 1886, but Asquith had not been as enthusiastic, stating in 1903 (while in opposition) that the party should never take office if that government would be dependent for survival on the support of the Irish Nationalist Party.[150] After 1910, though, Irish Nationalist votes were essential to stay in power. Retaining Ireland in the Union was the declared intent of all parties, and the Nationalists, as part of the majority that kept Asquith in office, were entitled to seek enactment of their plans for Home Rule, and to expect Liberal and Labour support.[10] The Conservatives, with die-hard support from the Protestant Orangemen of Ulster, were strongly opposed to Home Rule. The desire to retain a veto for the Lords on such bills had been an unbridgeable gap between the parties in the constitutional talks prior to the second 1910 election.[151]

The cabinet committee (not including Asquith) that in 1911 planned the Third Home Rule Bill opposed any special status for Protestant Ulster within majority-Catholic Ireland. Asquith later (in 1913) wrote to Churchill, stating that the Prime Minister had always believed and stated that the price of Home Rule should be a special status for Ulster. In spite of this, the bill as introduced in April 1912 contained no such provision, and was meant to apply to all Ireland.[10] Neither partition nor a special status for Ulster was likely to satisfy either side.[149] The self-government offered by the bill was very limited, but Irish Nationalists, expecting Home Rule to come by gradual parliamentary steps, favoured it. The Conservatives and Irish Unionists opposed it. Unionists began preparing to get their way by force if necessary, prompting nationalist emulation. Though very much a minority, Irish Unionists were generally better financed and more organised.[152]

Since the Parliament Act the Unionists could no longer block Home Rule in the House of Lords, but only delay Royal Assent by two years. Asquith decided to postpone any concessions to the Unionists until the bill's third passage through the Commons, when he believed the Unionists would be desperate for a compromise.[153] Jenkins concluded that had Asquith tried for an earlier agreement, he would have had no luck, as many of his opponents wanted a fight and the opportunity to smash his government.[154] Sir Edward Carson, MP for Dublin University and leader of the Irish Unionists in Parliament, threatened a revolt if Home Rule was enacted.[155] The new Conservative leader, Bonar Law, campaigned in Parliament and in northern Ireland, warning Ulstermen against "Rome Rule", that is, domination by the island's Catholic majority.[156] Many who opposed Home Rule felt that the Liberals had violated the Constitution—by pushing through major constitutional change without a clear electoral mandate, with the House of Lords, formerly the "watchdog of the constitution", not reformed as had been promised in the preamble of the 1911 Act—and thus justified actions that in other circumstances might be treason.[157]

The passions generated by the Irish question contrasted with Asquith's cool detachment, and he wrote about the prospective partition of the county of Tyrone, which had a mixed population, deeming it "an impasse, with unspeakable consequences, upon a matter which to English eyes seems inconceivably small, & to Irish eyes immeasurably big".[158] In 1912 Asquith said: "Ireland is a nation, not two nations but one nation. There are few cases in history, ...of nationality at once so distinct, so persistent and so assimilative as the Irish."[159] As the Commons debated the Home Rule bill in late 1912 and early 1913, unionists in the north of Ireland mobilised, with talk of Carson declaring a Provisional Government and Ulster Volunteer Forces (UVF) built around the Orange Lodges, but in the cabinet, only Churchill viewed this with alarm.[160] These forces, insisting on their loyalty to the British Crown but increasingly well-armed with smuggled German weapons, prepared to do battle with the British Army, but Unionist leaders were confident that the army would not aid in forcing Home Rule on Ulster.[158] As the Home Rule bill awaited its third passage through the Commons, the so-called Curragh incident occurred in April 1914. With deployment of troops into Ulster imminent and threatening language by Churchill and the Secretary of State for War, John Seely, around sixty army officers, led by Brigadier-General Hubert Gough, announced that they would rather be dismissed from the service than obey.[10] With unrest spreading to army officers in England, the Cabinet acted to placate the officers with a statement written by Asquith reiterating the duty of officers to obey lawful orders but claiming that the incident had been a misunderstanding. Seely then added an unauthorised assurance, countersigned by Sir John French (the professional head of the army), that the government had no intention of using force against Ulster. Asquith repudiated the addition, and required Seely and French to resign, taking on the War Office himself,[161] retaining the additional responsibility until hostilities against Germany began.[162]

Within a month of the start of Asquith's tenure at the War Office, the UVF landed a large cargo of guns and ammunition at Larne, but the Cabinet did not deem it prudent to arrest their leaders. On 12 May, Asquith announced that he would secure Home Rule's third passage through the Commons (accomplished on 25 May), but that there would be an amending bill with it, making special provision for Ulster. But the Lords made changes to the amending bill unacceptable to Asquith, and with no way to invoke the Parliament Act on the amending bill, Asquith agreed to meet other leaders at an all-party conference on 21 July at Buckingham Palace, chaired by the King. When no solution could be found, Asquith and his cabinet planned further concessions to the Unionists, but this did not occur as the crisis on the Continent erupted into war.[10] In September 1914, after the outbreak of the conflict, Asquith announced that the Home Rule bill would go on the statute book (as the Government of Ireland Act 1914) but would not go into force until after the war; in the interim a bill granting special status to Ulster would be considered. This solution satisfied neither side.[163]

Foreign and defence policy

 
The British Empire in 1910

Asquith led a deeply divided Liberal Party as Prime Minister, not least on questions of foreign relations and defence spending.[10] Under Balfour, Britain and France had agreed upon the Entente Cordiale.[164] In 1906, at the time the Liberals took office, there was an ongoing crisis between France and Germany over Morocco, and the French asked for British help in the event of conflict. Grey, the Foreign Secretary, refused any formal arrangement, but gave it as his personal opinion that in the event of war Britain would aid France. France then asked for military conversations aimed at co-ordination in such an event. Grey agreed, and these went on in the following years, without cabinet knowledge—Asquith most likely did not know of them until 1911. When he learnt of them, Asquith was concerned that the French took for granted British aid in the event of war, but Grey persuaded him the talks must continue.[165]

More public was the naval arms race between Britain and Germany. The Moroccan crisis had been settled at the Algeciras Conference, and Campbell-Bannerman's cabinet approved reduced naval estimates, including postponing the laying down of a second Dreadnought type battleship. Tenser relationships with Germany, and that nation moving ahead with its own dreadnoughts, led Reginald McKenna, when Asquith appointed him First Lord of the Admiralty in 1908, to propose the laying down of eight more British ones in the following three years. This prompted conflict in the Cabinet between those who supported this programme, such as McKenna, and the "economists" who promoted economy in naval estimates, led by Lloyd George and Churchill.[166] There was much public sentiment for building as many ships as possible to maintain British naval superiority. Asquith mediated among his colleagues and secured a compromise whereby four ships would be laid down at once, and four more if there proved to be a need.[167] The armaments matter was put to the side during the domestic crises over the 1909 budget and then the Parliament Act, though the building of warships continued at an accelerated rate.[168]

The Agadir crisis of 1911 was again between France and Germany over Moroccan interests, but Asquith's government signalled its friendliness towards France in Lloyd George's Mansion House speech on 21 July.[169] Late that year, the Lord President of the Council, Viscount Morley, brought the question of the communications with the French to the attention of the Cabinet. The Cabinet agreed (at Asquith's instigation) that no talks could be held that committed Britain to war, and required cabinet approval for co-ordinated military actions. Nevertheless, by 1912, the French had requested additional naval co-ordination and late in the year, the various understandings were committed to writing in an exchange of letters between Grey and French Ambassador Paul Cambon.[170] The relationship with France disquieted some Liberal backbenchers and Asquith felt obliged to assure them that nothing had been secretly agreed that would commit Britain to war. This quieted Asquith's foreign policy critics until another naval estimates dispute erupted early in 1914.[171]

July Crisis and outbreak of World War I

The assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria in Sarajevo on 28 June 1914 initiated a month of unsuccessful diplomatic attempts to avoid war.[172] These attempts ended with Grey's proposal for a four-power conference of Britain, Germany, France and Italy, following the Austrian ultimatum to Serbia on the evening of 23 July. Grey's initiative was rejected by Germany as "not practicable".[173] During this period, George Cassar considers that "the country was overwhelmingly opposed to intervention."[174] Much of Asquith's cabinet was similarly inclined, Lloyd George told a journalist on 27 July that "there could be no question of our taking part in any war in the first instance. He knew of no Minister who would be in favour of it."[173] and wrote in his War Memoirs that before the German ultimatum to Belgium on 3 August "The Cabinet was hopelessly divided—fully one third, if not one half, being opposed to our entry into the War. After the German ultimatum to Belgium the Cabinet was almost unanimous."[175] Asquith himself, while growing more aware of the impending catastrophe, was still uncertain of the necessity for Britain's involvement. On 24 July, he wrote to Venetia, "We are within measurable, or imaginable, distance of a real Armageddon. Happily there seems to be no reason why we should be anything more than spectators."[176]

During the continuing escalation Asquith "used all his experience and authority to keep his options open"[177] and adamantly refused to commit his government by saying, "The worst thing we could do would be to announce to the world at the present moment that in no circumstances would we intervene."[178] But he recognised Grey's clear commitment to Anglo-French unity and, following Russian mobilisation on 30 July,[179] and the Kaiser's ultimatum to the Tsar on 1 August, he recognised the inevitability of war.[180] From this point, he committed himself to participation, despite continuing Cabinet opposition. As he said, "There is a strong party reinforced by Ll George[, ] Morley and Harcourt who are against any kind of intervention. Grey will never consent and I shall not separate myself from him."[181] Also, on 2 August, he received confirmation of Conservative support from Bonar Law.[182] In one of two extraordinary Cabinets held on that Sunday, Grey informed members of the 1912 Anglo-French naval talks and Asquith secured agreement to mobilise the fleet.[183]

On Monday 3 August, the Belgian Government rejected the German demand for free passage through its country and in the afternoon, "with gravity and unexpected eloquence",[182] Grey spoke in the Commons and called for British action "against the unmeasured aggrandisement of any power".[184] Basil Liddell Hart considered that this speech saw the "hardening (of) British opinion to the point of intervention".[185] The following day Asquith saw the King and an ultimatum to Germany demanding withdrawal from Belgian soil was issued with a deadline of midnight Berlin time, 11.00 p.m. (GMT). Margot Asquith described the moment of expiry, somewhat inaccurately, in these terms: "(I joined) Henry in the Cabinet room. Lord Crewe and Sir Edward Grey were already there and we sat smoking cigarettes in silence … The clock on the mantelpiece hammered out the hour and when the last beat of midnight struck it was as silent as dawn. We were at War."[186]

First year of the war: August 1914 – May 1915

Asquith's wartime government

The declaration of war on 4 August 1914 saw Asquith as the head of an almost united Liberal Party. Having persuaded Sir John Simon and Lord Beauchamp to remain,[187] Asquith suffered only two resignations from his cabinet, those of John Morley and John Burns.[188] With other parties promising to co-operate, Asquith's government declared war on behalf of a united nation, Asquith bringing "the country into war without civil disturbance or political schism".[189]

The first months of the War saw a revival in Asquith's popularity. Bitterness from earlier struggles temporarily receded and the nation looked to Asquith, "steady, massive, self-reliant and unswerving",[190] to lead them to victory. But Asquith's peacetime strengths ill-equipped him for what was to become perhaps the first total war and, before its end, he would be out of office for ever and his party would never again form a majority government.[191]

Beyond the replacement of Morley and Burns,[192] Asquith made one other significant change to his cabinet. He relinquished the War Office and appointed the non-partisan but Conservative-inclined Lord Kitchener of Khartoum.[193] Kitchener was a figure of national renown and his participation strengthened the reputation of the government.[194] Whether it increased its effectiveness is less certain.[99] Overall, it was a government of considerable talent with Lloyd George remaining as Chancellor,[195] Grey as Foreign Secretary,[196] and Churchill at the Admiralty.[193]

The invasion of Belgium by German forces, the touch paper for British intervention, saw the Kaiser's armies attempt a lightning strike through Belgium against France, while holding Russian forces on the Eastern Front.[197] To support the French, Asquith's cabinet authorised the despatch of the British Expeditionary Force.[198] The ensuing Battle of the Frontiers in the late summer and early autumn of 1914 saw the final halt of the German advance at the First Battle of the Marne, which established the pattern of attritional trench warfare on the Western Front that continued until 1918.[199] This stalemate brought deepening resentment against the government, and against Asquith personally, as the population at large and the press lords in particular, blamed him for a lack of energy in the prosecution of the war.[200] It also created divisions within the Cabinet between the "Westerners", including Asquith, who supported the generals in believing that the key to victory lay in ever greater investment of men and munitions in France and Belgium,[201] and the "Easterners", led by Churchill and Lloyd George, who believed that the Western Front was in a state of irreversible stasis and sought victory through action in the East.[202] Lastly, it highlighted divisions between those politicians, and newspaper owners, who thought that military strategy and actions should be determined by the generals, and those who thought politicians should make those decisions.[203] Asquith said in his memoirs: "Once the governing objectives have been decided by Ministers at home—the execution should always be left to the untrammeled discretion of the commanders on the spot."[204] Lloyd George's counter view was expressed in a letter of early 1916 in which he asked "whether I have a right to express an independent view on the War or must (be) a pure advocate of opinions expressed by my military advisers?"[205] These divergent opinions lay behind the two great crises that would, within 14 months, see the collapse of the last ever fully Liberal administration and the advent of the first coalition, the Dardanelles Campaign and the Shell Crisis.[206]

Dardanelles Campaign

The Dardanelles Campaign was an attempt by Churchill and those favouring an Eastern strategy to end the stalemate on the Western Front. It envisaged an Anglo-French landing on Turkey's Gallipoli Peninsula and a rapid advance to Constantinople which would see the exit of Turkey from the conflict. The plan was rejected by Admiral Fisher, the First Sea Lord, and Kitchener.[207] Unable to provide decisive leadership, Asquith sought to arbitrate between these two and Churchill, leading to procrastination and delay. The naval attempt was badly defeated. Allied troops established bridgeheads on the Gallipoli Peninsula, but a delay in providing sufficient reinforcements allowed the Turks to regroup, leading to a stalemate Jenkins described "as immobile as that which prevailed on the Western Front".[208] The Allies suffered from infighting at the top, poor equipment, incompetent leadership, and lack of planning, while facing the best units of the Ottoman army. The Allies sent in 492,000 men; they suffered 132,000 casualties in the humiliating defeat—with very high rates for Australia and New Zealand that permanently transformed those dominions. In Britain, it was political ruin for Churchill and badly hurt Asquith.[209]

Shell Crisis of May 1915

The opening of 1915 saw growing division between Lloyd George and Kitchener over the supply of munitions for the army. Lloyd George considered that a munitions department, under his control, was essential to co-ordinate "the nation's entire engineering capacity".[210] Kitchener favoured the continuance of the current arrangement whereby munitions were sourced through contracts between the War Office and the country's armaments manufacturers. As so often, Asquith sought compromise through committee, establishing a group to "consider the much vexed question of putting the contracts for munitions on a proper footing".[211] This did little to dampen press criticism[212] and, on 20 April, Asquith sought to challenge his detractors in a major speech at Newcastle by saying, "I saw a statement the other day that the operations of our army were being crippled by our failure to provide the necessary ammunition. There is not a word of truth in that statement."[213]

The press response was savage: 14 May 1915 saw the publication in The Times of a letter from their correspondent Charles à Court Repington which ascribed the British failure at the Battle of Aubers Ridge to a shortage of high explosive shells. Thus opened a fully-fledged crisis, the Shell Crisis. The prime minister's wife correctly identified her husband's chief opponent, the Press baron, and owner of The Times, Lord Northcliffe: "I'm quite sure Northcliffe is at the bottom of all this,"[214] but failed to recognise the clandestine involvement of Sir John French, who leaked the details of the shells shortage to Repington.[215] Northcliffe claimed that "the whole question of the supply of the munitions of war is one on which the Cabinet cannot be arraigned too sharply."[216] Attacks on the government and on Asquith's personal lethargy came from the left as well as the right, C. P. Scott, the editor of The Manchester Guardian writing, "The Government has failed most frightfully and discreditably in the matter of munitions."[217]

Other events

Failures in both the East and the West began a tide of events that was to overwhelm Asquith's Liberal Government.[218] Strategic setbacks combined with a shattering personal blow when, on 12 May 1915, Venetia Stanley announced her engagement to Edwin Montagu. Asquith's reply was immediate and brief, "As you know well, this breaks my heart. I couldn't bear to come and see you. I can only pray God to bless you—and help me."[219] Venetia's importance to him is illustrated by a remark in a letter written in mid-1914: "Keep close to me beloved in this most critical time of my life. I know you will not fail."[220] Her engagement, "a very treacherous return after all the joy you've given me", left him devastated.[221] Significant though the loss was personally, its impact on Asquith politically can be overstated.[222] The historian Stephen Koss notes that Asquith "was always able to divide his public and private lives into separate compartments (and) soon found new confidantes to whom he was writing with no less frequency, ardour and indiscretion."[223]

This personal loss was immediately followed, on 15 May, by the resignation of Admiral Fisher after continuing disagreements with Churchill and in frustration at the disappointing developments in Gallipoli.[224] Aged 74, Fisher's behaviour had grown increasingly erratic and, in frequent letters to Lloyd George, he gave vent to his frustrations with the First Lord of the Admiralty: "Fisher writes to me every day or two to let me know how things are going. He has a great deal of trouble with his chief, who is always wanting to do something big and striking."[225] Adverse events, press hostility, Conservative opposition and personal sorrows assailed Asquith, and his position was further weakened by his Liberal colleagues. Cassar considers that Lloyd George displayed a distinct lack of loyalty,[226] and Koss writes of the contemporary rumours that Churchill had "been up to his old game of intriguing all round" and reports a claim that Churchill "unquestionably inspired" the Repington Letter, in collusion with Sir John French.[227] Lacking cohesion internally, and attacked from without, Asquith determined that his government could not continue and he wrote to the King, "I have come decidedly to the conclusion that the [Government] must be reconstituted on a broad and non-party basis."[228]

First Coalition: May 1915 – December 1916

The formation of the First Coalition saw Asquith display the political acuteness that seemed to have deserted him.[229] But it came at a cost. This involved the sacrifice of two old political comrades: Churchill, who was blamed for the Dardanelles fiasco, and Haldane, who was wrongly accused in the press of pro-German sympathies.[228] The Conservatives under Bonar Law made these removals a condition of entering government and, in sacking Haldane, who "made no difficulty",[230] Asquith, committed "the most uncharacteristic fault of (his) whole career".[231] In a letter to Grey, Asquith wrote of Haldane, "He is the oldest personal and political friend that I have in the world and, with him, you and I have stood together for the best part of 30 years."[232] But he was unable to express these sentiments directly to Haldane, who was greatly hurt. Asquith handled the allocation of offices more successfully, appointing Law to the relatively minor post of Colonial Secretary,[233] taking responsibility for munitions from Kitchener and giving it, as a new ministry, to Lloyd George and placing Balfour at the Admiralty, in place of Churchill, who was demoted to the sinecure Cabinet post of Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster. Overall the Liberals held 12 Cabinet seats, including most of the important ones, while the Conservatives held 8.[234] Despite this outcome, many Liberals were dismayed, the sacked Charles Hobhouse writing, "The disintegration of the Liberal Party is complete. Ll.G. and his Tory friends will soon get rid of Asquith."[235] From a party, and a personal, perspective, the creation of the First Coalition was seen as a "notable victory for (Asquith), if not for the allied cause".[229] But Asquith's dismissive handling of Law also contributed to his own and his party's later destruction.[236]

War re-organisation

Having reconstructed his government, Asquith attempted a re-configuration of his war-making apparatus. The most important element of this was the establishment of the Ministry of Munitions,[237] followed by the re-ordering of the War Council into a Dardanelles Committee, with Maurice Hankey as secretary and with a remit to consider all questions of war strategy.[238]

The Munitions of War Act 1915 brought private companies supplying the armed forces under the tight control of the Minister of Munitions, Lloyd George. The policy, according to J. A. R. Marriott, was that:

no private interest was to be permitted to obstruct the service, or imperil the safety, of the State. Trade Union regulations must be suspended; employers' profits must be limited, skilled men must fight, if not in the trenches, in the factories; man-power must be economised by the dilution of labour and the employment of women; Private factories must pass under the control of the State, and new national factories be set up. Results justified the new policy: the output was prodigious; the goods were at last delivered.[239]

Nevertheless, criticism of Asquith's leadership style continued. The Earl of Crawford, who had joined the Government as Minister of Agriculture, described his first Cabinet meeting in these terms: "It was a huge gathering, so big that it is hopeless for more than one or two to express opinions on each detail […] Asquith somnolent—hands shaky and cheeks pendulous. He exercised little control over debate, seemed rather bored, but good humoured throughout." Lloyd George was less tolerant, George Riddell recording in his diary, "(He) says the P.M. should lead not follow and (Asquith) never moves until he is forced, and then it is usually too late."[240] And crises, as well as criticism, continued to assail the Prime Minister, "envenomed by intra-party as well as inter-party rancour".[241]

Conscription

 
Lord Kitchener's call to arms

The insatiable demand for manpower for the Western Front had been foreseen early on. A volunteer system had been introduced at the outbreak of war, and Asquith was reluctant to change it for political reasons, as many Liberals, and almost all of their Irish Nationalist and Labour allies, were strongly opposed to conscription.[242] Volunteer numbers dropped,[243] not meeting the demands for more troops for Gallipoli, and much more strongly, for the Western Front.[244] This made the voluntary system increasingly untenable; Asquith's daughter Violet wrote in March 1915, "Gradually every man with the average number of limbs and faculties is being sucked out to the war."[245] In July 1915, the National Registration Act was passed, requiring compulsory registration for all men between the ages of 18 and 65.[246] This was seen by many as the prelude to conscription but the appointment of Lord Derby as Director-General of Recruiting instead saw an attempt to rejuvenate the voluntary system, the Derby Scheme.[247] Asquith's slow steps towards conscription continued to infuriate his opponents. Sir Henry Wilson, for example, wrote this to Leo Amery: "What is going to be the result of these debates? Will 'wait and see' win, or can that part of the Cabinet that is in earnest and is honest force that damned old Squiff into action?"[248] The Prime Minister's balancing act, within Parliament and within his own party, was not assisted by a strident campaign against conscription conducted by his wife. Describing herself as "passionately against it",[249] Margot Asquith engaged in one of her frequent influencing drives, by letters and through conversations, which had little impact other than doing "great harm" to Asquith's reputation and position.[250]

By the end of 1915, it was clear that conscription was essential and Asquith laid the Military Service Act in the House of Commons on 5 January 1916.[251] The Act introduced conscription of bachelors, and was extended to married men later in the year. Asquith's main opposition came from within his own party, particularly from Sir John Simon, who resigned. Asquith described Simon's stance in a letter to Sylvia Henley in these terms: "I felt really like a man who had been struck publicly in the face by his son."[252] Some years later, Simon acknowledged his error by saying, "I have long since realised that my opposition was a mistake."[253] Asquith's achievement in bringing the bill through without breaking up the government was considerable, to quote the estimation of his wife: "Henry's patience and skill in keeping Labour in this amazing change in England have stunned everyone,"[254] but the long struggle "hurt his own reputation and the unity of his party".[255]

Ireland

On Easter Monday 1916, a group of Irish Volunteers and members of the Irish Citizen Army seized a number of key buildings and locations in Dublin and elsewhere. There was heavy fighting over the next week before the Volunteers were forced to surrender.[256] Distracted by conscription, Asquith and the Government were slow to appreciate the developing danger,[257] which was exacerbated when, after hasty courts martial, a number of the Irish leaders were executed. On 11 May Asquith crossed to Dublin and, after a week of investigation, decided that the island's governance system was irredeemably broken,[258] He turned to Lloyd George for a solution. With his customary energy, Lloyd George brokered a settlement which would have seen Home Rule introduced at the end of the War, with the exclusion of Ulster.[259] However, neither he, nor Asquith, appreciated the extent of Conservative opposition, the plan was strongly attacked in the House of Lords, and was abandoned thereafter.[260] The episode damaged Lloyd George's reputation, but also that of Asquith. Walter Long spoke of the latter as "terribly lacking in decision".[261] It also further widened the divide between Asquith and Lloyd George, and encouraged the latter in his plans for government reconstruction. Lloyd George remarked that "Mr. A gets very few cheers nowadays."[262]

Progress of the war

 
Asquith visits the front during the Battle of the Somme, 1916

Continued Allied failure and heavy losses at the Battle of Loos between September and October 1915 ended any remaining confidence in the British commander, Sir John French and in the judgement of Lord Kitchener.[263] Asquith resorted to a favoured stratagem and, persuading Kitchener to undertake a tour of the Gallipoli battlefield in the hope that he could be persuaded to remain in the Mediterranean as Commander-in-Chief,[264] took temporary charge of the War Office himself.[265] He then replaced French with Sir Douglas Haig. In his diary for 10 December 1915, the latter recorded, "About 7 pm I received a letter from the Prime Minister marked 'Secret' and enclosed in three envelopes. It ran 'Sir J. French has placed in my hands his resignation … Subject to the King's approval, I have the pleasure of proposing to you that you should be his successor.'"[266] Asquith also appointed Sir William Robertson as Chief of the Imperial General Staff with increased powers, reporting directly to the Cabinet and with the sole right to give them military advice, relegating the Secretary of State for War to the tasks of recruiting and supplying the army.[267] Lastly, he instituted a smaller Dardanelles Committee, re-christened the War Committee,[268] with himself, Balfour, Law, Lloyd George and Reginald McKenna as members[269] although, as this soon increased, the Committee continued the failings of its predecessor, being "too large and lack(ing) executive authority".[270] None of this saved the Dardanelles Campaign and the decision to evacuate was taken in December,[271] resulting in the resignation from the Duchy of Lancaster of Churchill,[272] who wrote, "I could not accept a position of general responsibility for war policy without any effective share in its guidance and control."[269] Further reverses took place in the Balkans: the Central Powers overran Serbia, forcing the Allied troops which had attempted to intervene back towards Salonika.[273]

Early 1916 saw the start of the German offensive at Verdun, the "greatest battle of attrition in history".[274] In late May, the only significant Anglo-German naval engagement of the War took place at The Battle of Jutland. Although a strategic success,[275] the greater loss of ships on the Allied side brought early dismay.[276] Lord Newton, Paymaster General and Parliamentary spokesman for the War office in Kitchener's absence, recorded in his diary, "Stupefying news of naval battle off Jutland. Whilst listening to the list of ships lost, I thought it the worst disaster that we had ever suffered."[277] This despondency was compounded, for the nation, if not for his colleagues, when Lord Kitchener was killed in the sinking of HMS Hampshire on 5 June.[278]

Asquith first considered taking the vacant War Office himself but then offered it to Law, who declined it in favour of Lloyd George.[279] This was an important sign of growing unity of action between the two men and it filled Margot Asquith with foreboding: "I look upon this as the greatest political blunder of Henry's lifetime, … We are out: it can only be a question of time now when we shall have to leave Downing Street."[280][281]

Asquith followed this by agreeing to hold Commissions of Inquiry into the conduct of the Dardanelles and of the Mesopotamian campaign, where Allied forces had been forced to surrender at Kut.[282] Sir Maurice Hankey, Secretary to the War Committee, considered that, "the Coalition never recovered. For (its) last five months, the function of the Supreme Command was carried out under the shadow of these inquests."[283] But these mistakes were overshadowed by the limited progress and immense casualties of the Battle of the Somme, which began on 1 July 1916, and then by another devastating personal loss, the death of Asquith's son Raymond, on 15 September at the Battle of Flers–Courcelette.[284] Asquith's relationship with his eldest son had not been easy. Raymond wrote to his wife in early 1916, "If Margot talks any more bosh to you about the inhumanity of her stepchildren you can stop her mouth by telling her that during my 10 months exile here the P.M. has never written me a line of any description."[285] But Raymond's death was shattering. Violet wrote as follows: "…to see Father suffering so wrings one",[286] and Asquith passed much of the following months "withdrawn and difficult to approach".[287] The War brought no respite; Churchill remarked, "The failure to break the German line in the Somme, the recovery of the Germanic powers in the East [i.e. the defeat of the Brusilov Offensive], the ruin of Roumania and the beginnings of renewed submarine warfare strengthened and stimulated all those forces which insisted upon still greater vigour in the conduct of affairs."[288]

Fall: November–December 1916

The events that led to the collapse of the First Coalition were exhaustively chronicled by almost all of the major participants,[289] (although Asquith himself was a notable exception), and have been minutely studied by historians in the 100 years since.[290] Although many of the accounts and studies differ in detail, and present a somewhat confusing picture overall, the outline is clear. As R. J. Q. Adams wrote, "The Prime Minister depended upon [a] majority [in] Parliament. The faith of that majority in Asquith's leadership had been shaken and the appearance of a logical alternative destroyed him."[291][292][293]

Nigeria debate and Lord Lansdowne's memorandum

 
"a man called Max Aitken"

The touch paper for the final crisis was the unlikely subject of the sale of captured German assets in Nigeria.[294] As Colonial Secretary, the Conservative leader Bonar Law led the debate and was subject to a furious attack by Sir Edward Carson. The issue itself was trivial,[295] but the fact that Law had been attacked by a leading member of his own party, and was not supported by Lloyd George (who absented himself from the House only to dine with Carson later in the evening), was not.[296]

Margot Asquith immediately sensed the coming danger: "From that night it was quite clear that Northcliffe, Rothermere, Bonar, Carson, Ll.G (and a man called Max Aitken) were going to run the Government. I knew it was the end."[297] Grey was similarly prescient and wrote, "Lloyd George means to break up the Government."[298] Law saw the debate as a threat to his own political position,[299] as well as another instance of lack of grip by the government.[300]

The situation was further inflamed by the publication of a memorandum on future prospects in the war by Lord Lansdowne.[301] Circulated on 13 November, it considered, and did not dismiss, the possibility of a negotiated settlement with the Central Powers. Asquith's critics immediately assumed that the memorandum represented his own views and that Lansdowne was being used as a stalking horse,[302] Lord Crewe going so far as to suggest that the Lansdowne Memorandum was the "veritable causa causans[n] of the final break-up".[303]

Triumvirate gathers

On 20 November 1916 Lloyd George, Carson and Law met at the Hyde Park Hotel.[304] The meeting was organised by Max Aitken, who was to play central roles both in the forthcoming crisis and in its subsequent historiography.[305] Max Aitken was a Canadian adventurer, millionaire, and close friend of Law.[306] His book on the fall of the First Coalition, Politicians and the War 1914–1916, although always partial and sometimes inaccurate, gives a detailed insider's view of the events leading up to Asquith's political demise.[307] The trio agreed on the necessity of overhauling the government and further agreed on the mechanism for doing so; the establishment of a small War Council, chaired by Lloyd George, with no more than five members and with full executive authority for the conduct of the war.[308]

Asquith was to be retained as prime minister, and given honorific oversight of the War Council, but day to day operations would be directed by Lloyd George.[304] This scheme, although often reworked, remained the basis of all proposals to reform the government until Asquith's fall on 6 December. Until almost the end, both Law[309] and Lloyd George[310] wished to retain Asquith as premier, but Aitken,[307] Carson[311] and Lord Northcliffe emphatically did not.[312]

Power without responsibility

 
Lord Northcliffe teeing up

Lord Northcliffe's role was critical, as was the use Lloyd George made of him, and of the press in general. Northcliffe's involvement also highlights the limitations of both Aitken's and Lloyd George's accounts of Asquith's fall. Both minimised Northcliffe's part in the events. In his War Memoirs, Lloyd George stated emphatically "Lord Northcliffe was never, at any stage, brought into our consultations."[313] Aitken supported this by saying, "Lord Northcliffe was not in active co-operation with Lloyd George."[314] But these claims are contradicted by others. In their biography of Northcliffe, Reginald Pound and Geoffrey Harmsworth record Northcliffe's brother Rothermere writing contemporaneously, "Alfred has been actively at work with Ll.G. with a view to bringing about a change."[315] Riddell wrote in his diary for 27 May 1916: "LG never mentions directly that he sees Northcliffe but I am sure they are in daily contact."[316] Margot Asquith was also certain of Northcliffe's role, and of Lloyd George's involvement, although she obscured both of their names when writing in her diary: "I only hope the man responsible for giving information to Lord N- will be heavily punished: God may forgive him; I never can."[317] They are also contradicted by events; Northcliffe met with Lloyd George on each of the three days just prior to Lloyd George's resignation, on 1, 2, and 3 December,[318] including two meetings on 1 December, both before and after Lloyd George put his revised proposals for the War Council to Asquith.[319] It seems improbable that ongoing events were not discussed and that the two men confined their conversations to negotiating article circulation rights for Lloyd George once he had resigned, as Pound and Harmsworth weakly suggest.[320] The attempts made by others to use Northcliffe and the wider press also merit consideration. In this regard, some senior military officers were extremely active. Robertson, for example, wrote to Northcliffe in October 1916, "The Boche gives me no trouble compared with what I meet in London. So any help you can give me will be of Imperial value."[321] Lastly, the actions of Northcliffe's newspapers must be considered—in particular The Times editorial on 4 December which led Asquith to reject Lloyd George's final War Council proposals.[322] Thompson, Northcliffe's most recent biographer, concludes, "From the evidence, it appears that Northcliffe and his newspapers should be given more credit than they have generally received for the demise of the Asquith government in December 1916."[323]

To-ing and fro-ing

Law met again with Carson and Lloyd George on 25 November and, with Aitken's help, drafted a memorandum for Asquith's signature.[324] This would see a "Civilian General Staff", with Lloyd George as chairman and Asquith as president, attending irregularly but with the right of referral to Cabinet as desired.[324] This Law presented to Asquith, who committed to reply on Monday the following week.[325]

His reply was an outright rejection; the proposal was impossible "without fatally impairing the confidence of colleagues, and undermining my own authority."[325] Law took Asquith's response to Carson and Lloyd George at Law's office in the Colonial Office. All were uncertain of the next steps.[326] Law decided it would be appropriate to meet with his senior Conservative colleagues, something he had not previously done.[327] He saw Austen Chamberlain, Lord Curzon and Lord Robert Cecil on Thursday 30 November. All were united in opposition to Lloyd George's War Council plans, with Chamberlain writing, "(we) were unanimously of opinion (sic) that (the plans) were open to grave objection and made certain alternative proposals."[328]

Lloyd George had also been reflecting on the substance of the scheme and, on Friday 1 December, he met with Asquith to put forward an alternative. This would see a War Council of three, the two Service ministers and a third without portfolio. One of the three, presumably Lloyd George although this was not explicit, would be chairman. Asquith, as Prime Minister, would retain "supreme control."[329]

Asquith's reply the same day did not constitute an outright rejection, but he did demand that he retain the chairmanship of the council.[330] As such, it was unacceptable to Lloyd George and he wrote to Law the next day (Saturday 2 December), "I enclose copy of P.M.'s letter. The life of the country depends on resolute action by you now."[331]

Last four days: Sunday 3 December to Wednesday 6 December

In a four-day crisis Asquith was unaware how fast he was losing support. Lloyd George now had growing Unionist support, the backing of Labour and (thanks to the efforts of Christopher Addison) a majority of Liberal MPs. Asquith fell and Lloyd George answered the loud demands for a much more decisive government. He energetically set up a new small war cabinet, a cabinet secretariat under Hankey, and a secretariat of private advisors in the 'Garden Suburb' to move towards prime ministerial control.[332]

Sunday 3 December

Sunday 3 December saw the Conservative leadership meet at Law's house, Pembroke Lodge.[333] They gathered against a backdrop of ever-growing press involvement, in part fermented by Max Aitken.[334] That morning's Reynold's News, owned and edited by Lloyd George's close associate Henry Dalziel, had published an article setting out Lloyd George's demands to Asquith and claiming that he intended to resign and take his case to the country if they were not met.[335] At Law's house, the Conservatives present drew up a resolution which they demanded Law present to Asquith.[336]

This document, subsequently the source of much debate, stated that "the Government cannot continue as it is; the Prime Minister (should) tender the resignation of the Government" and, if Asquith was unwilling to do that, the Conservative members of the Government would "tender (their) resignations."[337] The meaning of this resolution is unclear, and even those who contributed to it took away differing interpretations.[338]

Chamberlain felt that it left open the options of either Asquith or Lloyd George as premier, dependent on who could gain greater support. Curzon, in a letter of that day to Lansdowne, stated that no one at the Pembroke Lodge meeting felt that the war could be won under Asquith's continued leadership, and that the issue for the Liberal politicians to resolve was whether Asquith remained in a Lloyd George administration in a subordinate role, or left the government altogether.[339] Max Aitken's claim that the resolution's purpose was to ensure that "Lloyd George should go"[340] is not supported by most of the contemporary accounts,[341] or by the assessments of most subsequent historians.

As one example, Gilmour, Curzon's biographer, writes that the Unionist ministers "did not, as Beaverbrook alleged, decide to resign themselves in order to strengthen the Prime Minister's hand against Lloyd George..(their intentions) were completely different."[342] Similarly, Adams, Law's latest biographer, describes Aitken's interpretation of the resolution as "convincingly overturned".[343] John Ramsden is equally clear: "the Unionist ministers acted to strengthen Lloyd George's hand, from a conviction that only greater power for Lloyd George could put enough drive into the war effort."[344]

Law then took the resolution to Asquith, who had, unusually, broken his weekend at Walmer Castle to return to Downing Street.[345] At their meeting Law sought to convey the content of his colleagues' earlier discussion but failed to produce the resolution itself.[346] That it was never actually shown to Asquith is incontrovertible, and Asquith confirmed this in his writings.[347] Law's motives in not handing it over are more controversial. Law himself maintained he simply forgot.[348] Jenkins charges him with bad faith, or neglect of duty.[349] Adams suggests that Law's motives were more complex (the resolution also contained a clause condemning the involvement of the press, prompted by the Reynold's News story of that morning)[350] and that, in continuing to seek an accommodation between Asquith and Lloyd George, Law felt it prudent not to share the actual text.[351]

The outcome of the interview between Law and Asquith was clear, even if Law had not been.[352] Asquith immediately decided that an accommodation with Lloyd George, and a substantial reconstruction to placate the Unionist ministers, were required.[353] He summoned Lloyd George and together they agreed a compromise that was, in fact, little different from Lloyd George's 1 December proposals.[354] The only substantial amendment was that Asquith would have daily oversight of the War Council's work and a right of veto.[354] John Grigg saw this compromise as "very favourable to Asquith".[355] Cassar is less certain: "The new formula left him in a much weaker position[, his] authority merely on paper for he was unlikely to exercise his veto lest it bring on the collective resignation of the War Council."[356] Nevertheless, Asquith, Lloyd George, and Law who had rejoined them at 5.00 pm, all felt a basis for a compromise had been reached, and they agreed that Asquith would issue a bulletin that evening announcing the reconstruction of the Government.[356] Crewe, who joined Asquith at Montagu's house at 10.00 p.m., recorded: "accommodation with Mr. Lloyd George would ultimately be achieved, without sacrifice of (Asquith's) position as chief of the War Committee; a large measure of reconstruction would satisfy the Unionist Ministers."[357]

Despite Lloyd George's denials of collaboration, the diary for 3 December by Northcliffe's factotum Tom Clarke, records that: "The Chief returned to town and at 7.00 o'clock he was at the War Office with Lloyd George."[358] Meanwhile, Duff Cooper was invited to dinner at Montagu's Queen Anne's Gate house, he afterwards played bridge with Asquith, Venetia Montagu and Churchill's sister-in-law "Goonie", recording in his diary : "..the P.M. more drunk than I have ever seen him, (..) so drunk that one felt uncomfortable … an extraordinary scene."[359]

Monday 4 December

The bulletin was published on the morning of Monday 4 December. It was accompanied by an avalanche of press criticism, all of it intensely hostile to Asquith.[360] The worst was a leader in Northcliffe's Times.[361] This had full details of the compromise reached the day before, including the names of those suggested as members of the War Council. More damagingly still, it ridiculed Asquith, claiming he had conspired in his own humiliation and would henceforth be "Prime Minister in name only."[360] Lloyd George's involvement is uncertain; he denied any,[362] but Asquith was certain he was the source.[363] The author was certainly the editor, Geoffrey Dawson, with some assistance from Carson. But it seems likely that Carson's source was Lloyd George.[318]

The leak prompted an immediate reaction from Asquith: "Unless the impression is at once corrected that I am being relegated to the position of an irresponsible spectator of the War, I cannot possibly go on."[362] Lloyd George's reply was prompt and conciliatory: "I cannot restrain nor I fear influence Northcliffe. I fully accept in letter and in spirit your summary of the suggested arrangement—subject of course to personnel."[364] But Asquith's mind was already turning to rejection of the Sunday compromise and outright confrontation with Lloyd George.[365]

It is unclear exactly whom Asquith spoke with on 4 December. Beaverbrook and Crewe state he met Chamberlain, Curzon and Cecil.[366][367] Cassar follows these opinions, to a degree.[368] But Chamberlain himself was adamant that he and his colleagues met Asquith only once during the crisis and that was on the following day, Tuesday 5 December. Chamberlain wrote at the time, "On Tuesday afternoon the Prime Minister sent for Curzon, Bob Cecil and myself. This is the first and only time the three of us met Asquith during those fateful days."[369] His recollection is supported by details of their meetings with Law and other colleagues,[369] in the afternoon, and then in the evening of the 4th,[370] and by most modern historians, e.g. Gilmour[371] and Adams.[372] Crawford records how little he and his senior Unionist colleagues were involved in the key discussions, and by implication, how much better informed were the press lords, writing in his diary: "We were all in such doubt as to what had actually occurred, and we sent out for an evening paper to see if there was any news!"[373] Asquith certainly did meet his senior Liberal colleagues on the evening of 4 December; they were unanimously opposed to compromise with Lloyd George and supported Asquith's growing determination to fight.[365] His way forward had been cleared by his tendering the resignation of his government to the King earlier in the day.[368] Asquith also saw Law, who confirmed that he would resign if Asquith failed to implement the War Council agreement as discussed only the day before.[374] In the evening, and having declined two requests for meetings, Asquith threw down the gauntlet to Lloyd George by rejecting the War Council proposal.[375]

Tuesday 5 December

Lloyd George accepted the challenge by return of post, writing: "As all delay is fatal in war, I place my office without further parley at your disposal."[375] Asquith had anticipated this response, but was surprised by a letter from Arthur Balfour, who until that point had been removed from the crisis by illness.[376] On its face, this letter merely offered confirmation that Balfour believed that Lloyd George's scheme for a smaller War Council deserved a chance and that he had no wish to remain at the Admiralty if Lloyd George wished him out. Jenkins argues that Asquith should have recognised it as a shift of allegiance.[376] Asquith discussed the crisis with Lord Crewe and they agreed an early meeting with the Unionist ministers was essential. Without their support, "it would be impossible for Asquith to continue."[377]

Asquith's meeting with Chamberlain, Curzon and Cecil at 3.00 p.m. only highlighted the weakness of his position.[352] They unanimously declined to serve in a Government that did not include Law and Lloyd George,[378] as a Government so constituted offered no "prospect of stability". Their reply to Asquith's follow-up question as to whether they would serve under Lloyd George caused him even more concern. The "Three Cs" stated they would serve under Lloyd George if he could create the stable Government they considered essential for the effective prosecution of the war.[379] The end was near, and a further letter from Balfour declining to reconsider his earlier decision brought it about. The Home Secretary, Herbert Samuel, recorded in a contemporaneous note: "We were all strongly of opinion, from which [Asquith] did not dissent, that there was no alternative [to resignation]. We could not carry on without LlG and the Unionists and ought not to give the appearance of wishing to do so."[380] At 7.00 pm, having been Prime Minister for eight years and 241 days, Asquith went to Buckingham Palace and tendered his resignation.[381] Describing the event to a friend sometime later, Asquith wrote, "When I fully realised what a position had been created, I saw that I could not go on without dishonour or impotence, or both."[382] That evening, he dined at Downing Street with family and friends, his daughter-in-law Cynthia describing the scene: "I sat next to the P.M.—he was too darling—rubicund, serene, puffing a guinea cigar and talking of going to Honolulu."[383] Cynthia believed that he would be back "in the saddle" within a fortnight with his position strengthened.[384]

Later that evening Law, who had been to the Palace to receive the King's commission, arrived to enquire whether Asquith would serve under him. Lord Crewe described Asquith's reply as "altogether discouraging, if not definitely in the negative."[381][o]

Wednesday 6 December

I am personally very sorry for poor old Squiff. He has had a hard time and even when 'exhilarated' seems to have had more capacity and brain power than any of the others. However, I expect more action and less talk is needed now

General Douglas Haig on Asquith's fall (6 December)[386]

Wednesday saw an afternoon conference at Buckingham Palace, hosted by the King and chaired by Balfour.[387] There is some doubt as to the originator of the idea,[387] although Adams considers that it was Law.[388] This is supported by a handwritten note of Aitken's, reproduced in A.J.P. Taylor's life of that politician, which reads: "6th Wed. Meeting at BL house with G. (Lloyd George) and C. (Carson)—Decide on Palace Conference."[389] Conversely, Crewe suggests that the suggestion came jointly from Lord Derby and Edwin Montagu.[390] However it came about, it did not bring the compromise the King sought. Within two hours of its break-up, Asquith, after consulting his Liberal colleagues,[391] except for Lloyd George, declined to serve under Law,[388] who accordingly declined the King's commission.[392] At 7.00 pm. Lloyd George was invited to form a Government. In just over twenty four hours he had done so, forming a small War Cabinet instead of the mooted War Council, and at 7.30 p.m. on Thursday 7 December he kissed hands as Prime Minister.[393] His achievement in creating a government was considerable, given that almost all of the senior Liberals sided with Asquith.[394] Balfour's acceptance of the Foreign Office made it possible.[395] Others placed a greater responsibility on Asquith as the author of his own downfall, for example Churchill: "A fierce, resolute Asquith, fighting with all his powers would have conquered easily. But the whole trouble arose from the fact that there was no fierce resolute Asquith to win this war or any other."[396]

Wartime Opposition Leader: 1916–1918

The Asquiths finally vacated 10 Downing Street on 9 December. Asquith, not normally given to displays of emotion, confided to his wife that he felt he had been stabbed.[384] He likened himself (10 December) to the Biblical character Job, although he also commented that Aristide Briand's government was also under strain in France.[397] Lord Newton wrote in his diary of meeting Asquith at dinner a few days after the fall, "It became painfully evident that he was suffering from an incipient nervous breakdown and before leaving the poor man completely collapsed."[398] Asquith was particularly appalled at Balfour's behaviour,[399] especially as he had argued against Lloyd George to retain Balfour at the Admiralty.[400] Writing years later, Margot's spleen was still evident: "between you and me, this is what hurt my husband more than anything else. That Lloyd George (a Welshman!) should betray him, he dimly did understand, but that Arthur should join his enemy and help to ruin him, he never understood."[400]

Asquith's fall was met with rejoicing in much of the British and Allied press and sterling rallied against the German mark on the New York markets. Press attacks on Asquith continued and indeed increased after the publication of the Dardanelles Report.[401]

Like Sir Robert Peel after 1846, Asquith after 1916 still controlled the party machinery and resented those who had ousted him, but showed no real interest in reuniting his party. Asquith did not put any pressure on Liberals to eschew joining the coalition government; in fact, though, few Liberals did join it. Most Liberal parliamentarians remained intensely loyal to him, and felt that he alone should not be left to face the criticism. On 8 December a gathering of Liberal MPs gave Asquith a vote of confidence as Leader of the Liberal Party, followed unanimously a few days later by the executive of the National Liberal Federation. There was much hostility to Lloyd George at these gatherings.[402]

Within Parliament, Asquith pursued a course of quiet support, retaining a "heavy, continuing responsibility for the decision of August 4, 1914."[403] A. G. Gardiner in The Daily News (9 December) stated explicitly that Lloyd George's government should not have to live under the constant barrage of criticism that Asquith's coalition had endured.[404] In a "gracious" reply to Lloyd George's first speech in the House of Commons as Prime Minister on 19 December 1916, Asquith made clear that he did not see his role "in any sense to be the leader of what is called an opposition".[405] From around the spring of 1917 Asquith's reluctance to criticise the government at all began to exasperate some of his press supporters.[404]

Outside of the Commons, Margot and he returned to 20 Cavendish Square and he divided his life between there, The Wharf and visiting. Money, in the absence of his premier's salary, became more of a concern.[406] In March 1917 he was informally offered the Lord Chancellorship, with the highest salary in government, but he declined.[146] Personal sadness continued in December 1917 when Asquith's third son Arthur, known in the family as "Oc", was badly wounded fighting in France; his leg was amputated in January 1918. Asquith's daughter-in-law recorded in her diary, "The Old Boy (Asquith) sent me fifteen pounds and also, in a letter, told me the sad news of poor, dear Oc having been badly wounded again."[407]

Maurice Debate

On 7 May 1918 a letter from a serving officer, Major-General Sir Frederick Maurice appeared in four London newspapers, accusing Lloyd George and Law of having misled the House of Commons in debates the previous month as to the manpower strength of the army in France.[146] Asquith, who received a letter from Maurice on 6 May,[408] and had also been in contact with the sacked Robertson,[409] with whom Maurice discussed the letter, called for a Select Committee of the House to investigate the charges.[410] In response to a private notice question, Law had offered a judicial inquiry, with Asquith free to choose the judges, but Asquith declined this offer on the evening of 7 May, thinking it contrary to the dignity of Parliament.[411] Prior to the debate, he received a surprising communication (8 May) from H. A. Gwynne, the editor of The Morning Post, and previously a fervent opponent. "The effect of the Maurice letter, and your motion, must be the dissolution of the present government (and) your accession to power."[412] At this point "Asquith hated Lloyd George with a passion" but he did not want the premiership for himself.[413] Asquith's opening speech on the Select Committee motion was lengthy and lacked punch. Bridgeman recorded, "He did not make much of a case, and did not even condemn Maurice's breach of the King's Regulations, for which he got a very heavy blow from L.G.".[414] Lloyd George's one and a quarter-hour long reply was "a stunning solo display by the greatest rhetorician of his age"[415] in which he threatened the House with the inevitable political consequence of a vote for Asquith's motion. "... if this motion is carried, he [Asquith] will again be responsible for the conduct of the War. Make no mistake!"[416] John Ramsden summed up the opinion in the House of Commons: "Lloyd George's lies were (preferred to) Asquith's half-measures."[417] The motion was defeated by 293 votes to 106, more an "utter rejection of Asquith, than (a) wholehearted endorsement of Lloyd George",[418] and the latter's position in Parliament was not seriously threatened for the remainder of the War.

End of the war

Asquith was left politically discredited by the Maurice Debate and by the clear turn of the war in the Allies' favour from the summer of 1918. He devoted far more effort to his Romanes Lecture "Some Aspects of the Victorian Age" at Oxford in June 1918 than to any political speech. However, Lady Ottoline Morrell thought it "a dull address".[419] A letter of July 1918 describes a typical couple of days. "Nothing much is happening here. I dined with the usual crowd at Mrs. Astor's last night. The Duke of Connaught lunches here on Friday: don't you wish you were coming!"[420]

The beginning of the end of the war began where it had begun, with the last German offensive on the Western Front, the Second Battle of the Marne.[421] "The tide of German success was stemmed and the ebb began under pressure of the great Allied counter-stroke."[421] In response to the Allied offensives, "the governments of the Central Powers were everywhere in collapse".[422]

Decline and eclipse: 1918–1926

Coupon election

Even before the Armistice, Lloyd George had been considering the political landscape and, on 2 November 1918, wrote to Law proposing an immediate election with a formal endorsement—for which Asquith coined the name "Coupon", with overtones of wartime food rationing—for Coalition candidates.[423] News of his plans soon reached Asquith, causing considerable concern. On 6 November he wrote to Hilda Henderson, "I suppose that tomorrow we shall be told the final decision about this accursed election."[424] A Liberal delegation met Lloyd George in the week of 6 November to propose Liberal reunification but was swiftly rebuffed.[425][424]

Asquith joined in the celebrations of the Armistice, speaking in the Commons, attending the service of thanksgiving at St Margaret's, Westminster and afterwards lunching with King George.[426] Asquith had a friendly meeting with Lloyd George a few days after the Armistice (the exact date is unclear), which Lloyd George began by saying "I understand you don't wish to join the government." [427] Asquith was instead keen to go to the Peace Conference, where he considered his expertise at finance and international law would have been an asset.[428] As he refused to accept public subordination, Lloyd George, despite lobbying from the King and Churchill, refused to invite him.[429][427]

Asquith led the Liberal Party into the election, but with a singular lack of enthusiasm, writing on 25 November: "I doubt whether there is much interest. The whole thing is a wicked fraud."[429] The Liberal leaders expected to lose the 1918 election badly, as they had lost the "Khaki Election" in 1900, but did not foresee the sheer scale of the defeat.[430] Asquith hoped for 100 Liberal MPs to be returned.[431] He began by attacking the Conservatives, but was eventually driven to attack the "blank cheque" which the government was demanding.[430]

Asquith was one of five people given a free pass by the Coalition but the East Fife Unionist Association defied national instructions and put up a candidate, Alexander Sprot, against him.[430] Sprot was refused a Coalition "coupon".[432] Asquith assumed his own seat would be safe and spent only two and half days there, speaking only to closed meetings; in one speech there on 11 December he conceded that he did not want to "displace" the current government. He scoffed at press rumours that he was being barracked by a gang of discharged soldiers.[430] Postwar reconstruction, the desire for harsh peace terms, and Asquith's desire to attend the peace talks, were campaign issues, with posters asking: "Asquith nearly lost you the War. Are you going to let him spoil the Peace?"[433] James Scott, his chairman at East Fife, wrote of "a swarm of women going from door to door indulging in a slander for which they had not a shadow of proof. This was used for such a purpose as to influence the female vote very much against you."[p][434]

At the poll on 14 December, Lloyd George's coalition won a landslide, with Asquith and every other former Liberal Cabinet minister losing his seat.[435] Margot later recorded having telephoned Liberal headquarters for the results: "Give me the East Fife figures: Asquith 6994—Sprott [sic] 8996." She said she had exclaimed "Asquith beat? … Thank God!"[436] Augustine Birrell also wrote to him "You are surely better off out of it for the time, than watching Ll.G. lead apes to Hell".[437] But for Asquith personally, "the blow was crippling, a personal humiliation which destroyed his hope of exercising any influence on the peace settlement."[432]

1919: out of Parliament

 
1919 portrait by André Cluysenaar

Asquith remained leader of the Liberal Party, despite McKenna vainly urging him, almost immediately after the election, to offer his resignation to the National Liberal Federation and help with building an alliance with Labour.[433] At first Asquith was extremely unpopular, and there is no evidence that he was invited to address any Liberal Association anywhere in the country for the first six months of 1919.[438] He continued to be calumnied in the press and Parliament over the supposed presence of Germans in Downing Street during the war.[439]

Although accounts differ as to the exact numbers, around 29 uncouponed Liberals had been elected, only three with any junior ministerial experience, not all of them opponents of the coalition. There was widespread discontent at Asquith's leadership, and Sir T. A. Bramsdon, who said that he had been elected at Portsmouth only by promising not to support Asquith, protested openly at his remaining leader from outside the Commons. At first Lloyd George extended the government whip to all Liberal MPs. On 3 February 23 non-coalition Liberals formed themselves into a "Free Liberal" group (soon known as the "Wee Frees" after a Scottish religious sect of that name); they accepted Asquith's appointment of Sir Donald Maclean as chairman in his absence but insisted that G.R. Thorne, whom Asquith had appointed Chief Whip, hold that job jointly with J.M. Hogge, of whom Asquith and Maclean had a low opinion. After a brief attempt to set up a joint committee with the Coalition Liberal MPs to explore reunion, the "Wee Frees" resigned the government whip on 4 April, although some Liberal MPs still remained of uncertain allegiance.[440] The Liberals won by-elections in March and April 1919, but thereafter Labour performed better than the Liberals in by-elections.[441]

In April 1919 Asquith gave a weak speech to Liberal candidates, his first public speech since the election. In Newcastle (15 May) he gave a slightly stronger speech, encouraged by his audience to "Hit Out!"[442] Asquith was also disappointed by the "terms and spirit" of the Treaty of Versailles in May, but did not oppose it very strongly in public.[439] On 31 July 1919, after a lunch in honour of former Supreme Allied Commander Ferdinand Foch, Asquith wrote "he talked a lot of nonsense about Germany sinking never to rise again."[434]

In August 1919 Asquith was asked to preside over a Royal Commission into the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, although the report when it came was, in line with Asquith's own academic views, somewhat conservative.[438] The commission began hearings in January 1920; many dons would have preferred Haldane as chair.[442] Asquith's public rehabilitation continued with the receipt in late 1919 of the 1914 Star, the British War Medal and the Victory Medal, honours which the War Office, under Churchill, had originally intended only to be awarded to Lloyd George, until the King insisted Asquith receive them also.[438]

Maclean and others urged Asquith to stand in the Spen Valley by-election in December 1919, but it is unclear whether he ever considered the idea. This was just as well, as it had become clear that Labour were going to fight the seat hard and they defeated Sir John Simon when Lloyd George insisted on splitting the Liberal vote by running a Coalition Liberal candidate.[439]

Paisley

A Parliamentary seat was essential if Asquith was again to play any serious part in future events. By the autumn of 1919 J.M. Hogge was openly critical of Asquith's leadership, and by January 1920 it was rumoured that he had given Asquith an ultimatum that unless he returned to Parliament in a by-election the Independent Liberal MPs would repudiate him as their leader (had he lost a by-election, his position would have been untenable anyway, as he well knew).[443]

In January 1920, an opportunity arose at Paisley, in Scotland like his previous seat, after the death of the Liberal MP.[444] The Liberals had held the seat by only 106 votes in 1918. Asquith's adoption was not a foregone conclusion: the local Association was split between pro- and anti-coalition factions, and he was selected by a vote of 20:17 by the executive and then 92:75 of the wider members. He was formally adopted on 21 January 1920 and soon united the local Liberal Association behind him.[441][445] Asquith was lukewarm at the thought of returning to Scotland, and regarded his gamble with trepidation, although he grew more confident as the campaign progressed.[446] Travelling with Margot, his daughter Violet and a small staff, Asquith directed most of his campaign not against Labour, who were already in second place, but against the Coalition, calling for a less harsh line on German reparations and the Irish War of Independence.[447] Some "thought fit to compare [the campaign] with Gladstone's Midlothian campaign,[448] although Asquith himself was more circumspect.[449]

The result was stupendous, with Asquith defeating his Labour opponent by a majority of over 2000 votes, with the Coalition candidate a very poor third.[450] Violet was ecstatic: "every star in the political skies favoured Father when we left Paisley, he became there what he has never before been in his life, the 'popular' candidate, the darling of the crowd."[451] The poll was up by 8,000 from 1918.[450] Asquith's surprise victory was helped by the support of the press baron Lord Rothermere.[452]

He was seen off by tumultuous crowds at Glasgow, and greeted by further crowds at Euston the next morning, and along the road on his first return to Parliament. However, he received only a chilly greeting inside the Chamber, and no personal congratulations from Coalition politicians, except from Lord Cave, who was later to defeat him for the Chancellorship of Oxford University in 1925.[453]

Leader of the Opposition: 1920–1921

Paisley was a false dawn, for the Liberals and for Asquith personally. Jenkins wrote that "The post-war Liberal day never achieved more than a grey and short-lived light. By 1924, it was dusk again. By 1926, for Asquith, it was political night."[454] Maurice Cowling characterised Asquith at this time as "a dignified wreck, neither effective in the House of Commons nor attractive as a public reputation, (who) drank too much and (who) had lost touch with the movement of events and the spirit of the time."[455]

Money, or its lack, also became an increasing concern. Margot's extravagance was legendary[456] and Asquith was no longer earning either the legal fees or the prime ministerial salary they had enjoyed in earlier years. Additionally, there were on-going difficulties with Margot's inheritance.[456] In 1920, as an economy measure, 20 Cavendish Square was sold[457] to Viscountess Cowdray[458] and Asquith and Margot moved to 44, Bedford Square.[457]

Criticism of Asquith's weak leadership continued. Lloyd George's mistress Frances Stevenson wrote (18 March) that he was "finished … no fight left in him"; the press baron Lord Rothermere, who had supported him at Paisley, wrote on 1 April of his "obvious incapacity for the position he is expected to fill".[459] In fact Asquith spoke in the House of Commons far more frequently than he had ever previously done when not a minister. He also spoke frequently around the country, in June 1921 topping the Liberal Chief Whip's list of the most active speakers.[460] The issue was the quality of his contributions. Asquith still maintained friendly relations with Lloyd George, although Margot made no secret of her enmity for him.[461]

Until the Paisley by-election Asquith had accepted that the next government must be some kind of Liberal-Labour coalition, but Labour had distanced themselves because of his policies on the mines, the Russo-Polish War, education, the prewar secret treaties and the suppression of the Easter Rebellion.[462] The success of Anti-Waste League candidates at by-elections made leading Liberals feel that there was a strong anti-Coalition vote which might be tapped by a wider-based and more credible opposition.[463] By late June 1921 Asquith's leadership was still under strong attack from within the Wee Free group, although Frances Stevenson's claim in her diary that most of them now wanted Lloyd George as their leader is not corroborated by the report in The Times.[464] Lord Robert Cecil, a moderate and pro-League of Nations Conservative, had been having talks with Edward Grey about a possible coalition, and Asquith and leading Liberals Crewe, Runciman and Maclean had a meeting with them on 5 July 1921, and two subsequent ones. Cecil wanted a genuine coalition rather than a de facto Liberal government, with Grey rather than Asquith as Prime Minister, but the Liberals did not, and little came of the plans.[465][462]

Asquith did fiercely oppose "the hellish policy of reprisals" in Ireland, impressing the young Oswald Mosley.[464] J.M. Hogge even urged Sir Donald Maclean (31 August) to "knock Asquith into the middle of next week" and seize back the chairmanship of the Liberal MPs.[461] Late in 1921 the National Liberal Federation adopted an industrial programme without Asquith's agreement.[466] On 24 October 1921 Asquith commented "if one tries to strike a bold true note half one's friends shiver and cower, and implore one not to get in front of the band".[461]

Leader of the Opposition: 1922

In January 1922 C.P. Scott of the Manchester Guardian told Asquith that he supported a centre-left grouping, but only if moderate Labour was included—in reality Labour leaders were unable to deliver the support of their local members for such a realignment.[467] Asquith achieved more success with a major speech at Westminster Central Hall in January 1922, in reply to a speech by Lloyd George a few days earlier. Asquith had with some difficulty been persuaded to make the maximum possible reference to his renewed alliance with Grey, but Haldane had refused to join the platform. Five days later Churchill replied with a pro-Coalition speech in which he accused Asquith and other Liberals of having "stood carefully aside" during the war, causing deep offence.[468][q]

By the summer of 1922 Asquith's interest in politics was at a very low ebb.[470] He was observed to be "very heavily loaded" and was helped up the stairs by Lloyd George at a party of Sir Philip Sassoon's on 16 July 1922, whilst his reputation was further damaged by his portrayal in Aldous Huxley's novel Crome Yellow and by the publication of the first volume of Margot's memoirs, which sold well in the UK and the USA, but were thought an undignified way for a former Prime Minister to make money.[471] On 13 September 1922 Sir Donald Maclean told Harold Laski that Asquith was devoted to bridge and small talk and did not do enough real work.[466] Asquith was increasingly attracted by the thought of making money from writing, with Churchill doing very well from his The World Crisis and Lloyd George rumoured to be being paid handsomely for his memoirs (which in the event did not appear until the mid-1930s).[472] Asquith's books The Genesis of the War finally appeared in September 1923 and Studies and Sketches in 1924.[473] His second son Herbert recorded, "A large part of my father's later years was occupied with authorship and it was during this period that he wrote most of his longer books."[474]

Asquith played no part in Lloyd George's fall from power in October 1922, which happened because the rank-and-file majority of his Conservative coalition partners, led by Stanley Baldwin and Lloyd George's former colleague Law, deserted him.[475] Law formed a purely Conservative government, and the following month, at the 1922 general election, Asquith ceased to be Leader of the Opposition as more Labour MPs were elected than the two Liberal factions combined. 138 Labour members outnumbered the combined Liberal number of 117, with 60 Asquith supporters and 57 "National Liberals" (adherents to Lloyd George).[476] Asquith had thought Paisley would be safe but was only narrowly returned with a 316 majority (50.5 per cent of the votes cast in a two-candidate battle with Labour), despite a rise in the Liberal vote. He put this down to the 5,000 unemployed at Paisley after the slump of 1920–1921. He wrote that he "gloated" over the senior Coalition Liberals—Churchill, Hamar Greenwood, Freddie Guest and Edwin Montagu—who lost their seats.[477][478]

Liberal reunion

In March 1923 a petition for reunion among Liberal backbenchers received 73 signatures, backed by the Lloyd Georgeite Daily Chronicle and the Asquithian Liberal Magazine. But reunion was opposed by senior Asquithian Liberals like Sir John Simon, Viscount Gladstone and Charles Masterman, and as late as 30 June by journalists such as H. W. Massingham and Gardiner of The Nation.[479] Viscount Gladstone felt that "it was generally recognised that Asquith was no longer effective as an active leader" but that Lloyd George must not succeed him.[479] By July Asquith was superficially friendly to Lloyd George and consulted him, but he did not include him in the Shadow Cabinet.[r][479] Asquith wanted Lloyd George to make the first move but although the latter put out feelers to senior Asquith supporters he insisted that he was "neither a suppliant nor a penitent".[460] M.S.R. Kinnear writes that Asquith felt that with Lloyd George's faction declining in strength he had everything to gain by waiting, while too quick an approach would antagonise the Labour leaders who hated Lloyd George and whose support he might need for a future Lib-Lab coalition. Kinnear also argues that Asquith's "gloating" over the defeat of Coalition Liberals in 1922 is evidence that "the most important factor influencing Asquith against quick reunion was his personal dislike of Lloyd George and his desire for vengeance."[480]

The political situation was transformed when Baldwin, now Prime Minister, came out in favour of Protection at Plymouth on 22 October 1923.[460] Coming out for Free Trade himself, Lloyd George was obliged, at least formally, to submit to Asquith's leadership.[481] Parliament was dissolved. Asquith and Lloyd George reached agreement on 13 November, followed by a Free Trade manifesto, followed by a more general one. Lloyd George, accompanied by his daughter Megan, came to Paisley to speak in Asquith's support on 24 November.[482]

Asquith fought an energetic national campaign on free trade in 1923, with echoes of 1903.[483] He spoke at Nottingham and Manchester, but did not privately expect more than 200 Liberals to be elected—although he hoped to overtake Labour and become Leader of the Opposition once again—and hoped for Baldwin to win by a tiny majority.[482]

The poll at Paisley was split by an independent extreme socialist and a Conservative.[460][482] Asquith won with 33.4 per cent of the vote.[478] Nationally, the outcome of the election in December 1923 was a hung Parliament (258 Conservatives, 191 Labour, 158 Liberals); the Liberals had gained seats but were still in third place.[460] A quarter of the seats were held by majority less than 1,000. In general, Asquith Liberals did better than Lloyd George Liberals, which Gladstone and Maclean saw as a reason to prevent close co-operation between the factions.[482]

Putting Labour in power

There was no question of the Liberals supporting a continuation of the Conservative government, not least as it was feared that an alliance of the two "bourgeois" parties would antagonise Labour. Asquith commented that "If a Labour Government is ever to be tried in this country, as it will be sooner or later, it could hardly be tried under safer conditions". Asquith's decision to support a minority Labour Government was seconded by Lloyd George and approved by a party meeting on 18 December.[484]

Baldwin's view was similar, as he rejected Sir Robert Horne's scheme for a Conservative-Liberal pact. Roy Douglas called the decision to put in Ramsay MacDonald "the most disastrous single action ever performed by a Liberal towards his party." Other historians such as Trevor Wilson and Koss reject this view, arguing that Asquith had little choice.[485]

Asquith was never in doubt as to the correctness of his approach, although a deluge of correspondence urged him to save the country from Socialism.[486] He wrote on 28 December "I have been intreated during these weeks, cajoled, wheedled, almost caressed, tortured, threatened, brow-beaten and all but blackmailed to step in as the saviour of society."[487][484]

The Liberals thus supported Britain's first ever (minority) Labour Government under Ramsay MacDonald. The Liberal Party voted for the Labour amendment to the Address, causing Baldwin to resign (Asquith believed that Baldwin could have ignored the vote and carried on attempting to govern without a majority). He thought the new Labour Government "a beggarly array" although he remarked that the Foreign Office staff were glad to see the back of "the Archduke Curzon".[486] Asquith believed that MacDonald would soon be discredited both in the eyes of the country and of his own more extreme supporters, and the Liberal revival would continue.[488]

Labour government and the Campbell Case

Asquith's decision only hastened his party's destruction, the Conservative Austen Chamberlain writing to his colleague Sir Samuel Hoare, "We have got (unexpectedly and by our own blunders and Asquith's greater folly) a second chance. Have we got the wit to take it?"[489]

Relations with Labour soon became very tense, with Liberal MPs increasingly angered at having to support a Labour Government which treated them with such open hostility. Many Liberals were also angered at MacDonald's pursuit of a trade agreement with the USSR, although Asquith rather less so.[490] The intervention of a Labour candidate at a by-election in Oxford in June handed the seat to the Conservatives.[491]

As Asquith brought MacDonald in so, later in the same year, he had significant responsibility for forcing him out over the Campbell Case and the Russian Treaty.[492] The Conservatives proposed a vote of censure against the Government for withdrawing their prosecution for sedition against the Daily Worker, and Asquith moved an amendment calling for a select committee (the same tactic he had employed over the Marconi scandal and the Maurice Debate).[490] Asquith's contribution to the debate showed an increasingly rare return to Parliamentary form. "Almost every one of his delightful sentences filled the Chamber with laughter."[493] Asquith's motion was passed by 364–198.[490] As in the Maurice Debate, his sense of political tactics was, in Jenkins' view, overcome by his sense of Parliamentary propriety. He could not bring himself to withdraw the amendment, but could not support the government either.[494]

1924 election

Instead of resigning MacDonald requested, and was granted, a General Election.[490] The 1924 election was intended by MacDonald to cripple the Liberals, and it did.[491] Lloyd George refused to hand over money from his fund until he had more say over the Liberal whips office, Liberal Party Headquarters at Arlington Street and an election there was a chance of winning.[494][491]

Meetings at Paisley were tumultuous and Asquith was barracked by hecklers singing "The Red Flag".[495] Asquith was widely expected to lose his seat and did so by 2,228.[496] He received 46.5 per cent of the vote in his final parliamentary election, a straight fight against Labour.[478] Violet wrote, "Father was absolutely controlled. He just said to me, 'I'm out by 2,000'."[497]

It was a political, as well as a personal, disaster. Baldwin won a landslide victory, with over "400 Conservatives returned and only 40 Liberals",[498] far behind Labour which entrenched its position as the "chief party of Opposition."[499] Labour's vote actually increased somewhat (partly as a result of their fielding more candidates than before). The Liberal vote collapsed, much of it coalescing to the Conservatives as a result of the scare around the forged Zinoviev Letter.[490]

The Liberal grandees, who hated Lloyd George, did not press Asquith to retire. Sir Robert Hudson and Maclean called on him (31 October) and insisted he firmly keep the chair at the next meeting and nominate the new Chief Whip himself.[496]

Elevation

The 1924 election was Asquith's last Parliamentary campaign, and there was no realistic chance of a return to the Commons. He told Charles Masterman "I'd sooner go to hell than to Wales," the only part of the country where Liberal support remained strong. The King offered him a peerage (4 November 1924).[500][501] Asquith felt he was not rich enough to accept, and would have preferred to die a commoner like Pitt or Gladstone. He accepted in January 1925 after a holiday in Egypt with his son Arthur. He deliberately chose the title "Earl of Oxford", saying it had a splendid history as the title chosen by Robert Harley, a Tory statesman of Queen Anne's reign.[502] He was thought by some to have delusions of grandeur, Lady Salisbury writing to him that the title was "like a suburban villa calling itself Versailles."[503] Asquith found the controversy amusing but the College of Heralds insisted that he add "and Asquith" to the final title, after protests from Harley's family. In practice he was known as "Lord Oxford".[504] He never enjoyed the House of Lords, and thought the quality of debates there poor. [505]

In 1924 the Liberal party had only been able to put up 343 candidates due to lack of money. At one point the Liberal Shadow Cabinet suggested obtaining the opinion of a Chancery Lawyer as to whether the Liberal Party was entitled under trust law to Lloyd George's money, which he had obtained from the sale of honours.[506] On 29 January 1925, at a two-day London convention, Asquith launched a Million Fund Appeal in an unsuccessful attempt to raise Liberal Party funds independent of Lloyd George.[507][508]

I have had a noble offer from Lady Bredalbane who proposes to give me her late husband's Garter robes as a present. I shall jump at this, as it will save me a lot of money.

Asquith on an additional benefit of The Order of the Garter[509]

One more disappointment remained. In 1925 he stood for the Chancellorship of Oxford University, vacant on the death of Lord Curzon. He was eminently suited and was described by Lord Birkenhead, one of his many Conservative supporters, as "the greatest living Oxonian."[510]

Asquith suspected he might lose because of country clergy's hostility to Welsh Disestablishment, blaming "Zadok the Priest and Abiathar the Priest—with their half-literate followers in the rural parsonages". The election was also seen as a settling of party scores and a mockery of his title. He lost to the Conservative candidate, Lord Cave, by 987 votes to 441 on 20 March. He claimed to be "more disappointed than surprised", but his friend Desmond MacCarthy wrote that it affected him "more than any disappointment, save one, in his life after he ceased to be Prime Minister."[511][512]

In May 1925 Asquith accepted the Order of the Garter from Baldwin, who was known to be a personal admirer of his.[501][513]

Resignation

Difficulties continued with Lloyd George, who had been chairman of the Liberal MPs since 1924,[514] over the party leadership and over party funds.[515] In the autumn of 1925 Hobhouse, Runciman and the industrialist Sir Alfred Mond protested to Asquith at Lloyd George organising his own campaign for reform of land ownership. Asquith was "not enthusiastic" but Lloyd George ignored him and arranged for Asquith to be sent reports and calculations ("Lord Oxford likes sums" he wrote). At a meeting on 25 November 1925 Grey, Maclean, Simon, Gladstone and Runciman urged Asquith to have a showdown with Lloyd George over money. Asquith wanted to think it over, and at the December 1925 Federation executive he left the meeting before the topic came up. To the horror of his followers Asquith reached an agreement in principle with Lloyd George over land reform on 2 December, then together they presented plans to the National Liberal Federation on 26 February 1926. But, wrote Maclean, "in private Asquith's language about Lloyd George was lurid."[516][508]

In January 1926 Mond withdrew his financial support from the Liberal Party.[516][508] The loss of wealthy donors and the failure of the Million Fund Appeal further weakened Asquith's position, and there is some evidence that his frequent requests for money irritated donors like Sir Robert Perks who had given a good deal to the Party over the years, and that outside his inner circle of devotees he was bad at keeping on good terms with potential donors.[517]

This was followed by a near final breach with Lloyd George over the General Strike. The Liberal Shadow Cabinet unequivocally backed Baldwin's handling of the strike on 3 May. Asquith viewed the strike as "criminal folly"[518] and condemned it in the House of Lords, whilst in the Commons Sir John Simon declared it to be illegal. But whereas Asquith and Grey both contributed to the British Gazette, Churchill's pro-government newssheet, Lloyd George, who had not previously expressed a contrary opinion at Shadow Cabinet, wrote an article for the American press more sympathetic to the strikers, and did not attend the Shadow Cabinet on 10 May, sending his apologies on "policy grounds". Asquith at first assumed him to be trying to ingratiate himself with the churches and Labour, but then (20 May) sent him a public letter rebuking him for not attending the meeting to discuss his opinions with colleagues in private.[519][520]

In private, both sides were incandescent; one of Asquith's colleagues describing him as "far more indignant at L.G. than I have ever seen",[521] whilst Lloyd George expressed his private feelings in a letter to Frances Stevenson on 24 May "(Asquith) is a silly old man drunk with hidden conceit. When he listens to those poor creatures he has a weakness for gathering around him he generally makes a fool of himself. They are really 'beat'. Dirty dogs—and bitches."[522]

Lloyd George's letter of 10 May had not been published, making it appear that Asquith had fired the first shot, and Lloyd George sent a moderate public reply, on 25 May. Asquith then wrote another public letter (1 June) stating that he regarded Lloyd George's behaviour as tantamount to resignation, the same as if a Cabinet Minister had refused to abide by the principle of collective responsibility. Twelve leading Liberals (including Grey, Lord Buckmaster, Simon, Maclean and Runciman) wrote in Asquith's support to The Times (1 June). However, Lloyd George had more support amongst the wider party than amongst the grandees. The executive of the National Liberal Federation, despite backing Asquith by 16:8, had already urged a reconciliation in late May, and the London Liberal Candidates' Association (3 June) and the Liberal MPs (8 June) did the same. Asquith had planned to launch a fightback at the National Liberal Federation in Weston-Super-Mare, due on 17 June, but on the eve of the conference he suffered a stroke (12 June) which put him out of action for three months.[519][520]

Margot is said to have later claimed that her husband regretted the breach and had acted after several rich donors had threatened to quit.[523] Asquith finally resigned the Liberal leadership on 15 October 1926.[524]

Final years: 1926–1928

 
Asquith's grave at Sutton Courtenay

Asquith filled his retirement with reading, writing, a little golf,[525] travelling and meeting with friends.[524] Since 1918 he had developed an interest in modern painting and sculpture.[524]

His health remained reasonable, almost to the end, though financial concerns increasingly beset him.[526] A perhaps surprising contributor to an endowment fund established to support Asquith in 1927 was Lord Beaverbrook (the former Max Aitken), who contributed £1,000.[527] Violet was highly embarrassed by her step-mother's attempts to enlist the aid of Aitken, Lord Reading and others of her husband's friends and acquaintances. "It is monstrous that other people (should) be made to foot Margot's bridge bills. How she has dragged his name through the mud!"[528]

Asquith suffered a second stroke in January 1927,[529] disabling his left leg for a while and leaving him a wheelchair-user for the spring and early summer of 1927.[530] Asquith's last visit was to see the widowed Venetia Montagu in Norfolk.[531] On his return to The Wharf, in autumn 1927, he was unable to get out of his car and "he was never again able to go upstairs to his own room."[532] He suffered a third stroke at the end of 1927.[533] His last months were difficult, and he became increasingly confused, his daughter Violet writing, "To watch Father's glorious mind breaking up and sinking—like a great ship—is a pain beyond all my imagining."[528]

Death

Asquith died, aged 75, at The Wharf on the morning of 15 February 1928.[526] "He was buried, at his own wish, with great simplicity,"[534] in the churchyard of All Saints' at Sutton Courtenay, his gravestone recording his name, title, and the dates of his birth and death. A blue plaque records his long residence at 20 Cavendish Square[535] and a memorial tablet was subsequently erected in Westminster Abbey.[536] Viscount Grey, with Haldane Asquith's oldest political friends, wrote, "I have felt (his) death very much: it is true that his work was done but we were very close together for so many years. I saw the beginning of his Parliamentary life; and to witness the close is the end of a long chapter of my own."[537]

Asquith's will was proven on 9 June 1928, with his estate amounting to £9345 9s. 2d. (roughly equivalent to £599,011 in 2021)[538].[539]

Descendants

 
Asquith's great-granddaughter, the actress Helena Bonham Carter

Asquith had five children by his first wife, Helen, and two surviving children (three others died at birth or in infancy) by his second wife, Margot.[540]

His eldest son, Raymond, after an academic career that outstripped his father's[541] was killed at the Somme in 1916.[541] His second son Herbert (1881–1947) became a writer and poet and married Cynthia Charteris.[542] His later life was marred by alcoholism.[543] His third son Arthur (1883–1939), became a soldier and businessman.[541] His only daughter by his first wife, Violet, later Violet Bonham Carter (1887–1969), became a well-regarded writer and a life peeress as Baroness Asquith of Yarnbury.[544] She married Asquith's Personal Private Secretary Maurice Bonham Carter in 1915. His fourth son Cyril (1890–1954) was born on the day Asquith became a QC [545] and later became a Law Lord.[541]

His two children by Margot were Elizabeth, later Princess Antoine Bibesco (1897–1945), a writer, who also struggled with alcohol[546] and Anthony Asquith (1902–1968),[547] known as "Puffin", a film-maker, whose life was also severely affected by alcoholism.[546]

Among his living descendants are his great-granddaughter, the actress Helena Bonham Carter (born 1966),[548] and two great-grandsons, Dominic Asquith, a former British High Commissioner to India,[549] and Raymond Asquith, 3rd Earl of Oxford and Asquith, who inherited Asquith's earldom.[550] Another leading British actress, Anna Chancellor (born 1965), is Asquith's great-great-granddaughter on her mother's side.[551]

Assessment

 
Memorial to Asquith, Westminster Abbey

According to Matthew, "Asquith's decision for war with Germany was the most important taken by a British prime minister in the twentieth century, and was more important than any prime ministerial decision of the nineteenth century. It not only dictated the involvement of the United Kingdom in war but affected much of the pattern of imperial, foreign, and economic history for the rest of the century."[10] Matthew deemed the decision Asquith's, in that without prime ministerial support, it was not likely Britain would have entered the war.[10] Given the deep divisions in the Liberal Party, Pearce and Goodlad said "it was a measure of [Asquith's] skill that he took Britain into the war with only two relatively minor Cabinet ministers … choosing to resign".[552]

Asquith's reputation will always be heavily influenced by his downfall at the height of the First World War. In 1970, Basil Liddell Hart summed up opinion as to the reasons for his fall: "Lloyd George [came to] power as the spokesman for a widespread demand for a more vigorous as well as a more efficient prosecution of the war."[553] Asquith's collegiate approach;[554] his tendency to "wait and see";[555] his stance as the chairman of the cabinet,[556] rather than leader of a government—"content to preside without directing";[557] his "contempt for the press, regard[ing] journalists as ignorant, spiteful and unpatriotic";[558] and his weakness for alcohol—"I had occasion to speak to the P.M. twice yesterday and on both occasions I was nearly gassed by the alcoholic fumes he discharged";[559] all contributed to a prevailing sense that Asquith was unable to rise to "the necessities of total warfare."[560] Grigg concludes, "In certain vital respects, he was not qualified to run the war. A great head of government in peacetime, by the end of 1916 he was in a general state of decline, his obvious defects as a war leader [exposed]."[561] Cassar, reflecting on Asquith's work to bring a united country to war, and his efforts in the year thereafter, goes towards a reassessment: "His achievements are sufficiently impressive to earn him a place as one of the outstanding figures of the Great War" [562] His contemporary opponent, Lord Birkenhead paid tribute to his bringing Britain united into the War, "A statesman who rendered great service to his country at a time when no other living Englishman could have done what he did."[563] The Coalition Whip, William Bridgeman, provided an alternative Conservative view, comparing Lloyd George to Asquith at the time of the latter's fall: "[H]owever unpopular or mistrusted [Lloyd George] was in the House, he carried much more weight in the Country than Asquith, who was almost everywhere looked on as a lazy and dilatory man."[564] Sheffield and Bourne provide a recent historical reassessment: "Asquith's governments arguably took all the key decisions of the War: the decision to intervene, to send the BEF; to raise a mass volunteer army; to start and end the Gallipoli Campaign; the creation of a Coalition government; the mobilisation of industry; the introduction of conscription."[565] The weight of opinion continues to agree with Asquith's own candid assessment, in a letter written in the midst of war in July 1916: "I am [as usual] encompassed by a cloud of worries, anxieties, problems and the rest. 'The time is out of joint' and sometimes I am tempted to say with Hamlet 'O cursed spite, that ever I was born to set it right.' Perhaps I wasn't."[566]

Asquith's fall also saw the end of the "Liberal Party as one of the great parties of state."[567] According to Koss, Asquith's memory, "has lingered over the successive crises that continued to afflict his party. Each glimmer of a Liberal revival has enhanced his historical stature, if only as the victim or agent of the Liberal decline."[568] After 1922, the Liberals did not hold office again, except as junior partners in coalition governments in 1931–1932, in 1940–1945,[s] and (as today's Liberal Democrats) in 2010–2015. Leonard considers that responsibility for this must also be carried, in part, by Asquith, "this gifted, fastidious, proud yet ultimately indecisive man must bear his share of the blame."[567]

Koss concludes that, in a "long, eventful and complex career, [that] does not admit easily of a summing up, Asquith's failings were no less manifest than his achievements."[569] Michael and Eleanor Brock maintain that "his peacetime record of legislative achievement should not be overshadowed by his wartime inadequacy."[570] Of those achievements, his colleague Lord Buckmaster wrote, "The dull senses and heavy lidded eyes of the public prevent them from seeing now all that you have accomplished, but history will record it and the accomplishment is vast."[571] Among his greatest domestic accomplishments, reform of the House of Lords is at the zenith. Yet Asquith's premiership was also marked by many difficulties, leading McKenna to write in his memoirs, "friends began to wonder whether the highest statesmanship consisted of overcoming one crisis by creating another".[572] Hazlehurst, writing in 1970, felt there was still much to be gleaned from a critical review of Asquith's peacetime premiership, "certainly, the record of a prime minister under whom the nation goes to the brink of civil war [over Ireland] must be subjected to the severest scrutiny."[572]

 
Blue plaque, 20 Cavendish Square, London

Perhaps Asquith's greatest personal attainment was his parliamentary dominance. From his earliest days in the House, "he spoke with the authority of a leader and not as a backbencher."[573] As Campbell-Bannerman's "sledgehammer", his "debating power was unequalled."[574] Lord Curzon extolled his skill in parliamentary dialectic: "Whenever I have heard him on a first-rate occasion, there rises in my mind the image of some great military parade. The words, the arguments, the points, follow each other with the steady tramp of regiments across the field; each unit is in its place, the whole marching in rhythmical order; the sunshine glints on the bayonets and ever, and anon, is heard the roll of the drums."[575]

Jenkins considered Asquith as foremost amongst the great social reforming premiers of the twentieth century. His Government's social and political reforms were unprecedented and far-sighted, "paving the way for the welfare state legislation of the Attlee government in 1945–1951 as well as Blair's constitutional reforms after 1997."[567] According to Roy Hattersley, a changed Britain entered the war in 1914, "the political, social and cultural revolution had already happened. Modern Britain was born in the opening years of the twentieth century."[576] Asquith also worked strenuously to secure a settlement of the Irish question and, although unsuccessful, his work contributed to the 1922 settlement.[577] Lastly, as a "great head of a Cabinet",[578] Asquith directed and developed the talents of an extraordinary array of parliamentarians, for an extraordinarily long period.[554] Hazlehurst contends that this "ability to keep so gifted and divergently-inclined a group in harness (was) one of his major achievements."[84] Overall, the Brocks argue that "on the basis of his achievements 1908 to 1914 he must rank among the greatest British statesmen of any era."[570] His oldest political and personal friend, Haldane, wrote to Asquith on the latter's final resignation: "My Dear A., a time has come in both of our lives when the bulk of work has been done. That work does not pass away. It is not by overt signs that its enduring character is to be judged. It is by the changes made in the spirit of things into which the work has entered."[579]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Some sources mention only two daughters. See Bates, p. 9. The brother and sister who survived into adulthood were William Willans and Emily Evelyn. See Margot Asquith 1962, p. 263.
  2. ^ The surname, a variant of Askwith, a village in North Yorkshire, derives from Old Norse ask-viðr – "ash-wood". See Ekwall, p. 16.
  3. ^ The English legal profession is split into two branches. At that time, any member of the public needing legal representation in the High Court or Court of Appeal had to engage a solicitor – who would in turn "instruct" or "brief" a barrister – who had the sole right to appear before the higher courts, but was not permitted to take work direct from the public without a solicitor as intermediary. A barrister without good contacts with solicitors would therefore go short of work. The distinctions between the two branches of the profession have been relaxed to some extent since Asquith's time, but to a considerable degree barristers remain dependent on solicitors for work. See Terrill, p. 58.
  4. ^ According to the official biography by J. A. Spender and Cyril Asquith, "he had a profound respect for the mind and intelligence of women ... But he considered politics to be peculiarly the male sphere, and it offended his sense of decorum and chivalry to think of them as engaged in the rough and tumble of this masculine business and exposed to its publicity. He always vehemently denied that the question had any relation to democratic theory or that the exclusion of women from the franchises was any reflection on their sex." See Spender & Asquith, p. 360.
  5. ^ He was the first former cabinet minister to resume practice at the bar after leaving government office. All cabinet ministers were, and are, appointed as lifetime members of the Privy Council, and there had been an uncodified feeling before 1895 that it was inappropriate for a Privy Councillor to appear as an advocate in court, submitting to the rulings of judges who, for the most part, ranked below him in the official order of precedence. See Jenkins, pp. 90–91.
  6. ^ A biographer of Campbell-Bannerman, A. J. A. Morris, suggests that Balfour was motivated in this unusual step by the vain hope that minority government would open up the many divisions within the Liberal party.[72]
  7. ^ Jenkins, with a reference to Asquith's own reputation in that sphere, comments that Asquith did his personal best to reverse the downward trend in alcohol sales.
  8. ^ Notice before one's employment is terminated
  9. ^ The imbalance in the Upper House had been caused by the Liberal split over the First Home Rule Bill in 1886, in which many Liberal peers had become Liberal Unionists, who by this time had almost merged with the Conservatives. As had happened in the Liberal Governments of 1892–1895, a number of bills were voted down by the Conservative-dominated House of Lords during Campbell-Bannerman's premiership. Although the Lords passed the Trade Disputes Act, the Workmen's Compensation Act and the Eight Hours Act, they rejected the Education Bill of 1906, an important measure in the eyes of Liberal nonconformist voters. See Magnus 1964, p. 532
  10. ^ That is, half a penny in a pound at a time (until 1971) when the pound sterling was made up of 240 pence, thus the tax was 1480 of the land's value, annually.
  11. ^ Asquith had to apologise to the King's adviser Lord Knollys for a Churchill speech calling for a Dissolution and rebuked Churchill at a Cabinet Meeting (21 July 1909) telling him to keep out of "matters of high policy", as the monarch's permission was needed to dissolve Parliament prematurely. See Magnus 1964, p. 527
  12. ^ Irish nationalists, unlike Liberals, favoured tariff reform, and opposed the planned increase in whisky duty, but an attempt by Lloyd George to win their support by cancelling it was abandoned as the Cabinet felt that this was recasting the Budget too much, and because it would also have annoyed nonconformist voters. See Magnus 1964, p. 548,553
  13. ^ By April the King was being advised by Balfour and the Archbishop of Canterbury (to whom he had turned for relatively neutral constitutional advice) that the Liberals did not have sufficient electoral mandate to demand creation of peers. See Magnus 1964, pp. 555–556. King Edward thought the whole proposal "simply disgusting" and that the government was "in the hands of Redmond & Co". Lord Crewe, Liberal leader in the Lords, announced publicly that the government's wish to create peers should be treated as formal "ministerial advice" (which, by convention, the monarch must obey) although Lord Esher argued that the monarch was entitled in extremis to dismiss the Government rather than take their "advice". See Heffer, pp. 294–296.
  14. ^ Definition: The real, effective cause of damage
  15. ^ That evening, Aitken and Churchill were dining with F. E. Smith at the latter's Grosvenor Gardens home. The dinner ended acrimoniously, as Aitken records: "'Smith,' said Winston with great emphasis, 'This man knows I am not to be in the Government.' He picked up his coat and hat and dashed into the street ... a curious end to the day." Churchill was detested by the Conservatives for his defection to the Liberals in 1904, for his role as an active, partisan Liberal thereafter, and for his role in the disastrous Dardanelles campaign; despite his energy and ability Lloyd George was not able to bring him back into the government until the summer of 1917.[385]
  16. ^ The exact nature of the slander is not specified. The Asquiths had been the subject of rumour about their supposed pro-German sympathies, and Noel Pemberton Billing had put it about that they had been amongst public figures seduced by German agents with sexual favours, lesbian ones in Margot's case.
  17. ^ Churchill's wife remonstrated with him that Asquith had seen his sons killed and maimed. Churchill replied that Asquith had left him to be a scapegoat over the Dardanelles, had refused to appoint him Commander-in-Chief in East Africa or to give him the brigade command on the Western Front which he had promised him at the end of 1915, or to appoint him to the vacancy for Minister of Munitions in the summer of 1916.[468] Asquith re-established friendly relations with Churchill after they were sat together at the wedding of the Duke of York and Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, writing of him as Chancellor of the Exchequer in 1925 that he was "a Chimborazo or Everest among the sandhills of the Baldwin Cabinet".[469]
  18. ^ Koss observes that this was not without recent precedent, as Campbell-Bannerman had sometimes excluded Asquith and the other Liberal Imperialists at the time of the Boer War.
  19. ^ The National Liberals, a breakaway faction confusingly bearing the same name as Lloyd George's followers of the early 1920s, and led by Asquith's former protégé Sir John Simon, were in coalition throughout the 1931–1945 period and eventually merged with the Conservatives.

References

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  2. ^ a b c Jenkins, p. 13.
  3. ^ Davies, Edward J. "The Ancestry of Herbert Henry Asquith", Genealogists' Magazine, 30 (2010–12), pp. 471–479
  4. ^ Alderson, p. 1.
  5. ^ Margot Asquith 1962, pp. 194–195.
  6. ^ Margot Asquith 1962, p. 195.
  7. ^ Jenkins, p. 15.
  8. ^ Levine, p. 75.
  9. ^ Bates, p. 10.
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  12. ^ Alderson, p. 10.
  13. ^ Bates, pp. 10–11.
  14. ^ Alderson, p. 3.
  15. ^ Jenkins, p. 17.
  16. ^ Spender & Asquith, p. 30.
  17. ^ "Political Notes", The Times, 23 July 1908, p. 12
  18. ^ Spender, J. A. and Cyril Asquith. "Lord Oxford", The Times, 12 September 1932, p. 11
  19. ^ Spender & Asquith, pp. 31–32.
  20. ^ Spender & Asquith, p. 33.
  21. ^ Spender & Asquith, p. 34.
  22. ^ Spender & Asquith, pp. 33–34.
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  25. ^ Jenkins, p. 23.
  26. ^ Levine, p. 76.
  27. ^ Bates, p. 12.
  28. ^ a b Jenkins, p. 25.
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  30. ^ Rintala, p. 118.
  31. ^ a b Jenkins, p. 27.
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  34. ^ Whitfield, p. 228.
  35. ^ Jenkins, pp. 31–32.
  36. ^ a b "Death of Mr. Justice Wright", The Times, 15 May 1904, p. 2
  37. ^ Jenkins, p. 37.
  38. ^ Douglas, p. 71.
  39. ^ Jenkins, pp. 38–40.
  40. ^ "The General Election", The Times, 9 July 1886, p. 10; and "The Election", The Manchester Guardian, 9 July 1886, p. 8.
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  42. ^ Alderson, pp. 37–38.
  43. ^ Jenkins, pp. 42–43.
  44. ^ Alderson, p. 44.
  45. ^ Jenkins, p. 44.
  46. ^ Spender & Asquith, p. 48.
  47. ^ Jenkins, p. 47.
  48. ^ "The Riots in London", The Manchester Guardian, 15 November 1887, p. 8.
  49. ^ "Central Criminal Court", The Times, 19 January 1888, p. 10.
  50. ^ "Police", The Times, 11 August 1888, p. 13; and "Central Criminal Court", The Times, 1 November 1888, p. 13.
  51. ^ Alderson, p. 33.
  52. ^ Jenkins, p. 49.
  53. ^ "Parnell Commission", The Manchester Guardian, 20 February 1889, p. 5.
  54. ^ Popplewell, pp. 24–25.
  55. ^ Alderson, pp. 33–34.
  56. ^ Popplewell, p. 25.
  57. ^ Popplewell, pp. 28–30.
  58. ^ "The Baccarat Case", The Times, 2 June 1891, p. 11; and "Queen's Bench Division", The Times, 20 June 1892, p. 3.
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  60. ^ Jenkins, p. 56.
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  65. ^ . Archived from the original on 31 March 2016. Retrieved 27 March 2016.
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  67. ^ Koss, pp. 282–283.
  68. ^ Hattersley, p. 60.
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  83. ^ Hazlehurst, pp. 504–505.
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  87. ^ Asquith 1985, p. 13.
  88. ^ Jenkins, pp. 259–261.
  89. ^ Tyack, Bradley & Pevsner, p. 553.
  90. ^ Jenkins, p. 259.
  91. ^ Margot Asquith 2014, p. xli.
  92. ^ Koss, p. 94.
  93. ^ a b Asquith 1985, p. 471.
  94. ^ Margot Asquith 2014, p. xlviii.
  95. ^ Asquith 1985, preface.
  96. ^ Asquith 1985, p. 3.
  97. ^ Koss, p. 140.
  98. ^ Margot Asquith 2014, p. xcv.
  99. ^ a b Adelman, p. 11.
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  102. ^ Hugh Purcell (2006). Lloyd George. pp. 42–43. ISBN 9781904950585. from the original on 23 September 2021. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
  103. ^ Ben Wright, Order Order!: The Rise and Fall of Political Drinking (2016) ch 4.
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  106. ^ Weston, p. 508.
  107. ^ Weston, pp. 508–512.
  108. ^ Koss, p. 112.
  109. ^ Spender & Asquith, pp. 254–255.
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  112. ^ Magnus 1964, pp. 232, 527.
  113. ^ Lloyd George, David (1929). "Budget: Newcastle Speech". In Guedalla, Philip (ed.). Slings and Arrows - Sayings Chosen from the Speeches of the Rt Hon David Lloyd George, OM, MP. London: Cassell and Company, Ltd. p. 111.
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  117. ^ Koss, pp. 116–117.
  118. ^ Neal Blewett, Peers, the Parties and the People: General Election of 1910 (Macmillan, 1972).
  119. ^ Koss, p. 118.
  120. ^ Magnus 1964, p. 548.
  121. ^ Heffer, pp. 290–293.
  122. ^ Koss, p. 121.
  123. ^ Jenkins, pp. 208–210.
  124. ^ Heffer, pp. 286–288.
  125. ^ Heffer, p. 293.
  126. ^ Spender & Asquith, pp. 298–299.
  127. ^ Matthew, H. C. G. (2004). "George V (1865–1936)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/33369. Retrieved 28 July 2015. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
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  129. ^ Spender & Asquith, pp. 299–300.
  130. ^ Jenkins, pp. 222–230.
  131. ^ Jenkins, p. 231.
  132. ^ Koss, p. 230.
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Sources

asquith, asquith, redirects, here, other, uses, asquith, disambiguation, herbert, asquith, redirects, here, poet, herbert, asquith, poet, herbert, henry, asquith, earl, oxford, asquith, september, 1852, february, 1928, generally, known, british, statesman, lib. Asquith redirects here For other uses see Asquith disambiguation Herbert Asquith redirects here For his son the poet see Herbert Asquith poet Herbert Henry Asquith 1st Earl of Oxford and Asquith KG PC KC FRS 12 September 1852 15 February 1928 generally known as H H Asquith was a British statesman and Liberal Party politician who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1908 to 1916 He was the last Liberal prime minister to command a majority government and the most recent Liberal to have served as Leader of the Opposition He played a major role in the design and passage of major liberal legislation and a reduction of the power of the House of Lords In August 1914 Asquith took Great Britain and the British Empire into the First World War During 1915 his government was vigorously attacked for a shortage of munitions and the failure of the Gallipoli Campaign He formed a coalition government with other parties but failed to satisfy critics was forced to resign in December 1916 and never regained power The Right HonourableThe Earl of Oxford and AsquithKG PC KC FRSAsquith c 1910sPrime Minister of the United KingdomIn office 5 April 1908 5 December 1916MonarchsEdward VII George VPreceded byHenry Campbell BannermanSucceeded byDavid Lloyd GeorgeLeader of the OppositionIn office 12 February 1920 21 November 1922MonarchGeorge VPrime MinisterDavid Lloyd GeorgeBonar LawPreceded byDonald MacleanSucceeded byRamsay MacDonaldIn office 6 December 1916 14 December 1918MonarchGeorge VPrime MinisterDavid Lloyd GeorgePreceded bySir Edward CarsonSucceeded byDonald MacleanLeader of the Liberal PartyIn office 30 April 1908 14 October 1926Preceded bySir Henry Campbell BannermanSucceeded byDavid Lloyd GeorgeSecretary of State for WarIn office 30 March 1914 5 August 1914MonarchGeorge VPrime MinisterHimselfPreceded byJ E B SeelySucceeded byThe Earl KitchenerChancellor of the ExchequerIn office 10 December 1905 12 April 1908MonarchEdward VIIPrime MinisterSir Henry Campbell BannermanPreceded byAusten ChamberlainSucceeded byDavid Lloyd GeorgeHome SecretaryIn office 18 August 1892 25 June 1895MonarchVictoriaPrime MinisterWilliam Ewart GladstoneThe Earl of RoseberyPreceded byHenry MatthewsSucceeded byMatthew White RidleyMember of the House of LordsLord TemporalIn office 10 February 1925 15 February 1928Earl of Oxford and AsquithPreceded byPeerage createdSucceeded byJulian Edward George AsquithParliamentary officesMember of Parliamentfor PaisleyIn office 12 February 1920 9 October 1924Preceded byJohn McCallumSucceeded byEdward MitchellMember of Parliamentfor East FifeIn office 27 July 1886 25 November 1918Preceded byJohn Boyd KinnearSucceeded byAlexander SprotPersonal detailsBornHerbert Asquith 1852 09 12 12 September 1852Morley West Riding of Yorkshire EnglandDied15 February 1928 1928 02 15 aged 75 Sutton Courtenay Berkshire EnglandResting placeAll Saints Church Sutton CourtenayPolitical partyLiberalSpousesHelen Kelsall Melland m 1877 died 1891 wbr Emma Margaret Margot Tennant m 1894 wbr Children10 including Raymond Herbert Arthur Violet Cyril Elizabeth and AnthonyEducationCity of London SchoolAlma materBalliol College OxfordInns of Court School of LawProfessionBarristerSignatureAfter attending Balliol College Oxford he became a successful barrister In 1886 he was the Liberal candidate for East Fife a seat he held for over thirty years In 1892 he was appointed as Home Secretary in Gladstone s fourth ministry remaining in the post until the Liberals lost the 1895 election In the decade of opposition that followed Asquith became a major figure in the party and when the Liberals regained power under Sir Henry Campbell Bannerman in 1905 Asquith was named Chancellor of the Exchequer In 1908 Asquith succeeded him as prime minister The Liberals were determined to advance their reform agenda An impediment to this was the House of Lords which rejected the People s Budget of 1909 Meanwhile the South Africa Act 1909 passed Asquith called an election for January 1910 and the Liberals won though they were reduced to a minority government After another general election in December 1910 he gained passage of the Parliament Act 1911 allowing a bill three times passed by the Commons in consecutive sessions to be enacted regardless of the Lords Asquith was less successful in dealing with Irish Home Rule Repeated crises led to gun running and violence verging on civil war When Britain declared war on Germany in response to the German invasion of Belgium high profile domestic conflicts were suspended regarding Ireland and women s suffrage Asquith was more of a committee chair than a dynamic leader He oversaw national mobilization the dispatch of the British Expeditionary Force to the Western Front the creation of a mass army and the development of an industrial strategy designed to support the country s war aims The war became bogged down and the demand rose for better leadership He was forced to form a coalition with the Conservatives and Labour early in 1915 He was weakened by his own indecision over strategy conscription and financing 1 Lloyd George replaced him as prime minister in December 1916 They became bitter enemies and fought for control of the fast declining Liberal Party His role in creating the modern British welfare state 1906 1911 has been celebrated but his weaknesses as a war leader and as a party leader after 1914 have been highlighted by historians He remained the only Prime Minister between 1827 and 1979 to serve more than eight consecutive years in a single term Contents 1 Early life and career 1852 1908 1 1 Family background 1 2 Childhood and schooling 1 3 Oxford 1 4 Early professional career 1 5 Member of Parliament and Queen s Counsel 1 6 Widower and cabinet minister 1 7 Out of office 1895 1905 1 8 Chancellor of the Exchequer 1905 1908 2 Peacetime prime minister 1908 1914 2 1 Appointments and cabinet 2 2 Prime minister at leisure 2 3 Domestic policy 2 3 1 Reforming the House of Lords 2 3 2 1909 People s Budget 2 3 3 1910 election and constitutional deadlock 2 3 3 1 1910 1911 second election and Parliament Act 2 3 4 Social religious and labour matters 2 3 5 Votes for women 2 4 Irish Home Rule 2 5 Foreign and defence policy 2 6 July Crisis and outbreak of World War I 3 First year of the war August 1914 May 1915 3 1 Asquith s wartime government 3 2 Dardanelles Campaign 3 3 Shell Crisis of May 1915 3 4 Other events 4 First Coalition May 1915 December 1916 4 1 War re organisation 4 2 Conscription 4 3 Ireland 4 4 Progress of the war 5 Fall November December 1916 5 1 Nigeria debate and Lord Lansdowne s memorandum 5 2 Triumvirate gathers 5 3 Power without responsibility 5 4 To ing and fro ing 5 5 Last four days Sunday 3 December to Wednesday 6 December 5 5 1 Sunday 3 December 5 5 2 Monday 4 December 5 5 3 Tuesday 5 December 5 5 4 Wednesday 6 December 6 Wartime Opposition Leader 1916 1918 6 1 Maurice Debate 6 2 End of the war 7 Decline and eclipse 1918 1926 7 1 Coupon election 7 2 1919 out of Parliament 7 3 Paisley 7 4 Leader of the Opposition 1920 1921 7 5 Leader of the Opposition 1922 7 6 Liberal reunion 7 7 Putting Labour in power 7 8 Labour government and the Campbell Case 7 9 1924 election 7 10 Elevation 7 11 Resignation 8 Final years 1926 1928 9 Death 10 Descendants 11 Assessment 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 Sources 15 1 Primary sources 16 Further reading 17 External linksEarly life and career 1852 1908 EditFamily background Edit Asquith left with his sister Emily and elder brother William c 1857 Asquith was born in Morley in the West Riding of Yorkshire the younger son of Joseph Dixon Asquith 1825 1860 and his wife Emily nee Willans 1828 1888 The couple also had three daughters of whom only one survived infancy 2 3 a The Asquiths were an old Yorkshire family with a long nonconformist tradition b It was a matter of family pride shared by Asquith that an ancestor Joseph Asquith was imprisoned for his part in the pro Roundhead Farnley Wood Plot of 1664 4 Both Asquith s parents came from families associated with the Yorkshire wool trade Dixon Asquith inherited the Gillroyd Mill Company founded by his father Emily s father William Willans ran a successful wool trading business in Huddersfield Both families were middle class Congregationalist and politically radical Dixon was a mild man cultivated and in his son s words not cut out for a business career 2 He was described as a man of high character who held Bible classes for young men 5 Emily suffered persistent poor health but was of strong character and a formative influence on her sons 6 Childhood and schooling Edit In his younger days he was called Herbert Bertie as a child within the family but his second wife called him Henry His biographer Stephen Koss entitled the first chapter of his biography From Herbert to Henry referring to upward social mobility and his abandonment of his Yorkshire Nonconformist roots with his second marriage However in public he was invariably referred to only as H H Asquith There have been few major national figures whose Christian names were less well known to the public according to biographer Roy Jenkins 2 He and his brother were educated at home by their parents until 1860 when Dixon Asquith died suddenly William Willans took charge of the family moved them to a house near his own and arranged for the boys schooling 7 After a year at Huddersfield College they were sent as boarders to Fulneck School a Moravian Church school near Leeds In 1863 William Willans died and the family came under the care of Emily s brother John Willans The boys went to live with him in London when he moved back to Yorkshire in 1864 for business reasons they remained in London and were lodged with various families The biographer Naomi Levine writes that in effect Asquith was treated like an orphan for the rest of his childhood 8 The departure of his uncle effectively severed Asquith s ties with his native Yorkshire and he described himself thereafter as to all intents and purposes a Londoner 9 Another biographer H C G Matthew writes that Asquith s northern nonconformist background continued to influence him It gave him a point of sturdy anti establishmentarian reference important to a man whose life in other respects was a long absorption into metropolitanism 10 The boys were sent to the City of London School as dayboys Under the school s headmaster E A Abbott a distinguished classical scholar Asquith became an outstanding pupil He later said that he was under deeper obligations to his old headmaster than to any man living 11 Abbott disclaimed credit for the boy s progress I never had a pupil who owed less to me and more to his own natural ability 11 12 Asquith excelled in classics and English was little interested in sports read voraciously in the Guildhall Library and became fascinated with oratory He visited the public gallery of the House of Commons studied the techniques of famous preachers and honed his own skills in the school debating society 13 Abbott remarked on the cogency and clarity of his pupil s speeches qualities for which Asquith became celebrated throughout the rest of his life 14 15 Asquith later recalled seeing as a schoolboy the corpses of five murderers left hanging outside Newgate 16 Oxford Edit Early press mention of Asquith 1869 In November 1869 Asquith won a classical scholarship at Balliol College Oxford going up the following October The college s prestige already high continued to rise under the recently elected Master Benjamin Jowett He sought to raise the standards of the college to the extent that its undergraduates shared what Asquith later called a tranquil consciousness of effortless superiority 17 Although Asquith admired Jowett he was more influenced by T H Green White s Professor of Moral Philosophy The abstract side of philosophy did not greatly attract Asquith whose outlook was always practical but Green s progressive liberal political views appealed to him 10 Asquith s university career was distinguished striking without being sensational in the words of his biographer Roy Jenkins An easy grasp of his studies left him ample time to indulge his liking for debate In the first month at university he spoke at the Oxford Union His official biographers J A Spender and Cyril Asquith commented that in his first months at Oxford he voiced the orthodox Liberal view speaking in support inter alia of the disestablishment of the Church of England and of non intervention in the Franco Prussian War 18 He sometimes debated against his Balliol contemporary Alfred Milner who although then a Liberal was already an advocate of British imperialism 19 He was elected Treasurer of the Union in 1872 but was defeated at his first attempt at the Presidency 20 During the General Election in January and February 1874 he spoke against Lord Randolph Churchill who was not yet a prominent politician at nearby Woodstock 21 He eventually became President of the Union in Trinity Term 1874 his last term as an undergraduate 22 23 Asquith was proxime accessit runner up for the Hertford Prize in 1872 again proxime accessit for the Ireland Prize in 1873 and again for the Ireland in 1874 on that occasion coming so close that the examiners awarded him a special prize of books However he won the Craven Scholarship and graduated with what his biographers describe as an easy double first in Mods and Greats 24 After graduating he was elected to a prize fellowship of Balliol 25 Early professional career Edit Perhaps because of his stark beginnings Asquith was always attracted to the comforts and accoutrements that money can buy He was personally extravagant always enjoying the good life good food good companions good conversation and attractive women Naomi Levine in a 1991 biography 26 After his graduation in 1874 Asquith spent several months coaching Viscount Lymington the 18 year old son and heir of the Earl of Portsmouth He found the experience of aristocratic country house life agreeable 27 28 He liked less the austere side of the nonconformist Liberal tradition with its strong temperance movement He was proud of ridding himself of the Puritanism in which I was bred 29 His fondness for fine wines and spirits which began at this period eventually earned him the sobriquet Squiffy 30 Returning to Oxford Asquith spent the first year of his seven year fellowship in residence there But he had no wish to pursue a career as a don the traditional route for politically ambitious but unmoneyed young men was through the law 28 While still at Oxford Asquith had already entered Lincoln s Inn to train as a barrister and in 1875 he served a pupillage under Charles Bowen 31 He was called to the bar in June 1876 32 There followed what Jenkins calls seven extremely lean years 31 Asquith set up a legal practice with two other junior barristers With no personal contacts with solicitors he received few briefs c Those that came his way he argued capably but he was too fastidious to learn the wilier tricks of the legal trade he was constitutionally incapable of making a discreet fog nor could he prevail on himself to dispense the conventional patter 33 He did not allow his lack of money to stop him marrying His bride Helen Kelsall Melland 1854 1891 was the daughter of Frederick Melland a physician in Manchester She and Asquith had met through friends of his mother s 33 The two had been in love for several years but it was not until 1877 that Asquith sought her father s consent to their marriage Despite Asquith s limited income practically nothing from the bar and a small stipend from his fellowship Melland consented after making inquiries about the young man s potential Helen had a private income of several hundred pounds a year and the couple lived in modest comfort in Hampstead They had five children Raymond Asquith 6 November 1878 15 September 1916 who married Katharine Horner daughter of Sir John Horner on 25 July 1907 They had three children Herbert Asquith 11 March 1881 5 August 1947 who married Lady Cynthia Charteris daughter of Hugo Richard Charteris 11th Earl of Wemyss and 7th Earl of March on 28 July 1910 They had three children Arthur Asquith 24 April 1883 25 August 1939 who married Betty Constance Manners daughter of John Manners Sutton 3rd Baron Manners on 30 April 1918 They had four daughters Violet Asquith 15 April 1887 19 February 1969 who married Sir Maurice Bonham Carter on 30 November 1915 They had four children Cyril Asquith Baron Asquith of Bishopstone 5 February 1890 24 August 1954 10 who married Anne Pollock daughter of Sir Adrian Donald Wilde Pollock on 12 February 1918 They had four children Asquith in 1876 Between 1876 and 1884 Asquith supplemented his income by writing regularly for The Spectator which at that time had a broadly Liberal outlook Matthew comments that the articles Asquith wrote for the magazine give a good overview of his political views as a young man He was staunchly radical but as unconvinced by extreme left wing views as by Toryism Among the topics that caused debate among Liberals were British imperialism the union of Great Britain and Ireland and female suffrage Asquith was a strong though not jingoistic proponent of the Empire and after initial caution came to support home rule for Ireland He opposed votes for women for most of his political career d There was also an element of party interest Asquith believed that votes for women would disproportionately benefit the Conservatives In a 2001 study of the extension of the franchise between 1832 and 1931 Bob Whitfield concluded that Asquith s surmise about the electoral impact was correct 34 In addition to his work for The Spectator he was retained as a leader writer by The Economist taught at evening classes and marked examination papers 35 Asquith s career as a barrister began to flourish in 1883 when R S Wright invited him to join his chambers at the Inner Temple Wright was the Junior Counsel to the Treasury a post often known as the Attorney General s devil 36 whose function included giving legal advice to ministers and government departments 36 One of Asquith s first jobs in working for Wright was to prepare a memorandum for the prime minister W E Gladstone on the status of the parliamentary oath in the wake of the Bradlaugh case Both Gladstone and the Attorney General Sir Henry James were impressed This raised Asquith s profile though not greatly enhancing his finances Much more remunerative were his new contacts with solicitors who regularly instructed Wright and now also began to instruct Asquith 37 Member of Parliament and Queen s Counsel Edit In June 1886 with the Liberal party split on the question of Irish Home Rule Gladstone called a general election 38 There was a last minute vacancy at East Fife where the sitting Liberal member John Boyd Kinnear had been deselected by his local Liberal Association for voting against Irish Home Rule Richard Haldane a close friend of Asquith s and also a struggling young barrister had been Liberal MP for the nearby Haddingtonshire constituency since December 1885 He put Asquith s name forward as a replacement for Kinnear and only ten days before polling Asquith was formally nominated in a vote of the local Liberals 39 The Conservatives did not contest the seat putting their support behind Kinnear who stood against Asquith as a Liberal Unionist Asquith was elected with 2 863 votes to Kinnear s 2 489 40 The Liberals lost the 1886 election and Asquith joined the House of Commons as an opposition backbencher He waited until March 1887 to make his maiden speech which opposed the Conservative administration s proposal to give special priority to an Irish Crimes Bill 41 42 From the start of his parliamentary career Asquith impressed other MPs with his air of authority as well as his lucidity of expression 43 For the remainder of this Parliament which lasted until 1892 Asquith spoke occasionally but effectively mostly on Irish matters 44 45 Asquith s legal practice was flourishing and took up much of his time In the late 1880s Anthony Hope who later gave up the bar to become a novelist was his pupil Asquith disliked arguing in front of a jury because of the repetitiveness and platitudes required but excelled at arguing fine points of civil law before a judge or in front of courts of appeal 46 These cases in which his clients were generally large businesses were unspectacular but financially rewarding 47 Asquith caricatured by Spy in Vanity Fair 1891 From time to time Asquith appeared in high profile criminal cases In 1887 and 1888 he defended the radical Liberal MP Cunninghame Graham who was charged with assaulting police officers when they attempted to break up a demonstration in Trafalgar Square 48 Graham was later convicted of the lesser charge of unlawful assembly 49 In what Jenkins calls a less liberal cause Asquith appeared for the prosecution in the trial of Henry Vizetelly for publishing obscene libels the first English versions of Zola s novels Nana Pot Bouille and La Terre which Asquith described in court as the three most immoral books ever published 50 Asquith s law career received a great and unforeseen boost in 1889 when he was named junior counsel to Sir Charles Russell at the Parnell Commission of Enquiry The commission had been set up in the aftermath of damaging statements in The Times based on forged letters that Irish MP Charles Stuart Parnell had expressed approval of Dublin s Phoenix Park killings When the manager of The Times J C Macdonald was called to give evidence Russell feeling tired surprised Asquith by asking him to conduct the cross examination 51 Under Asquith s questioning it became plain that in accepting the forgeries as genuine without making any check Macdonald had in Jenkins s phrase behaved with a credulity which would have been childlike had it not been criminally negligent 52 The Manchester Guardian reported that under Asquith s cross examination Macdonald squirmed and wriggled through a dozen half formed phrases in an attempt at explanation and finished none 53 The accusations against Parnell were shown to be false The Times was obliged to make a full apology and Asquith s reputation was assured 54 55 Within a year he had gained advancement to the senior rank of the bar Queen s Counsel 56 Asquith appeared in two important cases in the early 1890s He played an effective low key role in the sensational Tranby Croft libel trial 1891 helping to show that the plaintiff had not been libelled He was on the losing side in Carlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Co 1892 a landmark English contract law case that established that a company was obliged to meet its advertised pledges 57 58 Widower and cabinet minister Edit In September 1891 Helen Asquith died of typhoid fever following a few days illness while the family were on holiday in Scotland 59 Asquith bought a house in Surrey and hired nannies and other domestic staff He sold the Hampstead property and took a flat in Mount Street Mayfair where he lived during the working week 60 Margot Asquith at about the time of her marriage The general election of July 1892 returned Gladstone and the Liberals to office with intermittent support from the Irish Nationalist MPs Asquith who was then only 39 and had never served as a junior minister accepted the post of Home Secretary a senior Cabinet position The Conservatives and Liberal Unionists jointly outnumbered the Liberals in the Commons which together with a permanent Unionist majority in the House of Lords restricted the government s capacity to put reforming measures in place Asquith failed to secure a majority for a bill to disestablish the Church of Wales and another to protect workers injured at work but he built up a reputation as a capable and fair minister 10 In 1893 Asquith responded to a request from Magistrates in the Wakefield area for reinforcements to police a mining strike Asquith sent 400 Metropolitan policeman After two civilians were killed in Featherstone when soldiers opened fire on a crowd Asquith was subject to protests at public meetings for a period He responded to a taunt Why did you murder the miners at Featherstone in 92 by saying It was not 92 it was 93 61 When Gladstone retired in March 1894 Queen Victoria chose the Foreign Secretary Lord Rosebery as the new prime minister Asquith thought Rosebery preferable to the other possible candidate the Chancellor of the Exchequer Sir William Harcourt whom he deemed too anti imperialist one of the so called Little Englanders and too abrasive 62 Asquith remained at the Home Office until the government fell in 1895 10 Asquith had known Margot Tennant slightly since before his wife s death and grew increasingly attached to her in his years as a widower On 10 May 1894 they were married at St George s Hanover Square Asquith became a son in law of Sir Charles Tennant 1st Baronet Margot was in many respects the opposite of Asquith s first wife being outgoing impulsive extravagant and opinionated 63 Despite the misgivings of many of Asquith s friends and colleagues the marriage proved to be a success Margot got on if sometimes stormily with her step children and she and Asquith had five children of their own only two of whom survived infancy 63 Anthony Asquith 9 November 1902 21 February 1968 Elizabeth Asquith 26 February 1897 7 April 1945 she married Prince Antoine Bibesco on 30 April 1919 They had one daughter Out of office 1895 1905 Edit The general election of July 1895 was disastrous for the Liberals and the Conservatives under Lord Salisbury won a majority of 152 With no government post Asquith divided his time between politics and the bar e Jenkins comments that in this period Asquith earned a substantial though not stellar income and was never worse off and often much higher paid than when in office 64 Matthew writes that his income as a QC in the following years was around 5 000 to 10 000 per annum around 500 000 1 000 000 at 2015 prices 10 65 According to Haldane on returning to government in 1905 Asquith had to give up a 10 000 brief to act for the Khedive of Egypt 66 Margot later claimed in the 1920s when they were short of money that he could have made 50 000 per annum had he remained at the bar 67 Campbell Bannerman Liberal leader from 1899 The Liberal Party with a leadership Harcourt in the Commons and Rosebery in the Lords who detested each other once again suffered factional divisions Rosebery resigned in October 1896 and Harcourt followed him in December 1898 68 69 Asquith came under strong pressure to accept the nomination to take over as Liberal leader but the post of Leader of the Opposition though full time was then unpaid and he could not afford to give up his income as a barrister He and others prevailed on the former Secretary of State for War Sir Henry Campbell Bannerman to accept the post 70 During the Boer War of 1899 1902 Liberal opinion divided along pro imperialist and Little England lines with Campbell Bannerman striving to maintain party unity Asquith was less inclined than his leader and many in the party to censure the Conservative government for its conduct though he regarded the war as an unnecessary distraction 10 Joseph Chamberlain a former Liberal minister now an ally of the Conservatives campaigned for tariffs to shield British industry from cheaper foreign competition Asquith s advocacy of traditional Liberal free trade policies helped to make Chamberlain s proposals the central question in British politics in the early years of the 20th century In Matthew s view Asquith s forensic skills quickly exposed deficiencies and self contradictions in Chamberlain s arguments 10 The question divided the Conservatives while the Liberals were united under the banner of free fooders against those in the government who countenanced a tax on imported essentials 71 Chancellor of the Exchequer 1905 1908 Edit Asquith as Chancellor of the Exchequer in the House of Commons Salisbury s Conservative successor as Prime Minister Arthur Balfour resigned in December 1905 but did not seek a dissolution of Parliament and a general election f King Edward VII invited Campbell Bannerman to form a minority government Asquith and his close political allies Haldane and Sir Edward Grey tried to pressure him into taking a peerage to become a figurehead Prime Minister in the House of Lords giving the pro empire wing of the party greater dominance in the House of Commons Campbell Bannerman called their bluff and refused to move 72 73 Asquith was appointed Chancellor of the Exchequer He held the post for over two years and introduced three budgets 74 75 A month after taking office Campbell Bannerman called a general election in which the Liberals gained a landslide majority of 132 76 However Asquith s first budget in 1906 was constrained by the annual income and expenditure plans he had inherited from his predecessor Austen Chamberlain The only income for which Chamberlain had over budgeted was the duty from sales of alcohol g 77 With a balanced budget and a realistic assessment of future public expenditure Asquith was able in his second and third budgets to lay the foundations for limited redistribution of wealth and welfare provisions for the poor Blocked at first by Treasury officials from setting a variable rate of income tax with higher rates on those with high incomes he set up a committee under Sir Charles Dilke which recommended not only variable income tax rates but also a supertax on incomes of more than 5 000 a year Asquith also introduced a distinction between earned and unearned income taxing the latter at a higher rate He used the increased revenues to fund old age pensions the first time a British government had provided them Reductions in selective taxes such as that on sugar were aimed at benefiting the poor 78 Asquith planned the 1908 budget but by the time he presented it to the Commons he was no longer Chancellor Campbell Bannerman s health had been failing for nearly a year After a series of heart attacks he resigned on 3 April 1908 less than three weeks before he died 79 Asquith was universally accepted as the natural successor 80 King Edward who was on holiday in Biarritz sent for Asquith who took the boat train to France and kissed hands as prime minister in the Hotel du Palais Biarritz on 8 April 81 Peacetime prime minister 1908 1914 EditFurther information Liberal government 1905 1915 Appointments and cabinet Edit Asquith in 1908 On Asquith s return from Biarritz his leadership of the Liberals was affirmed by a party meeting the first time this had been done for a prime minister 10 He initiated a cabinet reshuffle Lloyd George was promoted to be Asquith s replacement as chancellor Winston Churchill succeeded Lloyd George as President of the Board of Trade entering the Cabinet despite his youth aged 33 and the fact that he had crossed the floor to become a Liberal only four years previously 82 Asquith demoted or dismissed a number of Campbell Bannerman s cabinet ministers Lord Tweedmouth the First Lord of the Admiralty was relegated to the nominal post of Lord President of the Council Lord Elgin was sacked from the Colonial Office and the Earl of Portsmouth whom Asquith had tutored was too as undersecretary at the War Office The abruptness of their dismissals caused hard feelings Elgin wrote to Tweedmouth I venture to think that even a prime minister may have some regard for the usages common among gentlemen I feel that even a housemaid gets a better warning h 83 Historian Cameron Hazlehurst wrote that the new men with the old made a powerful team 84 The cabinet choices balanced the competing factions in the party the appointments of Lloyd George and Churchill satisfied the radicals while the whiggish element favoured Reginald McKenna s appointment as First Lord 10 Prime minister at leisure Edit Possessed of a faculty for working quickly 85 Asquith had considerable time for leisure Reading 86 the classics poetry and a vast range of English literature consumed much of his time So did correspondence intensely disliking the telephone Asquith was a prolific letter writer 87 Travelling often to country houses owned by members of Margot s family was almost constant Asquith being a devoted weekender 88 He spent part of each summer in Scotland with golf constituency matters and time at Balmoral as duty minister 10 He and Margot divided their time between Downing Street and The Wharf 89 a country house at Sutton Courtenay in Berkshire which they bought in 1912 90 their London mansion 20 Cavendish Square 91 was let during his premiership He was addicted to Contract bridge 92 Above all else Asquith thrived on company and conversation A clubbable man he enjoyed the companionship of clever and attractive women even more 93 Throughout his life Asquith had a circle of close female friends which Margot termed his harem 94 In 1912 one of these Venetia Stanley became much closer Meeting first in 1909 1910 by 1912 she was Asquith s constant correspondent and companion Between that point and 1915 he wrote her some 560 letters at a rate of up to four a day 95 Although it remains uncertain whether or not they were lovers 96 she became of central importance to him 97 Asquith s thorough enjoyment of comfort and luxury 93 during peacetime and his unwillingness to adjust his behaviour during conflict 98 ultimately contributed to the impression of a man out of touch Lady Tree s teasing question asked at the height of the conflict Tell me Mr Asquith do you take an interest in the war 99 conveyed a commonly held view Asquith enjoyed alcohol and his drinking was the subject of considerable gossip His relaxed attitude to drink disappointed the temperance element in the Liberal coalition 100 and some authors have suggested it affected his decision making for example in his opposition to Lloyd George s wartime attacks on the liquor trade 101 The Conservative leader Bonar Law quipped Asquith drunk can make a better speech than any of us sober 102 His reputation suffered especially as wartime crises demanded the full alert attention of the prime minister 103 David Owen writes that Asquith was ordered by his doctor to rein in his consumption after a near collapse in April 1911 but it is unclear whether he actually did so Owen a medical doctor by training states that by modern diagnostic standards Asquith became an alcoholic while Prime Minister Witnesses often remarked on his weight gain and red bloated face 104 Domestic policy Edit Reforming the House of Lords Edit Asquith hoped to act as a mediator between members of his cabinet as they pushed Liberal legislation through Parliament Events including conflict with the House of Lords forced him to the front from the start of his premiership Despite the Liberals s massive majority in the House of Commons the Conservatives had overwhelming support in the unelected upper chamber 105 i Campbell Bannerman had favoured reforming the Lords by providing that a bill thrice passed by the Commons at least six months apart could become law without the Lords consent while diminishing the power of the Commons by reducing the maximum term of a parliament from seven to five years 106 Asquith as chancellor had served on a cabinet committee that had written a plan to resolve legislative stalemates by a joint sitting of the Commons as a body with 100 of the peers 107 The Commons passed a number of pieces of legislation in 1908 which were defeated or heavily amended in the Lords including a Licensing Bill a Scottish Small Landholders Bill and a Scottish Land Values Bill 105 None of these bills were important enough to dissolve parliament and seek a new mandate at a general election 10 Asquith and Lloyd George believed the peers would back down if presented with Liberal objectives contained within a finance bill the Lords had not obstructed a money bill since the 17th century and after initially blocking Gladstone s attempt as chancellor to repeal Paper Duties had yielded in 1861 when it was submitted again in a finance bill Accordingly the Liberal leadership expected that after much objection from the Conservative peers the Lords would yield to policy changes wrapped within a budget bill 108 1909 People s Budget Edit This 1909 Punch cartoon suggests the Liberals were delighted when the Lords forced an election Back row Haldane Churchill with arms up being hugged by his ally Lloyd George Asquith standing at right Bottom row McKenna Lord Crewe with moustache Augustine Birrell leaning back In a major speech in December 1908 Asquith announced that the upcoming budget would reflect the Liberals policy agenda and the People s Budget that was submitted to Parliament by Lloyd George the following year greatly expanded social welfare programmes To pay for them it significantly increased both direct and indirect taxes 10 These included a 20 per cent tax on the unearned increase in value in land payable at death of the owner or sale of the land There would also be a tax of 1 2 d in the pound j on undeveloped land A graduated income tax was imposed and there were increases in imposts on tobacco beer and spirits 109 A tax on petrol was introduced despite Treasury concerns that it could not work in practice Although Asquith held fourteen cabinet meetings to assure unity amongst his ministers 10 there was opposition from some Liberals Rosebery described the budget as inquisitorial tyrannical and Socialistic 110 The budget divided the country and provoked bitter debate through the summer of 1909 111 The Northcliffe Press The Times and the Daily Mail urged rejection of the budget to give tariff reform indirect taxes on imported goods which it was felt would encourage British industry and trade within the Empire a chance there were many public meetings some of them organised by dukes in protest at the budget 112 Many Liberal politicians attacked the peers including Lloyd George in his Newcastle upon Tyne speech in which he said a fully equipped duke costs as much to keep up as two Dreadnoughts and dukes are just as great a terror and they last longer 113 King Edward privately urged Conservative leaders Balfour and Lord Lansdowne to pass the Budget this was not unusual as Queen Victoria had helped to broker agreement between the two Houses over the Irish Church Act 1869 and the Third Reform Act in 1884 114 From July it became increasingly clear that the Conservative peers would reject the budget partly in the hope of forcing an election 115 If they rejected it Asquith determined he would have to ask the King to dissolve Parliament four years into a seven year term 10 as it would mean the legislature had refused supply k The budget passed the Commons on 4 November 1909 but was voted down in the Lords on the 30th the Lords passing a resolution by Lord Lansdowne stating that they were entitled to oppose the finance bill as it lacked an electoral mandate 116 Asquith had Parliament prorogued three days later for an election beginning on 15 January 1910 with the Commons first passing a resolution deeming the Lords vote to be an attack on the constitution 117 1910 election and constitutional deadlock Edit The January 1910 general election was dominated by talk of removing the Lords veto 10 118 A possible solution was to threaten to have King Edward pack the House of Lords with freshly minted Liberal peers who would override the Lords s veto Asquith s talk of safeguards was taken by many to mean that he had secured the King s agreement to this They were mistaken the King had informed Asquith that he would not consider a mass creation of peers until after a second general election 10 Lloyd George and Churchill were the leading forces in the Liberals appeal to the voters Asquith clearly tired took to the hustings for a total of two weeks during the campaign and when the polls began journeyed to Cannes with such speed that he neglected an engagement with the King to the monarch s annoyance citation needed The result was a hung parliament The Liberals lost heavily from their great majority of 1906 but still finished with two more seats than the Conservatives With Irish Nationalist and Labour support the government would have ample support on most issues and Asquith stated that his majority compared favourably with those enjoyed by Palmerston and Lord John Russell 119 Asquith caricatured in Vanity Fair 1910 Immediate further pressure to remove the Lords veto now came from the Irish MPs who wanted to remove the Lords ability to block the introduction of Irish Home Rule They threatened to vote against the Budget unless they had their way 120 l With another general election likely before long Asquith had to make clear the Liberal policy on constitutional change to the country without alienating the Irish and Labour This initially proved difficult and the King s speech opening Parliament was vague on what was to be done to neutralise the Lords veto Asquith dispirited his supporters by stating in Parliament that he had neither asked for nor received a commitment from the King to create peers 10 The cabinet considered resigning and leaving it up to Balfour to try to form a Conservative government 121 The budget passed the Commons again and now that it had an electoral mandate it was approved by the Lords in April without a division 122 The cabinet finally decided to back a plan based on Campbell Bannerman s that a bill passed by the Commons in three consecutive annual sessions would become law notwithstanding the Lords objections Unless the King guaranteed that he would create enough Liberal peers to pass the bill ministers would resign and allow Balfour to form a government leaving the matter to be debated at the ensuing general election 123 On 14 April 1910 the Commons passed resolutions that would become the basis of the eventual Parliament Act 1911 to remove the power of the Lords to veto money bills to reduce blocking of other bills to a two year power of delay and also to reduce the term of a parliament from seven years to five 124 In that debate Asquith also hinted in part to ensure the support of the Irish MPs that he would ask the King to break the deadlock in that Parliament i e that he would ask for the mass creation of peers contrary to the King s earlier stipulation that there be a second election 125 m These plans were scuttled by the death of Edward VII on 6 May 1910 Asquith and his ministers were initially reluctant to press the new king George V in mourning for his father for commitments on constitutional change and the monarch s views were not yet known With a strong feeling in the country that the parties should compromise Asquith and other Liberals met with Conservative leaders in a number of conferences through much of the remainder of 1910 These talks failed in November over Conservative insistence that there be no limits on the Lords s ability to veto Irish Home Rule 10 When the Parliament Bill was submitted to the Lords they made amendments that were not acceptable to the government 126 1910 1911 second election and Parliament Act Edit Punch 1911 cartoon shows Asquith and Lloyd George preparing coronets for 500 new peers On 11 November Asquith asked King George to dissolve Parliament for another general election in December and on the 14th met again with the King and demanded assurances the monarch would create an adequate number of Liberal peers to carry the Parliament Bill The King was slow to agree and Asquith and his cabinet informed him they would resign if he did not make the commitment Balfour had told King Edward that he would form a Conservative government if the Liberals left office but the new King did not know this The King reluctantly gave in to Asquith s demand writing in his diary that I disliked having to do this very much but agreed that this was the only alternative to the Cabinet resigning which at this moment would be disastrous 127 Asquith dominated the short election campaign focusing on the Lords veto in calm speeches compared by his biographer Stephen Koss to the wild irresponsibility of other major campaigners 128 In a speech at Hull he stated that the Liberals purpose was to remove the obstruction not establish an ideal upper house I have always got to deal the country has got to deal with things here and now We need an instrument of constitutional change that can be set to work at once which will get rid of deadlocks and give us the fair and even chance in legislation to which we are entitled and which is all that we demand 129 Samuel Begg s depiction of the passing of the Parliament Bill in the House of Lords 1911 The election resulted in little change to the party strengths the Liberal and Conservative parties were exactly equal in size by 1914 the Conservative Party would actually be larger owing to by election victories Nevertheless Asquith remained in Number Ten with a large majority in the Commons on the issue of the House of Lords The Parliament Bill again passed the House of Commons in April 1911 and was heavily amended in the Lords Asquith advised King George that the monarch would be called upon to create the peers and the King agreed asking that his pledge be made public and that the Lords be allowed to reconsider their opposition Once it was there was a raging internal debate within the Conservatives on whether to give in or to continue to vote no even when outnumbered by hundreds of newly created peers After lengthy debate on 10 August 1911 the Lords voted narrowly not to insist on their amendments with many Conservative peers abstaining and a few voting in favour of the government the bill was passed into law 130 According to Jenkins although Asquith had at times moved slowly during the crisis on the whole Asquith s slow moulding of events had amounted to a masterly display of political nerve and patient determination Compared with the Conservatives his leadership was outstanding 131 Churchill wrote to Asquith after the second 1910 election your leadership was the main and conspicuous feature of the whole fight 128 Matthew in his article on Asquith found that the episode was the zenith of Asquith s prime ministerial career In the British Liberal tradition he patched rather than reformulated the constitution 10 Social religious and labour matters Edit Despite the distraction of the problem of the House of Lords Asquith and his government moved ahead with a number of pieces of reforming legislation According to Matthew no peacetime premier has been a more effective enabler Labour exchanges the introduction of unemployment and health insurance reflected the reforms the government was able to achieve despite the problem of the Lords Asquith was not himself a new Liberal but he saw the need for a change in assumptions about the individual s relationship to the state and he was fully aware of the political risk to the Liberals of a Labour Party on its left flank 10 Keen to keep the support of the Labour Party the Asquith government passed bills urged by that party including the Trade Union Act 1913 reversing the Osborne judgment and in 1911 granting MPs a salary making it more feasible for working class people to serve in the House of Commons 132 Asquith had as chancellor placed money aside for the provision of non contributory old age pensions the bill authorising them passed in 1908 during his premiership despite some objection in the Lords 133 Jenkins noted that the scheme which provided five shillings a week to single pensioners aged seventy and over and slightly less than twice that to married couples to modern ears sounds cautious and meagre But it was violently criticised at the time for showing a reckless generosity 134 Asquith s new government became embroiled in a controversy over the Eucharistic Congress of 1908 held in London Following the Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829 the Roman Catholic Church had seen a resurgence in Britain and a large procession displaying the Blessed Sacrament was planned to allow the laity to participate Although such an event was forbidden by the 1829 act planners counted on the British reputation for religious tolerance 135 and Francis Cardinal Bourne the Archbishop of Westminster had obtained permission from the Metropolitan Police When the plans became widely known King Edward objected as did many other Protestants Asquith received inconsistent advice from his Home Secretary Herbert Gladstone and successfully pressed the organisers to cancel the religious aspects of the procession though it cost him the resignation of his only Catholic cabinet minister Lord Ripon 136 Disestablishment of the Welsh Church was a Liberal priority but despite support by most Welsh MPs there was opposition in the Lords Asquith was an authority on Welsh disestablishment from his time under Gladstone but had little to do with the passage of the bill It was twice rejected by the Lords in 1912 and 1913 but having been forced through under the Parliament Act received royal assent in September 1914 with the provisions suspended until war s end 10 137 Votes for women Edit See also Suffragette bombing and arson campaign Early 20th century suffragist lapel pin Asquith had opposed votes for women as early as 1882 and he remained well known as an adversary throughout his time as prime minister 138 He took a detached view of the women s suffrage question believing it should be judged on whether extending the franchise would improve the system of government rather than as a question of rights He did not understand Jenkins ascribed it to a failure of imagination why passions were raised on both sides over the issue He told the House of Commons in 1913 while complaining of the exaggerated language on both sides I am sometimes tempted to think as one listens to the arguments of supporters of women s suffrage that there is nothing to be said for it and I am sometimes tempted to think as I listen to the arguments of the opponents of women s suffrage that there is nothing to be said against it 139 In 1906 suffragettes Annie Kenney Adelaide Knight and Jane Sbarborough were arrested when they tried to obtain an audience with Asquith 140 141 Offered either six weeks in prison or giving up campaigning for one year the women all chose prison 140 Asquith was a target for militant suffragettes as they abandoned hope of achieving the vote through peaceful means He was several times the subject of their tactics approached to his annoyance arriving at 10 Downing Street by Olive Fargus and Catherine Corbett whom he called silly women 142 confronted at evening parties accosted on the golf course and ambushed while driving to Stirling to dedicate a memorial to Campbell Bannerman On the last occasion his top hat proved adequate protection against the dog whips wielded by the women These incidents left him unmoved as he did not believe them a true manifestation of public opinion 143 With a growing majority of the Cabinet including Lloyd George and Churchill in favour of women s suffrage Asquith was pressed to allow consideration of a private member s bill to give women the vote The majority of Liberal MPs were also in favour 144 Jenkins deemed him one of the two main prewar obstacles to women gaining the vote the other being the suffragists s own militancy In 1912 Asquith reluctantly agreed to permit a free vote on an amendment to a pending reform bill allowing women the vote on the same terms as men This would have satisfied Liberal suffrage supporters and many suffragists but the Speaker in January 1913 ruled that the amendment changed the nature of the bill which would have to be withdrawn Asquith was loud in his complaints against the Speaker but was privately relieved 145 Asquith belatedly came around to support women s suffrage in 1917 146 by which time he was out of office Women over the age of thirty were eventually given the vote by Lloyd George s government under the Representation of the People Act 1918 Asquith s reforms to the House of Lords eased the way for the passage of the bill 147 Irish Home Rule Edit Members of the Ulster Volunteer Force march through Belfast 1914 As a minority party after 1910 elections the Liberals depended on the Irish vote controlled by John Redmond To gain Irish support for the budget and the parliament bill Asquith promised Redmond that Irish Home Rule would be the highest priority 148 It proved much more complex and time consuming than expected 149 Support for self government for Ireland had been a tenet of the Liberal Party since 1886 but Asquith had not been as enthusiastic stating in 1903 while in opposition that the party should never take office if that government would be dependent for survival on the support of the Irish Nationalist Party 150 After 1910 though Irish Nationalist votes were essential to stay in power Retaining Ireland in the Union was the declared intent of all parties and the Nationalists as part of the majority that kept Asquith in office were entitled to seek enactment of their plans for Home Rule and to expect Liberal and Labour support 10 The Conservatives with die hard support from the Protestant Orangemen of Ulster were strongly opposed to Home Rule The desire to retain a veto for the Lords on such bills had been an unbridgeable gap between the parties in the constitutional talks prior to the second 1910 election 151 The cabinet committee not including Asquith that in 1911 planned the Third Home Rule Bill opposed any special status for Protestant Ulster within majority Catholic Ireland Asquith later in 1913 wrote to Churchill stating that the Prime Minister had always believed and stated that the price of Home Rule should be a special status for Ulster In spite of this the bill as introduced in April 1912 contained no such provision and was meant to apply to all Ireland 10 Neither partition nor a special status for Ulster was likely to satisfy either side 149 The self government offered by the bill was very limited but Irish Nationalists expecting Home Rule to come by gradual parliamentary steps favoured it The Conservatives and Irish Unionists opposed it Unionists began preparing to get their way by force if necessary prompting nationalist emulation Though very much a minority Irish Unionists were generally better financed and more organised 152 Since the Parliament Act the Unionists could no longer block Home Rule in the House of Lords but only delay Royal Assent by two years Asquith decided to postpone any concessions to the Unionists until the bill s third passage through the Commons when he believed the Unionists would be desperate for a compromise 153 Jenkins concluded that had Asquith tried for an earlier agreement he would have had no luck as many of his opponents wanted a fight and the opportunity to smash his government 154 Sir Edward Carson MP for Dublin University and leader of the Irish Unionists in Parliament threatened a revolt if Home Rule was enacted 155 The new Conservative leader Bonar Law campaigned in Parliament and in northern Ireland warning Ulstermen against Rome Rule that is domination by the island s Catholic majority 156 Many who opposed Home Rule felt that the Liberals had violated the Constitution by pushing through major constitutional change without a clear electoral mandate with the House of Lords formerly the watchdog of the constitution not reformed as had been promised in the preamble of the 1911 Act and thus justified actions that in other circumstances might be treason 157 The passions generated by the Irish question contrasted with Asquith s cool detachment and he wrote about the prospective partition of the county of Tyrone which had a mixed population deeming it an impasse with unspeakable consequences upon a matter which to English eyes seems inconceivably small amp to Irish eyes immeasurably big 158 In 1912 Asquith said Ireland is a nation not two nations but one nation There are few cases in history of nationality at once so distinct so persistent and so assimilative as the Irish 159 As the Commons debated the Home Rule bill in late 1912 and early 1913 unionists in the north of Ireland mobilised with talk of Carson declaring a Provisional Government and Ulster Volunteer Forces UVF built around the Orange Lodges but in the cabinet only Churchill viewed this with alarm 160 These forces insisting on their loyalty to the British Crown but increasingly well armed with smuggled German weapons prepared to do battle with the British Army but Unionist leaders were confident that the army would not aid in forcing Home Rule on Ulster 158 As the Home Rule bill awaited its third passage through the Commons the so called Curragh incident occurred in April 1914 With deployment of troops into Ulster imminent and threatening language by Churchill and the Secretary of State for War John Seely around sixty army officers led by Brigadier General Hubert Gough announced that they would rather be dismissed from the service than obey 10 With unrest spreading to army officers in England the Cabinet acted to placate the officers with a statement written by Asquith reiterating the duty of officers to obey lawful orders but claiming that the incident had been a misunderstanding Seely then added an unauthorised assurance countersigned by Sir John French the professional head of the army that the government had no intention of using force against Ulster Asquith repudiated the addition and required Seely and French to resign taking on the War Office himself 161 retaining the additional responsibility until hostilities against Germany began 162 Within a month of the start of Asquith s tenure at the War Office the UVF landed a large cargo of guns and ammunition at Larne but the Cabinet did not deem it prudent to arrest their leaders On 12 May Asquith announced that he would secure Home Rule s third passage through the Commons accomplished on 25 May but that there would be an amending bill with it making special provision for Ulster But the Lords made changes to the amending bill unacceptable to Asquith and with no way to invoke the Parliament Act on the amending bill Asquith agreed to meet other leaders at an all party conference on 21 July at Buckingham Palace chaired by the King When no solution could be found Asquith and his cabinet planned further concessions to the Unionists but this did not occur as the crisis on the Continent erupted into war 10 In September 1914 after the outbreak of the conflict Asquith announced that the Home Rule bill would go on the statute book as the Government of Ireland Act 1914 but would not go into force until after the war in the interim a bill granting special status to Ulster would be considered This solution satisfied neither side 163 Foreign and defence policy Edit The British Empire in 1910 Asquith led a deeply divided Liberal Party as Prime Minister not least on questions of foreign relations and defence spending 10 Under Balfour Britain and France had agreed upon the Entente Cordiale 164 In 1906 at the time the Liberals took office there was an ongoing crisis between France and Germany over Morocco and the French asked for British help in the event of conflict Grey the Foreign Secretary refused any formal arrangement but gave it as his personal opinion that in the event of war Britain would aid France France then asked for military conversations aimed at co ordination in such an event Grey agreed and these went on in the following years without cabinet knowledge Asquith most likely did not know of them until 1911 When he learnt of them Asquith was concerned that the French took for granted British aid in the event of war but Grey persuaded him the talks must continue 165 More public was the naval arms race between Britain and Germany The Moroccan crisis had been settled at the Algeciras Conference and Campbell Bannerman s cabinet approved reduced naval estimates including postponing the laying down of a second Dreadnought type battleship Tenser relationships with Germany and that nation moving ahead with its own dreadnoughts led Reginald McKenna when Asquith appointed him First Lord of the Admiralty in 1908 to propose the laying down of eight more British ones in the following three years This prompted conflict in the Cabinet between those who supported this programme such as McKenna and the economists who promoted economy in naval estimates led by Lloyd George and Churchill 166 There was much public sentiment for building as many ships as possible to maintain British naval superiority Asquith mediated among his colleagues and secured a compromise whereby four ships would be laid down at once and four more if there proved to be a need 167 The armaments matter was put to the side during the domestic crises over the 1909 budget and then the Parliament Act though the building of warships continued at an accelerated rate 168 The Agadir crisis of 1911 was again between France and Germany over Moroccan interests but Asquith s government signalled its friendliness towards France in Lloyd George s Mansion House speech on 21 July 169 Late that year the Lord President of the Council Viscount Morley brought the question of the communications with the French to the attention of the Cabinet The Cabinet agreed at Asquith s instigation that no talks could be held that committed Britain to war and required cabinet approval for co ordinated military actions Nevertheless by 1912 the French had requested additional naval co ordination and late in the year the various understandings were committed to writing in an exchange of letters between Grey and French Ambassador Paul Cambon 170 The relationship with France disquieted some Liberal backbenchers and Asquith felt obliged to assure them that nothing had been secretly agreed that would commit Britain to war This quieted Asquith s foreign policy critics until another naval estimates dispute erupted early in 1914 171 July Crisis and outbreak of World War I Edit Main articles Causes of World War I and July Crisis Sir Edward Grey The assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria in Sarajevo on 28 June 1914 initiated a month of unsuccessful diplomatic attempts to avoid war 172 These attempts ended with Grey s proposal for a four power conference of Britain Germany France and Italy following the Austrian ultimatum to Serbia on the evening of 23 July Grey s initiative was rejected by Germany as not practicable 173 During this period George Cassar considers that the country was overwhelmingly opposed to intervention 174 Much of Asquith s cabinet was similarly inclined Lloyd George told a journalist on 27 July that there could be no question of our taking part in any war in the first instance He knew of no Minister who would be in favour of it 173 and wrote in his War Memoirs that before the German ultimatum to Belgium on 3 August The Cabinet was hopelessly divided fully one third if not one half being opposed to our entry into the War After the German ultimatum to Belgium the Cabinet was almost unanimous 175 Asquith himself while growing more aware of the impending catastrophe was still uncertain of the necessity for Britain s involvement On 24 July he wrote to Venetia We are within measurable or imaginable distance of a real Armageddon Happily there seems to be no reason why we should be anything more than spectators 176 During the continuing escalation Asquith used all his experience and authority to keep his options open 177 and adamantly refused to commit his government by saying The worst thing we could do would be to announce to the world at the present moment that in no circumstances would we intervene 178 But he recognised Grey s clear commitment to Anglo French unity and following Russian mobilisation on 30 July 179 and the Kaiser s ultimatum to the Tsar on 1 August he recognised the inevitability of war 180 From this point he committed himself to participation despite continuing Cabinet opposition As he said There is a strong party reinforced by Ll George Morley and Harcourt who are against any kind of intervention Grey will never consent and I shall not separate myself from him 181 Also on 2 August he received confirmation of Conservative support from Bonar Law 182 In one of two extraordinary Cabinets held on that Sunday Grey informed members of the 1912 Anglo French naval talks and Asquith secured agreement to mobilise the fleet 183 On Monday 3 August the Belgian Government rejected the German demand for free passage through its country and in the afternoon with gravity and unexpected eloquence 182 Grey spoke in the Commons and called for British action against the unmeasured aggrandisement of any power 184 Basil Liddell Hart considered that this speech saw the hardening of British opinion to the point of intervention 185 The following day Asquith saw the King and an ultimatum to Germany demanding withdrawal from Belgian soil was issued with a deadline of midnight Berlin time 11 00 p m GMT Margot Asquith described the moment of expiry somewhat inaccurately in these terms I joined Henry in the Cabinet room Lord Crewe and Sir Edward Grey were already there and we sat smoking cigarettes in silence The clock on the mantelpiece hammered out the hour and when the last beat of midnight struck it was as silent as dawn We were at War 186 First year of the war August 1914 May 1915 EditMain article History of the United Kingdom during the First World War Asquith s wartime government Edit The declaration of war on 4 August 1914 saw Asquith as the head of an almost united Liberal Party Having persuaded Sir John Simon and Lord Beauchamp to remain 187 Asquith suffered only two resignations from his cabinet those of John Morley and John Burns 188 With other parties promising to co operate Asquith s government declared war on behalf of a united nation Asquith bringing the country into war without civil disturbance or political schism 189 The first months of the War saw a revival in Asquith s popularity Bitterness from earlier struggles temporarily receded and the nation looked to Asquith steady massive self reliant and unswerving 190 to lead them to victory But Asquith s peacetime strengths ill equipped him for what was to become perhaps the first total war and before its end he would be out of office for ever and his party would never again form a majority government 191 Beyond the replacement of Morley and Burns 192 Asquith made one other significant change to his cabinet He relinquished the War Office and appointed the non partisan but Conservative inclined Lord Kitchener of Khartoum 193 Kitchener was a figure of national renown and his participation strengthened the reputation of the government 194 Whether it increased its effectiveness is less certain 99 Overall it was a government of considerable talent with Lloyd George remaining as Chancellor 195 Grey as Foreign Secretary 196 and Churchill at the Admiralty 193 The invasion of Belgium by German forces the touch paper for British intervention saw the Kaiser s armies attempt a lightning strike through Belgium against France while holding Russian forces on the Eastern Front 197 To support the French Asquith s cabinet authorised the despatch of the British Expeditionary Force 198 The ensuing Battle of the Frontiers in the late summer and early autumn of 1914 saw the final halt of the German advance at the First Battle of the Marne which established the pattern of attritional trench warfare on the Western Front that continued until 1918 199 This stalemate brought deepening resentment against the government and against Asquith personally as the population at large and the press lords in particular blamed him for a lack of energy in the prosecution of the war 200 It also created divisions within the Cabinet between the Westerners including Asquith who supported the generals in believing that the key to victory lay in ever greater investment of men and munitions in France and Belgium 201 and the Easterners led by Churchill and Lloyd George who believed that the Western Front was in a state of irreversible stasis and sought victory through action in the East 202 Lastly it highlighted divisions between those politicians and newspaper owners who thought that military strategy and actions should be determined by the generals and those who thought politicians should make those decisions 203 Asquith said in his memoirs Once the governing objectives have been decided by Ministers at home the execution should always be left to the untrammeled discretion of the commanders on the spot 204 Lloyd George s counter view was expressed in a letter of early 1916 in which he asked whether I have a right to express an independent view on the War or must be a pure advocate of opinions expressed by my military advisers 205 These divergent opinions lay behind the two great crises that would within 14 months see the collapse of the last ever fully Liberal administration and the advent of the first coalition the Dardanelles Campaign and the Shell Crisis 206 Dardanelles Campaign Edit Main article Gallipoli Campaign Admiral Jacky Fisher The Dardanelles Campaign was an attempt by Churchill and those favouring an Eastern strategy to end the stalemate on the Western Front It envisaged an Anglo French landing on Turkey s Gallipoli Peninsula and a rapid advance to Constantinople which would see the exit of Turkey from the conflict The plan was rejected by Admiral Fisher the First Sea Lord and Kitchener 207 Unable to provide decisive leadership Asquith sought to arbitrate between these two and Churchill leading to procrastination and delay The naval attempt was badly defeated Allied troops established bridgeheads on the Gallipoli Peninsula but a delay in providing sufficient reinforcements allowed the Turks to regroup leading to a stalemate Jenkins described as immobile as that which prevailed on the Western Front 208 The Allies suffered from infighting at the top poor equipment incompetent leadership and lack of planning while facing the best units of the Ottoman army The Allies sent in 492 000 men they suffered 132 000 casualties in the humiliating defeat with very high rates for Australia and New Zealand that permanently transformed those dominions In Britain it was political ruin for Churchill and badly hurt Asquith 209 Shell Crisis of May 1915 Edit Main article Shell Crisis of 1915 The opening of 1915 saw growing division between Lloyd George and Kitchener over the supply of munitions for the army Lloyd George considered that a munitions department under his control was essential to co ordinate the nation s entire engineering capacity 210 Kitchener favoured the continuance of the current arrangement whereby munitions were sourced through contracts between the War Office and the country s armaments manufacturers As so often Asquith sought compromise through committee establishing a group to consider the much vexed question of putting the contracts for munitions on a proper footing 211 This did little to dampen press criticism 212 and on 20 April Asquith sought to challenge his detractors in a major speech at Newcastle by saying I saw a statement the other day that the operations of our army were being crippled by our failure to provide the necessary ammunition There is not a word of truth in that statement 213 The press response was savage 14 May 1915 saw the publication in The Times of a letter from their correspondent Charles a Court Repington which ascribed the British failure at the Battle of Aubers Ridge to a shortage of high explosive shells Thus opened a fully fledged crisis the Shell Crisis The prime minister s wife correctly identified her husband s chief opponent the Press baron and owner of The Times Lord Northcliffe I m quite sure Northcliffe is at the bottom of all this 214 but failed to recognise the clandestine involvement of Sir John French who leaked the details of the shells shortage to Repington 215 Northcliffe claimed that the whole question of the supply of the munitions of war is one on which the Cabinet cannot be arraigned too sharply 216 Attacks on the government and on Asquith s personal lethargy came from the left as well as the right C P Scott the editor of The Manchester Guardian writing The Government has failed most frightfully and discreditably in the matter of munitions 217 Other events Edit Failures in both the East and the West began a tide of events that was to overwhelm Asquith s Liberal Government 218 Strategic setbacks combined with a shattering personal blow when on 12 May 1915 Venetia Stanley announced her engagement to Edwin Montagu Asquith s reply was immediate and brief As you know well this breaks my heart I couldn t bear to come and see you I can only pray God to bless you and help me 219 Venetia s importance to him is illustrated by a remark in a letter written in mid 1914 Keep close to me beloved in this most critical time of my life I know you will not fail 220 Her engagement a very treacherous return after all the joy you ve given me left him devastated 221 Significant though the loss was personally its impact on Asquith politically can be overstated 222 The historian Stephen Koss notes that Asquith was always able to divide his public and private lives into separate compartments and soon found new confidantes to whom he was writing with no less frequency ardour and indiscretion 223 This personal loss was immediately followed on 15 May by the resignation of Admiral Fisher after continuing disagreements with Churchill and in frustration at the disappointing developments in Gallipoli 224 Aged 74 Fisher s behaviour had grown increasingly erratic and in frequent letters to Lloyd George he gave vent to his frustrations with the First Lord of the Admiralty Fisher writes to me every day or two to let me know how things are going He has a great deal of trouble with his chief who is always wanting to do something big and striking 225 Adverse events press hostility Conservative opposition and personal sorrows assailed Asquith and his position was further weakened by his Liberal colleagues Cassar considers that Lloyd George displayed a distinct lack of loyalty 226 and Koss writes of the contemporary rumours that Churchill had been up to his old game of intriguing all round and reports a claim that Churchill unquestionably inspired the Repington Letter in collusion with Sir John French 227 Lacking cohesion internally and attacked from without Asquith determined that his government could not continue and he wrote to the King I have come decidedly to the conclusion that the Government must be reconstituted on a broad and non party basis 228 First Coalition May 1915 December 1916 EditFurther information Asquith coalition ministry Bonar Law The formation of the First Coalition saw Asquith display the political acuteness that seemed to have deserted him 229 But it came at a cost This involved the sacrifice of two old political comrades Churchill who was blamed for the Dardanelles fiasco and Haldane who was wrongly accused in the press of pro German sympathies 228 The Conservatives under Bonar Law made these removals a condition of entering government and in sacking Haldane who made no difficulty 230 Asquith committed the most uncharacteristic fault of his whole career 231 In a letter to Grey Asquith wrote of Haldane He is the oldest personal and political friend that I have in the world and with him you and I have stood together for the best part of 30 years 232 But he was unable to express these sentiments directly to Haldane who was greatly hurt Asquith handled the allocation of offices more successfully appointing Law to the relatively minor post of Colonial Secretary 233 taking responsibility for munitions from Kitchener and giving it as a new ministry to Lloyd George and placing Balfour at the Admiralty in place of Churchill who was demoted to the sinecure Cabinet post of Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Overall the Liberals held 12 Cabinet seats including most of the important ones while the Conservatives held 8 234 Despite this outcome many Liberals were dismayed the sacked Charles Hobhouse writing The disintegration of the Liberal Party is complete Ll G and his Tory friends will soon get rid of Asquith 235 From a party and a personal perspective the creation of the First Coalition was seen as a notable victory for Asquith if not for the allied cause 229 But Asquith s dismissive handling of Law also contributed to his own and his party s later destruction 236 War re organisation Edit Having reconstructed his government Asquith attempted a re configuration of his war making apparatus The most important element of this was the establishment of the Ministry of Munitions 237 followed by the re ordering of the War Council into a Dardanelles Committee with Maurice Hankey as secretary and with a remit to consider all questions of war strategy 238 The Munitions of War Act 1915 brought private companies supplying the armed forces under the tight control of the Minister of Munitions Lloyd George The policy according to J A R Marriott was that no private interest was to be permitted to obstruct the service or imperil the safety of the State Trade Union regulations must be suspended employers profits must be limited skilled men must fight if not in the trenches in the factories man power must be economised by the dilution of labour and the employment of women Private factories must pass under the control of the State and new national factories be set up Results justified the new policy the output was prodigious the goods were at last delivered 239 Nevertheless criticism of Asquith s leadership style continued The Earl of Crawford who had joined the Government as Minister of Agriculture described his first Cabinet meeting in these terms It was a huge gathering so big that it is hopeless for more than one or two to express opinions on each detail Asquith somnolent hands shaky and cheeks pendulous He exercised little control over debate seemed rather bored but good humoured throughout Lloyd George was less tolerant George Riddell recording in his diary He says the P M should lead not follow and Asquith never moves until he is forced and then it is usually too late 240 And crises as well as criticism continued to assail the Prime Minister envenomed by intra party as well as inter party rancour 241 Conscription Edit Main article Recruitment to the British Army during the First World War Lord Kitchener s call to arms The insatiable demand for manpower for the Western Front had been foreseen early on A volunteer system had been introduced at the outbreak of war and Asquith was reluctant to change it for political reasons as many Liberals and almost all of their Irish Nationalist and Labour allies were strongly opposed to conscription 242 Volunteer numbers dropped 243 not meeting the demands for more troops for Gallipoli and much more strongly for the Western Front 244 This made the voluntary system increasingly untenable Asquith s daughter Violet wrote in March 1915 Gradually every man with the average number of limbs and faculties is being sucked out to the war 245 In July 1915 the National Registration Act was passed requiring compulsory registration for all men between the ages of 18 and 65 246 This was seen by many as the prelude to conscription but the appointment of Lord Derby as Director General of Recruiting instead saw an attempt to rejuvenate the voluntary system the Derby Scheme 247 Asquith s slow steps towards conscription continued to infuriate his opponents Sir Henry Wilson for example wrote this to Leo Amery What is going to be the result of these debates Will wait and see win or can that part of the Cabinet that is in earnest and is honest force that damned old Squiff into action 248 The Prime Minister s balancing act within Parliament and within his own party was not assisted by a strident campaign against conscription conducted by his wife Describing herself as passionately against it 249 Margot Asquith engaged in one of her frequent influencing drives by letters and through conversations which had little impact other than doing great harm to Asquith s reputation and position 250 By the end of 1915 it was clear that conscription was essential and Asquith laid the Military Service Act in the House of Commons on 5 January 1916 251 The Act introduced conscription of bachelors and was extended to married men later in the year Asquith s main opposition came from within his own party particularly from Sir John Simon who resigned Asquith described Simon s stance in a letter to Sylvia Henley in these terms I felt really like a man who had been struck publicly in the face by his son 252 Some years later Simon acknowledged his error by saying I have long since realised that my opposition was a mistake 253 Asquith s achievement in bringing the bill through without breaking up the government was considerable to quote the estimation of his wife Henry s patience and skill in keeping Labour in this amazing change in England have stunned everyone 254 but the long struggle hurt his own reputation and the unity of his party 255 Ireland Edit Main article Easter Rising On Easter Monday 1916 a group of Irish Volunteers and members of the Irish Citizen Army seized a number of key buildings and locations in Dublin and elsewhere There was heavy fighting over the next week before the Volunteers were forced to surrender 256 Distracted by conscription Asquith and the Government were slow to appreciate the developing danger 257 which was exacerbated when after hasty courts martial a number of the Irish leaders were executed On 11 May Asquith crossed to Dublin and after a week of investigation decided that the island s governance system was irredeemably broken 258 He turned to Lloyd George for a solution With his customary energy Lloyd George brokered a settlement which would have seen Home Rule introduced at the end of the War with the exclusion of Ulster 259 However neither he nor Asquith appreciated the extent of Conservative opposition the plan was strongly attacked in the House of Lords and was abandoned thereafter 260 The episode damaged Lloyd George s reputation but also that of Asquith Walter Long spoke of the latter as terribly lacking in decision 261 It also further widened the divide between Asquith and Lloyd George and encouraged the latter in his plans for government reconstruction Lloyd George remarked that Mr A gets very few cheers nowadays 262 Progress of the war Edit Asquith visits the front during the Battle of the Somme 1916 Continued Allied failure and heavy losses at the Battle of Loos between September and October 1915 ended any remaining confidence in the British commander Sir John French and in the judgement of Lord Kitchener 263 Asquith resorted to a favoured stratagem and persuading Kitchener to undertake a tour of the Gallipoli battlefield in the hope that he could be persuaded to remain in the Mediterranean as Commander in Chief 264 took temporary charge of the War Office himself 265 He then replaced French with Sir Douglas Haig In his diary for 10 December 1915 the latter recorded About 7 pm I received a letter from the Prime Minister marked Secret and enclosed in three envelopes It ran Sir J French has placed in my hands his resignation Subject to the King s approval I have the pleasure of proposing to you that you should be his successor 266 Asquith also appointed Sir William Robertson as Chief of the Imperial General Staff with increased powers reporting directly to the Cabinet and with the sole right to give them military advice relegating the Secretary of State for War to the tasks of recruiting and supplying the army 267 Lastly he instituted a smaller Dardanelles Committee re christened the War Committee 268 with himself Balfour Law Lloyd George and Reginald McKenna as members 269 although as this soon increased the Committee continued the failings of its predecessor being too large and lack ing executive authority 270 None of this saved the Dardanelles Campaign and the decision to evacuate was taken in December 271 resulting in the resignation from the Duchy of Lancaster of Churchill 272 who wrote I could not accept a position of general responsibility for war policy without any effective share in its guidance and control 269 Further reverses took place in the Balkans the Central Powers overran Serbia forcing the Allied troops which had attempted to intervene back towards Salonika 273 Early 1916 saw the start of the German offensive at Verdun the greatest battle of attrition in history 274 In late May the only significant Anglo German naval engagement of the War took place at The Battle of Jutland Although a strategic success 275 the greater loss of ships on the Allied side brought early dismay 276 Lord Newton Paymaster General and Parliamentary spokesman for the War office in Kitchener s absence recorded in his diary Stupefying news of naval battle off Jutland Whilst listening to the list of ships lost I thought it the worst disaster that we had ever suffered 277 This despondency was compounded for the nation if not for his colleagues when Lord Kitchener was killed in the sinking of HMS Hampshire on 5 June 278 Asquith first considered taking the vacant War Office himself but then offered it to Law who declined it in favour of Lloyd George 279 This was an important sign of growing unity of action between the two men and it filled Margot Asquith with foreboding I look upon this as the greatest political blunder of Henry s lifetime We are out it can only be a question of time now when we shall have to leave Downing Street 280 281 Raymond Asquith Asquith followed this by agreeing to hold Commissions of Inquiry into the conduct of the Dardanelles and of the Mesopotamian campaign where Allied forces had been forced to surrender at Kut 282 Sir Maurice Hankey Secretary to the War Committee considered that the Coalition never recovered For its last five months the function of the Supreme Command was carried out under the shadow of these inquests 283 But these mistakes were overshadowed by the limited progress and immense casualties of the Battle of the Somme which began on 1 July 1916 and then by another devastating personal loss the death of Asquith s son Raymond on 15 September at the Battle of Flers Courcelette 284 Asquith s relationship with his eldest son had not been easy Raymond wrote to his wife in early 1916 If Margot talks any more bosh to you about the inhumanity of her stepchildren you can stop her mouth by telling her that during my 10 months exile here the P M has never written me a line of any description 285 But Raymond s death was shattering Violet wrote as follows to see Father suffering so wrings one 286 and Asquith passed much of the following months withdrawn and difficult to approach 287 The War brought no respite Churchill remarked The failure to break the German line in the Somme the recovery of the Germanic powers in the East i e the defeat of the Brusilov Offensive the ruin of Roumania and the beginnings of renewed submarine warfare strengthened and stimulated all those forces which insisted upon still greater vigour in the conduct of affairs 288 Fall November December 1916 EditThe events that led to the collapse of the First Coalition were exhaustively chronicled by almost all of the major participants 289 although Asquith himself was a notable exception and have been minutely studied by historians in the 100 years since 290 Although many of the accounts and studies differ in detail and present a somewhat confusing picture overall the outline is clear As R J Q Adams wrote The Prime Minister depended upon a majority in Parliament The faith of that majority in Asquith s leadership had been shaken and the appearance of a logical alternative destroyed him 291 292 293 Nigeria debate and Lord Lansdowne s memorandum Edit a man called Max Aitken The touch paper for the final crisis was the unlikely subject of the sale of captured German assets in Nigeria 294 As Colonial Secretary the Conservative leader Bonar Law led the debate and was subject to a furious attack by Sir Edward Carson The issue itself was trivial 295 but the fact that Law had been attacked by a leading member of his own party and was not supported by Lloyd George who absented himself from the House only to dine with Carson later in the evening was not 296 Margot Asquith immediately sensed the coming danger From that night it was quite clear that Northcliffe Rothermere Bonar Carson Ll G and a man called Max Aitken were going to run the Government I knew it was the end 297 Grey was similarly prescient and wrote Lloyd George means to break up the Government 298 Law saw the debate as a threat to his own political position 299 as well as another instance of lack of grip by the government 300 The situation was further inflamed by the publication of a memorandum on future prospects in the war by Lord Lansdowne 301 Circulated on 13 November it considered and did not dismiss the possibility of a negotiated settlement with the Central Powers Asquith s critics immediately assumed that the memorandum represented his own views and that Lansdowne was being used as a stalking horse 302 Lord Crewe going so far as to suggest that the Lansdowne Memorandum was the veritable causa causans n of the final break up 303 Triumvirate gathers Edit On 20 November 1916 Lloyd George Carson and Law met at the Hyde Park Hotel 304 The meeting was organised by Max Aitken who was to play central roles both in the forthcoming crisis and in its subsequent historiography 305 Max Aitken was a Canadian adventurer millionaire and close friend of Law 306 His book on the fall of the First Coalition Politicians and the War 1914 1916 although always partial and sometimes inaccurate gives a detailed insider s view of the events leading up to Asquith s political demise 307 The trio agreed on the necessity of overhauling the government and further agreed on the mechanism for doing so the establishment of a small War Council chaired by Lloyd George with no more than five members and with full executive authority for the conduct of the war 308 Asquith was to be retained as prime minister and given honorific oversight of the War Council but day to day operations would be directed by Lloyd George 304 This scheme although often reworked remained the basis of all proposals to reform the government until Asquith s fall on 6 December Until almost the end both Law 309 and Lloyd George 310 wished to retain Asquith as premier but Aitken 307 Carson 311 and Lord Northcliffe emphatically did not 312 Power without responsibility Edit Lord Northcliffe teeing up Lord Northcliffe s role was critical as was the use Lloyd George made of him and of the press in general Northcliffe s involvement also highlights the limitations of both Aitken s and Lloyd George s accounts of Asquith s fall Both minimised Northcliffe s part in the events In his War Memoirs Lloyd George stated emphatically Lord Northcliffe was never at any stage brought into our consultations 313 Aitken supported this by saying Lord Northcliffe was not in active co operation with Lloyd George 314 But these claims are contradicted by others In their biography of Northcliffe Reginald Pound and Geoffrey Harmsworth record Northcliffe s brother Rothermere writing contemporaneously Alfred has been actively at work with Ll G with a view to bringing about a change 315 Riddell wrote in his diary for 27 May 1916 LG never mentions directly that he sees Northcliffe but I am sure they are in daily contact 316 Margot Asquith was also certain of Northcliffe s role and of Lloyd George s involvement although she obscured both of their names when writing in her diary I only hope the man responsible for giving information to Lord N will be heavily punished God may forgive him I never can 317 They are also contradicted by events Northcliffe met with Lloyd George on each of the three days just prior to Lloyd George s resignation on 1 2 and 3 December 318 including two meetings on 1 December both before and after Lloyd George put his revised proposals for the War Council to Asquith 319 It seems improbable that ongoing events were not discussed and that the two men confined their conversations to negotiating article circulation rights for Lloyd George once he had resigned as Pound and Harmsworth weakly suggest 320 The attempts made by others to use Northcliffe and the wider press also merit consideration In this regard some senior military officers were extremely active Robertson for example wrote to Northcliffe in October 1916 The Boche gives me no trouble compared with what I meet in London So any help you can give me will be of Imperial value 321 Lastly the actions of Northcliffe s newspapers must be considered in particular The Times editorial on 4 December which led Asquith to reject Lloyd George s final War Council proposals 322 Thompson Northcliffe s most recent biographer concludes From the evidence it appears that Northcliffe and his newspapers should be given more credit than they have generally received for the demise of the Asquith government in December 1916 323 To ing and fro ing Edit Law met again with Carson and Lloyd George on 25 November and with Aitken s help drafted a memorandum for Asquith s signature 324 This would see a Civilian General Staff with Lloyd George as chairman and Asquith as president attending irregularly but with the right of referral to Cabinet as desired 324 This Law presented to Asquith who committed to reply on Monday the following week 325 His reply was an outright rejection the proposal was impossible without fatally impairing the confidence of colleagues and undermining my own authority 325 Law took Asquith s response to Carson and Lloyd George at Law s office in the Colonial Office All were uncertain of the next steps 326 Law decided it would be appropriate to meet with his senior Conservative colleagues something he had not previously done 327 He saw Austen Chamberlain Lord Curzon and Lord Robert Cecil on Thursday 30 November All were united in opposition to Lloyd George s War Council plans with Chamberlain writing we were unanimously of opinion sic that the plans were open to grave objection and made certain alternative proposals 328 Lloyd George had also been reflecting on the substance of the scheme and on Friday 1 December he met with Asquith to put forward an alternative This would see a War Council of three the two Service ministers and a third without portfolio One of the three presumably Lloyd George although this was not explicit would be chairman Asquith as Prime Minister would retain supreme control 329 Asquith s reply the same day did not constitute an outright rejection but he did demand that he retain the chairmanship of the council 330 As such it was unacceptable to Lloyd George and he wrote to Law the next day Saturday 2 December I enclose copy of P M s letter The life of the country depends on resolute action by you now 331 Last four days Sunday 3 December to Wednesday 6 December Edit In a four day crisis Asquith was unaware how fast he was losing support Lloyd George now had growing Unionist support the backing of Labour and thanks to the efforts of Christopher Addison a majority of Liberal MPs Asquith fell and Lloyd George answered the loud demands for a much more decisive government He energetically set up a new small war cabinet a cabinet secretariat under Hankey and a secretariat of private advisors in the Garden Suburb to move towards prime ministerial control 332 Sunday 3 December Edit Sunday 3 December saw the Conservative leadership meet at Law s house Pembroke Lodge 333 They gathered against a backdrop of ever growing press involvement in part fermented by Max Aitken 334 That morning s Reynold s News owned and edited by Lloyd George s close associate Henry Dalziel had published an article setting out Lloyd George s demands to Asquith and claiming that he intended to resign and take his case to the country if they were not met 335 At Law s house the Conservatives present drew up a resolution which they demanded Law present to Asquith 336 This document subsequently the source of much debate stated that the Government cannot continue as it is the Prime Minister should tender the resignation of the Government and if Asquith was unwilling to do that the Conservative members of the Government would tender their resignations 337 The meaning of this resolution is unclear and even those who contributed to it took away differing interpretations 338 Chamberlain felt that it left open the options of either Asquith or Lloyd George as premier dependent on who could gain greater support Curzon in a letter of that day to Lansdowne stated that no one at the Pembroke Lodge meeting felt that the war could be won under Asquith s continued leadership and that the issue for the Liberal politicians to resolve was whether Asquith remained in a Lloyd George administration in a subordinate role or left the government altogether 339 Max Aitken s claim that the resolution s purpose was to ensure that Lloyd George should go 340 is not supported by most of the contemporary accounts 341 or by the assessments of most subsequent historians As one example Gilmour Curzon s biographer writes that the Unionist ministers did not as Beaverbrook alleged decide to resign themselves in order to strengthen the Prime Minister s hand against Lloyd George their intentions were completely different 342 Similarly Adams Law s latest biographer describes Aitken s interpretation of the resolution as convincingly overturned 343 John Ramsden is equally clear the Unionist ministers acted to strengthen Lloyd George s hand from a conviction that only greater power for Lloyd George could put enough drive into the war effort 344 Law then took the resolution to Asquith who had unusually broken his weekend at Walmer Castle to return to Downing Street 345 At their meeting Law sought to convey the content of his colleagues earlier discussion but failed to produce the resolution itself 346 That it was never actually shown to Asquith is incontrovertible and Asquith confirmed this in his writings 347 Law s motives in not handing it over are more controversial Law himself maintained he simply forgot 348 Jenkins charges him with bad faith or neglect of duty 349 Adams suggests that Law s motives were more complex the resolution also contained a clause condemning the involvement of the press prompted by the Reynold s News story of that morning 350 and that in continuing to seek an accommodation between Asquith and Lloyd George Law felt it prudent not to share the actual text 351 The outcome of the interview between Law and Asquith was clear even if Law had not been 352 Asquith immediately decided that an accommodation with Lloyd George and a substantial reconstruction to placate the Unionist ministers were required 353 He summoned Lloyd George and together they agreed a compromise that was in fact little different from Lloyd George s 1 December proposals 354 The only substantial amendment was that Asquith would have daily oversight of the War Council s work and a right of veto 354 John Grigg saw this compromise as very favourable to Asquith 355 Cassar is less certain The new formula left him in a much weaker position his authority merely on paper for he was unlikely to exercise his veto lest it bring on the collective resignation of the War Council 356 Nevertheless Asquith Lloyd George and Law who had rejoined them at 5 00 pm all felt a basis for a compromise had been reached and they agreed that Asquith would issue a bulletin that evening announcing the reconstruction of the Government 356 Crewe who joined Asquith at Montagu s house at 10 00 p m recorded accommodation with Mr Lloyd George would ultimately be achieved without sacrifice of Asquith s position as chief of the War Committee a large measure of reconstruction would satisfy the Unionist Ministers 357 Despite Lloyd George s denials of collaboration the diary for 3 December by Northcliffe s factotum Tom Clarke records that The Chief returned to town and at 7 00 o clock he was at the War Office with Lloyd George 358 Meanwhile Duff Cooper was invited to dinner at Montagu s Queen Anne s Gate house he afterwards played bridge with Asquith Venetia Montagu and Churchill s sister in law Goonie recording in his diary the P M more drunk than I have ever seen him so drunk that one felt uncomfortable an extraordinary scene 359 Monday 4 December Edit The bulletin was published on the morning of Monday 4 December It was accompanied by an avalanche of press criticism all of it intensely hostile to Asquith 360 The worst was a leader in Northcliffe s Times 361 This had full details of the compromise reached the day before including the names of those suggested as members of the War Council More damagingly still it ridiculed Asquith claiming he had conspired in his own humiliation and would henceforth be Prime Minister in name only 360 Lloyd George s involvement is uncertain he denied any 362 but Asquith was certain he was the source 363 The author was certainly the editor Geoffrey Dawson with some assistance from Carson But it seems likely that Carson s source was Lloyd George 318 The leak prompted an immediate reaction from Asquith Unless the impression is at once corrected that I am being relegated to the position of an irresponsible spectator of the War I cannot possibly go on 362 Lloyd George s reply was prompt and conciliatory I cannot restrain nor I fear influence Northcliffe I fully accept in letter and in spirit your summary of the suggested arrangement subject of course to personnel 364 But Asquith s mind was already turning to rejection of the Sunday compromise and outright confrontation with Lloyd George 365 It is unclear exactly whom Asquith spoke with on 4 December Beaverbrook and Crewe state he met Chamberlain Curzon and Cecil 366 367 Cassar follows these opinions to a degree 368 But Chamberlain himself was adamant that he and his colleagues met Asquith only once during the crisis and that was on the following day Tuesday 5 December Chamberlain wrote at the time On Tuesday afternoon the Prime Minister sent for Curzon Bob Cecil and myself This is the first and only time the three of us met Asquith during those fateful days 369 His recollection is supported by details of their meetings with Law and other colleagues 369 in the afternoon and then in the evening of the 4th 370 and by most modern historians e g Gilmour 371 and Adams 372 Crawford records how little he and his senior Unionist colleagues were involved in the key discussions and by implication how much better informed were the press lords writing in his diary We were all in such doubt as to what had actually occurred and we sent out for an evening paper to see if there was any news 373 Asquith certainly did meet his senior Liberal colleagues on the evening of 4 December they were unanimously opposed to compromise with Lloyd George and supported Asquith s growing determination to fight 365 His way forward had been cleared by his tendering the resignation of his government to the King earlier in the day 368 Asquith also saw Law who confirmed that he would resign if Asquith failed to implement the War Council agreement as discussed only the day before 374 In the evening and having declined two requests for meetings Asquith threw down the gauntlet to Lloyd George by rejecting the War Council proposal 375 Tuesday 5 December Edit Arthur Balfour Lloyd George accepted the challenge by return of post writing As all delay is fatal in war I place my office without further parley at your disposal 375 Asquith had anticipated this response but was surprised by a letter from Arthur Balfour who until that point had been removed from the crisis by illness 376 On its face this letter merely offered confirmation that Balfour believed that Lloyd George s scheme for a smaller War Council deserved a chance and that he had no wish to remain at the Admiralty if Lloyd George wished him out Jenkins argues that Asquith should have recognised it as a shift of allegiance 376 Asquith discussed the crisis with Lord Crewe and they agreed an early meeting with the Unionist ministers was essential Without their support it would be impossible for Asquith to continue 377 Asquith s meeting with Chamberlain Curzon and Cecil at 3 00 p m only highlighted the weakness of his position 352 They unanimously declined to serve in a Government that did not include Law and Lloyd George 378 as a Government so constituted offered no prospect of stability Their reply to Asquith s follow up question as to whether they would serve under Lloyd George caused him even more concern The Three Cs stated they would serve under Lloyd George if he could create the stable Government they considered essential for the effective prosecution of the war 379 The end was near and a further letter from Balfour declining to reconsider his earlier decision brought it about The Home Secretary Herbert Samuel recorded in a contemporaneous note We were all strongly of opinion from which Asquith did not dissent that there was no alternative to resignation We could not carry on without LlG and the Unionists and ought not to give the appearance of wishing to do so 380 At 7 00 pm having been Prime Minister for eight years and 241 days Asquith went to Buckingham Palace and tendered his resignation 381 Describing the event to a friend sometime later Asquith wrote When I fully realised what a position had been created I saw that I could not go on without dishonour or impotence or both 382 That evening he dined at Downing Street with family and friends his daughter in law Cynthia describing the scene I sat next to the P M he was too darling rubicund serene puffing a guinea cigar and talking of going to Honolulu 383 Cynthia believed that he would be back in the saddle within a fortnight with his position strengthened 384 Later that evening Law who had been to the Palace to receive the King s commission arrived to enquire whether Asquith would serve under him Lord Crewe described Asquith s reply as altogether discouraging if not definitely in the negative 381 o Wednesday 6 December Edit I am personally very sorry for poor old Squiff He has had a hard time and even when exhilarated seems to have had more capacity and brain power than any of the others However I expect more action and less talk is needed now General Douglas Haig on Asquith s fall 6 December 386 Wednesday saw an afternoon conference at Buckingham Palace hosted by the King and chaired by Balfour 387 There is some doubt as to the originator of the idea 387 although Adams considers that it was Law 388 This is supported by a handwritten note of Aitken s reproduced in A J P Taylor s life of that politician which reads 6th Wed Meeting at BL house with G Lloyd George and C Carson Decide on Palace Conference 389 Conversely Crewe suggests that the suggestion came jointly from Lord Derby and Edwin Montagu 390 However it came about it did not bring the compromise the King sought Within two hours of its break up Asquith after consulting his Liberal colleagues 391 except for Lloyd George declined to serve under Law 388 who accordingly declined the King s commission 392 At 7 00 pm Lloyd George was invited to form a Government In just over twenty four hours he had done so forming a small War Cabinet instead of the mooted War Council and at 7 30 p m on Thursday 7 December he kissed hands as Prime Minister 393 His achievement in creating a government was considerable given that almost all of the senior Liberals sided with Asquith 394 Balfour s acceptance of the Foreign Office made it possible 395 Others placed a greater responsibility on Asquith as the author of his own downfall for example Churchill A fierce resolute Asquith fighting with all his powers would have conquered easily But the whole trouble arose from the fact that there was no fierce resolute Asquith to win this war or any other 396 Wartime Opposition Leader 1916 1918 EditThe Asquiths finally vacated 10 Downing Street on 9 December Asquith not normally given to displays of emotion confided to his wife that he felt he had been stabbed 384 He likened himself 10 December to the Biblical character Job although he also commented that Aristide Briand s government was also under strain in France 397 Lord Newton wrote in his diary of meeting Asquith at dinner a few days after the fall It became painfully evident that he was suffering from an incipient nervous breakdown and before leaving the poor man completely collapsed 398 Asquith was particularly appalled at Balfour s behaviour 399 especially as he had argued against Lloyd George to retain Balfour at the Admiralty 400 Writing years later Margot s spleen was still evident between you and me this is what hurt my husband more than anything else That Lloyd George a Welshman should betray him he dimly did understand but that Arthur should join his enemy and help to ruin him he never understood 400 Asquith s fall was met with rejoicing in much of the British and Allied press and sterling rallied against the German mark on the New York markets Press attacks on Asquith continued and indeed increased after the publication of the Dardanelles Report 401 Like Sir Robert Peel after 1846 Asquith after 1916 still controlled the party machinery and resented those who had ousted him but showed no real interest in reuniting his party Asquith did not put any pressure on Liberals to eschew joining the coalition government in fact though few Liberals did join it Most Liberal parliamentarians remained intensely loyal to him and felt that he alone should not be left to face the criticism On 8 December a gathering of Liberal MPs gave Asquith a vote of confidence as Leader of the Liberal Party followed unanimously a few days later by the executive of the National Liberal Federation There was much hostility to Lloyd George at these gatherings 402 Within Parliament Asquith pursued a course of quiet support retaining a heavy continuing responsibility for the decision of August 4 1914 403 A G Gardiner in The Daily News 9 December stated explicitly that Lloyd George s government should not have to live under the constant barrage of criticism that Asquith s coalition had endured 404 In a gracious reply to Lloyd George s first speech in the House of Commons as Prime Minister on 19 December 1916 Asquith made clear that he did not see his role in any sense to be the leader of what is called an opposition 405 From around the spring of 1917 Asquith s reluctance to criticise the government at all began to exasperate some of his press supporters 404 Outside of the Commons Margot and he returned to 20 Cavendish Square and he divided his life between there The Wharf and visiting Money in the absence of his premier s salary became more of a concern 406 In March 1917 he was informally offered the Lord Chancellorship with the highest salary in government but he declined 146 Personal sadness continued in December 1917 when Asquith s third son Arthur known in the family as Oc was badly wounded fighting in France his leg was amputated in January 1918 Asquith s daughter in law recorded in her diary The Old Boy Asquith sent me fifteen pounds and also in a letter told me the sad news of poor dear Oc having been badly wounded again 407 Maurice Debate Edit Main article Maurice Debate On 7 May 1918 a letter from a serving officer Major General Sir Frederick Maurice appeared in four London newspapers accusing Lloyd George and Law of having misled the House of Commons in debates the previous month as to the manpower strength of the army in France 146 Asquith who received a letter from Maurice on 6 May 408 and had also been in contact with the sacked Robertson 409 with whom Maurice discussed the letter called for a Select Committee of the House to investigate the charges 410 In response to a private notice question Law had offered a judicial inquiry with Asquith free to choose the judges but Asquith declined this offer on the evening of 7 May thinking it contrary to the dignity of Parliament 411 Prior to the debate he received a surprising communication 8 May from H A Gwynne the editor of The Morning Post and previously a fervent opponent The effect of the Maurice letter and your motion must be the dissolution of the present government and your accession to power 412 At this point Asquith hated Lloyd George with a passion but he did not want the premiership for himself 413 Asquith s opening speech on the Select Committee motion was lengthy and lacked punch Bridgeman recorded He did not make much of a case and did not even condemn Maurice s breach of the King s Regulations for which he got a very heavy blow from L G 414 Lloyd George s one and a quarter hour long reply was a stunning solo display by the greatest rhetorician of his age 415 in which he threatened the House with the inevitable political consequence of a vote for Asquith s motion if this motion is carried he Asquith will again be responsible for the conduct of the War Make no mistake 416 John Ramsden summed up the opinion in the House of Commons Lloyd George s lies were preferred to Asquith s half measures 417 The motion was defeated by 293 votes to 106 more an utter rejection of Asquith than a wholehearted endorsement of Lloyd George 418 and the latter s position in Parliament was not seriously threatened for the remainder of the War End of the war Edit Main article Armistice of 11 November 1918 Asquith was left politically discredited by the Maurice Debate and by the clear turn of the war in the Allies favour from the summer of 1918 He devoted far more effort to his Romanes Lecture Some Aspects of the Victorian Age at Oxford in June 1918 than to any political speech However Lady Ottoline Morrell thought it a dull address 419 A letter of July 1918 describes a typical couple of days Nothing much is happening here I dined with the usual crowd at Mrs Astor s last night The Duke of Connaught lunches here on Friday don t you wish you were coming 420 The beginning of the end of the war began where it had begun with the last German offensive on the Western Front the Second Battle of the Marne 421 The tide of German success was stemmed and the ebb began under pressure of the great Allied counter stroke 421 In response to the Allied offensives the governments of the Central Powers were everywhere in collapse 422 Decline and eclipse 1918 1926 EditCoupon election Edit Even before the Armistice Lloyd George had been considering the political landscape and on 2 November 1918 wrote to Law proposing an immediate election with a formal endorsement for which Asquith coined the name Coupon with overtones of wartime food rationing for Coalition candidates 423 News of his plans soon reached Asquith causing considerable concern On 6 November he wrote to Hilda Henderson I suppose that tomorrow we shall be told the final decision about this accursed election 424 A Liberal delegation met Lloyd George in the week of 6 November to propose Liberal reunification but was swiftly rebuffed 425 424 Asquith joined in the celebrations of the Armistice speaking in the Commons attending the service of thanksgiving at St Margaret s Westminster and afterwards lunching with King George 426 Asquith had a friendly meeting with Lloyd George a few days after the Armistice the exact date is unclear which Lloyd George began by saying I understand you don t wish to join the government 427 Asquith was instead keen to go to the Peace Conference where he considered his expertise at finance and international law would have been an asset 428 As he refused to accept public subordination Lloyd George despite lobbying from the King and Churchill refused to invite him 429 427 Asquith led the Liberal Party into the election but with a singular lack of enthusiasm writing on 25 November I doubt whether there is much interest The whole thing is a wicked fraud 429 The Liberal leaders expected to lose the 1918 election badly as they had lost the Khaki Election in 1900 but did not foresee the sheer scale of the defeat 430 Asquith hoped for 100 Liberal MPs to be returned 431 He began by attacking the Conservatives but was eventually driven to attack the blank cheque which the government was demanding 430 Asquith was one of five people given a free pass by the Coalition but the East Fife Unionist Association defied national instructions and put up a candidate Alexander Sprot against him 430 Sprot was refused a Coalition coupon 432 Asquith assumed his own seat would be safe and spent only two and half days there speaking only to closed meetings in one speech there on 11 December he conceded that he did not want to displace the current government He scoffed at press rumours that he was being barracked by a gang of discharged soldiers 430 Postwar reconstruction the desire for harsh peace terms and Asquith s desire to attend the peace talks were campaign issues with posters asking Asquith nearly lost you the War Are you going to let him spoil the Peace 433 James Scott his chairman at East Fife wrote of a swarm of women going from door to door indulging in a slander for which they had not a shadow of proof This was used for such a purpose as to influence the female vote very much against you p 434 At the poll on 14 December Lloyd George s coalition won a landslide with Asquith and every other former Liberal Cabinet minister losing his seat 435 Margot later recorded having telephoned Liberal headquarters for the results Give me the East Fife figures Asquith 6994 Sprott sic 8996 She said she had exclaimed Asquith beat Thank God 436 Augustine Birrell also wrote to him You are surely better off out of it for the time than watching Ll G lead apes to Hell 437 But for Asquith personally the blow was crippling a personal humiliation which destroyed his hope of exercising any influence on the peace settlement 432 1919 out of Parliament Edit 1919 portrait by Andre Cluysenaar Asquith remained leader of the Liberal Party despite McKenna vainly urging him almost immediately after the election to offer his resignation to the National Liberal Federation and help with building an alliance with Labour 433 At first Asquith was extremely unpopular and there is no evidence that he was invited to address any Liberal Association anywhere in the country for the first six months of 1919 438 He continued to be calumnied in the press and Parliament over the supposed presence of Germans in Downing Street during the war 439 Although accounts differ as to the exact numbers around 29 uncouponed Liberals had been elected only three with any junior ministerial experience not all of them opponents of the coalition There was widespread discontent at Asquith s leadership and Sir T A Bramsdon who said that he had been elected at Portsmouth only by promising not to support Asquith protested openly at his remaining leader from outside the Commons At first Lloyd George extended the government whip to all Liberal MPs On 3 February 23 non coalition Liberals formed themselves into a Free Liberal group soon known as the Wee Frees after a Scottish religious sect of that name they accepted Asquith s appointment of Sir Donald Maclean as chairman in his absence but insisted that G R Thorne whom Asquith had appointed Chief Whip hold that job jointly with J M Hogge of whom Asquith and Maclean had a low opinion After a brief attempt to set up a joint committee with the Coalition Liberal MPs to explore reunion the Wee Frees resigned the government whip on 4 April although some Liberal MPs still remained of uncertain allegiance 440 The Liberals won by elections in March and April 1919 but thereafter Labour performed better than the Liberals in by elections 441 In April 1919 Asquith gave a weak speech to Liberal candidates his first public speech since the election In Newcastle 15 May he gave a slightly stronger speech encouraged by his audience to Hit Out 442 Asquith was also disappointed by the terms and spirit of the Treaty of Versailles in May but did not oppose it very strongly in public 439 On 31 July 1919 after a lunch in honour of former Supreme Allied Commander Ferdinand Foch Asquith wrote he talked a lot of nonsense about Germany sinking never to rise again 434 In August 1919 Asquith was asked to preside over a Royal Commission into the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge although the report when it came was in line with Asquith s own academic views somewhat conservative 438 The commission began hearings in January 1920 many dons would have preferred Haldane as chair 442 Asquith s public rehabilitation continued with the receipt in late 1919 of the 1914 Star the British War Medal and the Victory Medal honours which the War Office under Churchill had originally intended only to be awarded to Lloyd George until the King insisted Asquith receive them also 438 Maclean and others urged Asquith to stand in the Spen Valley by election in December 1919 but it is unclear whether he ever considered the idea This was just as well as it had become clear that Labour were going to fight the seat hard and they defeated Sir John Simon when Lloyd George insisted on splitting the Liberal vote by running a Coalition Liberal candidate 439 Paisley Edit Main article Paisley by election 1920 A Parliamentary seat was essential if Asquith was again to play any serious part in future events By the autumn of 1919 J M Hogge was openly critical of Asquith s leadership and by January 1920 it was rumoured that he had given Asquith an ultimatum that unless he returned to Parliament in a by election the Independent Liberal MPs would repudiate him as their leader had he lost a by election his position would have been untenable anyway as he well knew 443 In January 1920 an opportunity arose at Paisley in Scotland like his previous seat after the death of the Liberal MP 444 The Liberals had held the seat by only 106 votes in 1918 Asquith s adoption was not a foregone conclusion the local Association was split between pro and anti coalition factions and he was selected by a vote of 20 17 by the executive and then 92 75 of the wider members He was formally adopted on 21 January 1920 and soon united the local Liberal Association behind him 441 445 Asquith was lukewarm at the thought of returning to Scotland and regarded his gamble with trepidation although he grew more confident as the campaign progressed 446 Travelling with Margot his daughter Violet and a small staff Asquith directed most of his campaign not against Labour who were already in second place but against the Coalition calling for a less harsh line on German reparations and the Irish War of Independence 447 Some thought fit to compare the campaign with Gladstone s Midlothian campaign 448 although Asquith himself was more circumspect 449 The result was stupendous with Asquith defeating his Labour opponent by a majority of over 2000 votes with the Coalition candidate a very poor third 450 Violet was ecstatic every star in the political skies favoured Father when we left Paisley he became there what he has never before been in his life the popular candidate the darling of the crowd 451 The poll was up by 8 000 from 1918 450 Asquith s surprise victory was helped by the support of the press baron Lord Rothermere 452 He was seen off by tumultuous crowds at Glasgow and greeted by further crowds at Euston the next morning and along the road on his first return to Parliament However he received only a chilly greeting inside the Chamber and no personal congratulations from Coalition politicians except from Lord Cave who was later to defeat him for the Chancellorship of Oxford University in 1925 453 Leader of the Opposition 1920 1921 Edit Paisley was a false dawn for the Liberals and for Asquith personally Jenkins wrote that The post war Liberal day never achieved more than a grey and short lived light By 1924 it was dusk again By 1926 for Asquith it was political night 454 Maurice Cowling characterised Asquith at this time as a dignified wreck neither effective in the House of Commons nor attractive as a public reputation who drank too much and who had lost touch with the movement of events and the spirit of the time 455 Money or its lack also became an increasing concern Margot s extravagance was legendary 456 and Asquith was no longer earning either the legal fees or the prime ministerial salary they had enjoyed in earlier years Additionally there were on going difficulties with Margot s inheritance 456 In 1920 as an economy measure 20 Cavendish Square was sold 457 to Viscountess Cowdray 458 and Asquith and Margot moved to 44 Bedford Square 457 Criticism of Asquith s weak leadership continued Lloyd George s mistress Frances Stevenson wrote 18 March that he was finished no fight left in him the press baron Lord Rothermere who had supported him at Paisley wrote on 1 April of his obvious incapacity for the position he is expected to fill 459 In fact Asquith spoke in the House of Commons far more frequently than he had ever previously done when not a minister He also spoke frequently around the country in June 1921 topping the Liberal Chief Whip s list of the most active speakers 460 The issue was the quality of his contributions Asquith still maintained friendly relations with Lloyd George although Margot made no secret of her enmity for him 461 Until the Paisley by election Asquith had accepted that the next government must be some kind of Liberal Labour coalition but Labour had distanced themselves because of his policies on the mines the Russo Polish War education the prewar secret treaties and the suppression of the Easter Rebellion 462 The success of Anti Waste League candidates at by elections made leading Liberals feel that there was a strong anti Coalition vote which might be tapped by a wider based and more credible opposition 463 By late June 1921 Asquith s leadership was still under strong attack from within the Wee Free group although Frances Stevenson s claim in her diary that most of them now wanted Lloyd George as their leader is not corroborated by the report in The Times 464 Lord Robert Cecil a moderate and pro League of Nations Conservative had been having talks with Edward Grey about a possible coalition and Asquith and leading Liberals Crewe Runciman and Maclean had a meeting with them on 5 July 1921 and two subsequent ones Cecil wanted a genuine coalition rather than a de facto Liberal government with Grey rather than Asquith as Prime Minister but the Liberals did not and little came of the plans 465 462 Asquith did fiercely oppose the hellish policy of reprisals in Ireland impressing the young Oswald Mosley 464 J M Hogge even urged Sir Donald Maclean 31 August to knock Asquith into the middle of next week and seize back the chairmanship of the Liberal MPs 461 Late in 1921 the National Liberal Federation adopted an industrial programme without Asquith s agreement 466 On 24 October 1921 Asquith commented if one tries to strike a bold true note half one s friends shiver and cower and implore one not to get in front of the band 461 Leader of the Opposition 1922 Edit In January 1922 C P Scott of the Manchester Guardian told Asquith that he supported a centre left grouping but only if moderate Labour was included in reality Labour leaders were unable to deliver the support of their local members for such a realignment 467 Asquith achieved more success with a major speech at Westminster Central Hall in January 1922 in reply to a speech by Lloyd George a few days earlier Asquith had with some difficulty been persuaded to make the maximum possible reference to his renewed alliance with Grey but Haldane had refused to join the platform Five days later Churchill replied with a pro Coalition speech in which he accused Asquith and other Liberals of having stood carefully aside during the war causing deep offence 468 q By the summer of 1922 Asquith s interest in politics was at a very low ebb 470 He was observed to be very heavily loaded and was helped up the stairs by Lloyd George at a party of Sir Philip Sassoon s on 16 July 1922 whilst his reputation was further damaged by his portrayal in Aldous Huxley s novel Crome Yellow and by the publication of the first volume of Margot s memoirs which sold well in the UK and the USA but were thought an undignified way for a former Prime Minister to make money 471 On 13 September 1922 Sir Donald Maclean told Harold Laski that Asquith was devoted to bridge and small talk and did not do enough real work 466 Asquith was increasingly attracted by the thought of making money from writing with Churchill doing very well from his The World Crisis and Lloyd George rumoured to be being paid handsomely for his memoirs which in the event did not appear until the mid 1930s 472 Asquith s books The Genesis of the War finally appeared in September 1923 and Studies and Sketches in 1924 473 His second son Herbert recorded A large part of my father s later years was occupied with authorship and it was during this period that he wrote most of his longer books 474 Asquith played no part in Lloyd George s fall from power in October 1922 which happened because the rank and file majority of his Conservative coalition partners led by Stanley Baldwin and Lloyd George s former colleague Law deserted him 475 Law formed a purely Conservative government and the following month at the 1922 general election Asquith ceased to be Leader of the Opposition as more Labour MPs were elected than the two Liberal factions combined 138 Labour members outnumbered the combined Liberal number of 117 with 60 Asquith supporters and 57 National Liberals adherents to Lloyd George 476 Asquith had thought Paisley would be safe but was only narrowly returned with a 316 majority 50 5 per cent of the votes cast in a two candidate battle with Labour despite a rise in the Liberal vote He put this down to the 5 000 unemployed at Paisley after the slump of 1920 1921 He wrote that he gloated over the senior Coalition Liberals Churchill Hamar Greenwood Freddie Guest and Edwin Montagu who lost their seats 477 478 Liberal reunion Edit In March 1923 a petition for reunion among Liberal backbenchers received 73 signatures backed by the Lloyd Georgeite Daily Chronicle and the Asquithian Liberal Magazine But reunion was opposed by senior Asquithian Liberals like Sir John Simon Viscount Gladstone and Charles Masterman and as late as 30 June by journalists such as H W Massingham and Gardiner of The Nation 479 Viscount Gladstone felt that it was generally recognised that Asquith was no longer effective as an active leader but that Lloyd George must not succeed him 479 By July Asquith was superficially friendly to Lloyd George and consulted him but he did not include him in the Shadow Cabinet r 479 Asquith wanted Lloyd George to make the first move but although the latter put out feelers to senior Asquith supporters he insisted that he was neither a suppliant nor a penitent 460 M S R Kinnear writes that Asquith felt that with Lloyd George s faction declining in strength he had everything to gain by waiting while too quick an approach would antagonise the Labour leaders who hated Lloyd George and whose support he might need for a future Lib Lab coalition Kinnear also argues that Asquith s gloating over the defeat of Coalition Liberals in 1922 is evidence that the most important factor influencing Asquith against quick reunion was his personal dislike of Lloyd George and his desire for vengeance 480 The political situation was transformed when Baldwin now Prime Minister came out in favour of Protection at Plymouth on 22 October 1923 460 Coming out for Free Trade himself Lloyd George was obliged at least formally to submit to Asquith s leadership 481 Parliament was dissolved Asquith and Lloyd George reached agreement on 13 November followed by a Free Trade manifesto followed by a more general one Lloyd George accompanied by his daughter Megan came to Paisley to speak in Asquith s support on 24 November 482 Asquith fought an energetic national campaign on free trade in 1923 with echoes of 1903 483 He spoke at Nottingham and Manchester but did not privately expect more than 200 Liberals to be elected although he hoped to overtake Labour and become Leader of the Opposition once again and hoped for Baldwin to win by a tiny majority 482 The poll at Paisley was split by an independent extreme socialist and a Conservative 460 482 Asquith won with 33 4 per cent of the vote 478 Nationally the outcome of the election in December 1923 was a hung Parliament 258 Conservatives 191 Labour 158 Liberals the Liberals had gained seats but were still in third place 460 A quarter of the seats were held by majority less than 1 000 In general Asquith Liberals did better than Lloyd George Liberals which Gladstone and Maclean saw as a reason to prevent close co operation between the factions 482 Putting Labour in power Edit There was no question of the Liberals supporting a continuation of the Conservative government not least as it was feared that an alliance of the two bourgeois parties would antagonise Labour Asquith commented that If a Labour Government is ever to be tried in this country as it will be sooner or later it could hardly be tried under safer conditions Asquith s decision to support a minority Labour Government was seconded by Lloyd George and approved by a party meeting on 18 December 484 Baldwin s view was similar as he rejected Sir Robert Horne s scheme for a Conservative Liberal pact Roy Douglas called the decision to put in Ramsay MacDonald the most disastrous single action ever performed by a Liberal towards his party Other historians such as Trevor Wilson and Koss reject this view arguing that Asquith had little choice 485 Asquith was never in doubt as to the correctness of his approach although a deluge of correspondence urged him to save the country from Socialism 486 He wrote on 28 December I have been intreated during these weeks cajoled wheedled almost caressed tortured threatened brow beaten and all but blackmailed to step in as the saviour of society 487 484 The Liberals thus supported Britain s first ever minority Labour Government under Ramsay MacDonald The Liberal Party voted for the Labour amendment to the Address causing Baldwin to resign Asquith believed that Baldwin could have ignored the vote and carried on attempting to govern without a majority He thought the new Labour Government a beggarly array although he remarked that the Foreign Office staff were glad to see the back of the Archduke Curzon 486 Asquith believed that MacDonald would soon be discredited both in the eyes of the country and of his own more extreme supporters and the Liberal revival would continue 488 Labour government and the Campbell Case Edit Asquith s decision only hastened his party s destruction the Conservative Austen Chamberlain writing to his colleague Sir Samuel Hoare We have got unexpectedly and by our own blunders and Asquith s greater folly a second chance Have we got the wit to take it 489 Relations with Labour soon became very tense with Liberal MPs increasingly angered at having to support a Labour Government which treated them with such open hostility Many Liberals were also angered at MacDonald s pursuit of a trade agreement with the USSR although Asquith rather less so 490 The intervention of a Labour candidate at a by election in Oxford in June handed the seat to the Conservatives 491 As Asquith brought MacDonald in so later in the same year he had significant responsibility for forcing him out over the Campbell Case and the Russian Treaty 492 The Conservatives proposed a vote of censure against the Government for withdrawing their prosecution for sedition against the Daily Worker and Asquith moved an amendment calling for a select committee the same tactic he had employed over the Marconi scandal and the Maurice Debate 490 Asquith s contribution to the debate showed an increasingly rare return to Parliamentary form Almost every one of his delightful sentences filled the Chamber with laughter 493 Asquith s motion was passed by 364 198 490 As in the Maurice Debate his sense of political tactics was in Jenkins view overcome by his sense of Parliamentary propriety He could not bring himself to withdraw the amendment but could not support the government either 494 1924 election Edit Instead of resigning MacDonald requested and was granted a General Election 490 The 1924 election was intended by MacDonald to cripple the Liberals and it did 491 Lloyd George refused to hand over money from his fund until he had more say over the Liberal whips office Liberal Party Headquarters at Arlington Street and an election there was a chance of winning 494 491 Meetings at Paisley were tumultuous and Asquith was barracked by hecklers singing The Red Flag 495 Asquith was widely expected to lose his seat and did so by 2 228 496 He received 46 5 per cent of the vote in his final parliamentary election a straight fight against Labour 478 Violet wrote Father was absolutely controlled He just said to me I m out by 2 000 497 It was a political as well as a personal disaster Baldwin won a landslide victory with over 400 Conservatives returned and only 40 Liberals 498 far behind Labour which entrenched its position as the chief party of Opposition 499 Labour s vote actually increased somewhat partly as a result of their fielding more candidates than before The Liberal vote collapsed much of it coalescing to the Conservatives as a result of the scare around the forged Zinoviev Letter 490 The Liberal grandees who hated Lloyd George did not press Asquith to retire Sir Robert Hudson and Maclean called on him 31 October and insisted he firmly keep the chair at the next meeting and nominate the new Chief Whip himself 496 Elevation Edit The 1924 election was Asquith s last Parliamentary campaign and there was no realistic chance of a return to the Commons He told Charles Masterman I d sooner go to hell than to Wales the only part of the country where Liberal support remained strong The King offered him a peerage 4 November 1924 500 501 Asquith felt he was not rich enough to accept and would have preferred to die a commoner like Pitt or Gladstone He accepted in January 1925 after a holiday in Egypt with his son Arthur He deliberately chose the title Earl of Oxford saying it had a splendid history as the title chosen by Robert Harley a Tory statesman of Queen Anne s reign 502 He was thought by some to have delusions of grandeur Lady Salisbury writing to him that the title was like a suburban villa calling itself Versailles 503 Asquith found the controversy amusing but the College of Heralds insisted that he add and Asquith to the final title after protests from Harley s family In practice he was known as Lord Oxford 504 He never enjoyed the House of Lords and thought the quality of debates there poor 505 In 1924 the Liberal party had only been able to put up 343 candidates due to lack of money At one point the Liberal Shadow Cabinet suggested obtaining the opinion of a Chancery Lawyer as to whether the Liberal Party was entitled under trust law to Lloyd George s money which he had obtained from the sale of honours 506 On 29 January 1925 at a two day London convention Asquith launched a Million Fund Appeal in an unsuccessful attempt to raise Liberal Party funds independent of Lloyd George 507 508 Main article University of Oxford Chancellor election 1925 I have had a noble offer from Lady Bredalbane who proposes to give me her late husband s Garter robes as a present I shall jump at this as it will save me a lot of money Asquith on an additional benefit of The Order of the Garter 509 One more disappointment remained In 1925 he stood for the Chancellorship of Oxford University vacant on the death of Lord Curzon He was eminently suited and was described by Lord Birkenhead one of his many Conservative supporters as the greatest living Oxonian 510 Asquith suspected he might lose because of country clergy s hostility to Welsh Disestablishment blaming Zadok the Priest and Abiathar the Priest with their half literate followers in the rural parsonages The election was also seen as a settling of party scores and a mockery of his title He lost to the Conservative candidate Lord Cave by 987 votes to 441 on 20 March He claimed to be more disappointed than surprised but his friend Desmond MacCarthy wrote that it affected him more than any disappointment save one in his life after he ceased to be Prime Minister 511 512 In May 1925 Asquith accepted the Order of the Garter from Baldwin who was known to be a personal admirer of his 501 513 Resignation Edit Difficulties continued with Lloyd George who had been chairman of the Liberal MPs since 1924 514 over the party leadership and over party funds 515 In the autumn of 1925 Hobhouse Runciman and the industrialist Sir Alfred Mond protested to Asquith at Lloyd George organising his own campaign for reform of land ownership Asquith was not enthusiastic but Lloyd George ignored him and arranged for Asquith to be sent reports and calculations Lord Oxford likes sums he wrote At a meeting on 25 November 1925 Grey Maclean Simon Gladstone and Runciman urged Asquith to have a showdown with Lloyd George over money Asquith wanted to think it over and at the December 1925 Federation executive he left the meeting before the topic came up To the horror of his followers Asquith reached an agreement in principle with Lloyd George over land reform on 2 December then together they presented plans to the National Liberal Federation on 26 February 1926 But wrote Maclean in private Asquith s language about Lloyd George was lurid 516 508 In January 1926 Mond withdrew his financial support from the Liberal Party 516 508 The loss of wealthy donors and the failure of the Million Fund Appeal further weakened Asquith s position and there is some evidence that his frequent requests for money irritated donors like Sir Robert Perks who had given a good deal to the Party over the years and that outside his inner circle of devotees he was bad at keeping on good terms with potential donors 517 This was followed by a near final breach with Lloyd George over the General Strike The Liberal Shadow Cabinet unequivocally backed Baldwin s handling of the strike on 3 May Asquith viewed the strike as criminal folly 518 and condemned it in the House of Lords whilst in the Commons Sir John Simon declared it to be illegal But whereas Asquith and Grey both contributed to the British Gazette Churchill s pro government newssheet Lloyd George who had not previously expressed a contrary opinion at Shadow Cabinet wrote an article for the American press more sympathetic to the strikers and did not attend the Shadow Cabinet on 10 May sending his apologies on policy grounds Asquith at first assumed him to be trying to ingratiate himself with the churches and Labour but then 20 May sent him a public letter rebuking him for not attending the meeting to discuss his opinions with colleagues in private 519 520 In private both sides were incandescent one of Asquith s colleagues describing him as far more indignant at L G than I have ever seen 521 whilst Lloyd George expressed his private feelings in a letter to Frances Stevenson on 24 May Asquith is a silly old man drunk with hidden conceit When he listens to those poor creatures he has a weakness for gathering around him he generally makes a fool of himself They are really beat Dirty dogs and bitches 522 Lloyd George s letter of 10 May had not been published making it appear that Asquith had fired the first shot and Lloyd George sent a moderate public reply on 25 May Asquith then wrote another public letter 1 June stating that he regarded Lloyd George s behaviour as tantamount to resignation the same as if a Cabinet Minister had refused to abide by the principle of collective responsibility Twelve leading Liberals including Grey Lord Buckmaster Simon Maclean and Runciman wrote in Asquith s support to The Times 1 June However Lloyd George had more support amongst the wider party than amongst the grandees The executive of the National Liberal Federation despite backing Asquith by 16 8 had already urged a reconciliation in late May and the London Liberal Candidates Association 3 June and the Liberal MPs 8 June did the same Asquith had planned to launch a fightback at the National Liberal Federation in Weston Super Mare due on 17 June but on the eve of the conference he suffered a stroke 12 June which put him out of action for three months 519 520 Margot is said to have later claimed that her husband regretted the breach and had acted after several rich donors had threatened to quit 523 Asquith finally resigned the Liberal leadership on 15 October 1926 524 Final years 1926 1928 Edit Asquith s grave at Sutton Courtenay Asquith filled his retirement with reading writing a little golf 525 travelling and meeting with friends 524 Since 1918 he had developed an interest in modern painting and sculpture 524 His health remained reasonable almost to the end though financial concerns increasingly beset him 526 A perhaps surprising contributor to an endowment fund established to support Asquith in 1927 was Lord Beaverbrook the former Max Aitken who contributed 1 000 527 Violet was highly embarrassed by her step mother s attempts to enlist the aid of Aitken Lord Reading and others of her husband s friends and acquaintances It is monstrous that other people should be made to foot Margot s bridge bills How she has dragged his name through the mud 528 Asquith suffered a second stroke in January 1927 529 disabling his left leg for a while and leaving him a wheelchair user for the spring and early summer of 1927 530 Asquith s last visit was to see the widowed Venetia Montagu in Norfolk 531 On his return to The Wharf in autumn 1927 he was unable to get out of his car and he was never again able to go upstairs to his own room 532 He suffered a third stroke at the end of 1927 533 His last months were difficult and he became increasingly confused his daughter Violet writing To watch Father s glorious mind breaking up and sinking like a great ship is a pain beyond all my imagining 528 Death EditAsquith died aged 75 at The Wharf on the morning of 15 February 1928 526 He was buried at his own wish with great simplicity 534 in the churchyard of All Saints at Sutton Courtenay his gravestone recording his name title and the dates of his birth and death A blue plaque records his long residence at 20 Cavendish Square 535 and a memorial tablet was subsequently erected in Westminster Abbey 536 Viscount Grey with Haldane Asquith s oldest political friends wrote I have felt his death very much it is true that his work was done but we were very close together for so many years I saw the beginning of his Parliamentary life and to witness the close is the end of a long chapter of my own 537 Asquith s will was proven on 9 June 1928 with his estate amounting to 9345 9s 2d roughly equivalent to 599 011 in 2021 538 539 Descendants EditMain article Asquith family Asquith s great granddaughter the actress Helena Bonham Carter Asquith had five children by his first wife Helen and two surviving children three others died at birth or in infancy by his second wife Margot 540 His eldest son Raymond after an academic career that outstripped his father s 541 was killed at the Somme in 1916 541 His second son Herbert 1881 1947 became a writer and poet and married Cynthia Charteris 542 His later life was marred by alcoholism 543 His third son Arthur 1883 1939 became a soldier and businessman 541 His only daughter by his first wife Violet later Violet Bonham Carter 1887 1969 became a well regarded writer and a life peeress as Baroness Asquith of Yarnbury 544 She married Asquith s Personal Private Secretary Maurice Bonham Carter in 1915 His fourth son Cyril 1890 1954 was born on the day Asquith became a QC 545 and later became a Law Lord 541 His two children by Margot were Elizabeth later Princess Antoine Bibesco 1897 1945 a writer who also struggled with alcohol 546 and Anthony Asquith 1902 1968 547 known as Puffin a film maker whose life was also severely affected by alcoholism 546 Among his living descendants are his great granddaughter the actress Helena Bonham Carter born 1966 548 and two great grandsons Dominic Asquith a former British High Commissioner to India 549 and Raymond Asquith 3rd Earl of Oxford and Asquith who inherited Asquith s earldom 550 Another leading British actress Anna Chancellor born 1965 is Asquith s great great granddaughter on her mother s side 551 Assessment Edit Memorial to Asquith Westminster Abbey According to Matthew Asquith s decision for war with Germany was the most important taken by a British prime minister in the twentieth century and was more important than any prime ministerial decision of the nineteenth century It not only dictated the involvement of the United Kingdom in war but affected much of the pattern of imperial foreign and economic history for the rest of the century 10 Matthew deemed the decision Asquith s in that without prime ministerial support it was not likely Britain would have entered the war 10 Given the deep divisions in the Liberal Party Pearce and Goodlad said it was a measure of Asquith s skill that he took Britain into the war with only two relatively minor Cabinet ministers choosing to resign 552 Asquith s reputation will always be heavily influenced by his downfall at the height of the First World War In 1970 Basil Liddell Hart summed up opinion as to the reasons for his fall Lloyd George came to power as the spokesman for a widespread demand for a more vigorous as well as a more efficient prosecution of the war 553 Asquith s collegiate approach 554 his tendency to wait and see 555 his stance as the chairman of the cabinet 556 rather than leader of a government content to preside without directing 557 his contempt for the press regard ing journalists as ignorant spiteful and unpatriotic 558 and his weakness for alcohol I had occasion to speak to the P M twice yesterday and on both occasions I was nearly gassed by the alcoholic fumes he discharged 559 all contributed to a prevailing sense that Asquith was unable to rise to the necessities of total warfare 560 Grigg concludes In certain vital respects he was not qualified to run the war A great head of government in peacetime by the end of 1916 he was in a general state of decline his obvious defects as a war leader exposed 561 Cassar reflecting on Asquith s work to bring a united country to war and his efforts in the year thereafter goes towards a reassessment His achievements are sufficiently impressive to earn him a place as one of the outstanding figures of the Great War 562 His contemporary opponent Lord Birkenhead paid tribute to his bringing Britain united into the War A statesman who rendered great service to his country at a time when no other living Englishman could have done what he did 563 The Coalition Whip William Bridgeman provided an alternative Conservative view comparing Lloyd George to Asquith at the time of the latter s fall H owever unpopular or mistrusted Lloyd George was in the House he carried much more weight in the Country than Asquith who was almost everywhere looked on as a lazy and dilatory man 564 Sheffield and Bourne provide a recent historical reassessment Asquith s governments arguably took all the key decisions of the War the decision to intervene to send the BEF to raise a mass volunteer army to start and end the Gallipoli Campaign the creation of a Coalition government the mobilisation of industry the introduction of conscription 565 The weight of opinion continues to agree with Asquith s own candid assessment in a letter written in the midst of war in July 1916 I am as usual encompassed by a cloud of worries anxieties problems and the rest The time is out of joint and sometimes I am tempted to say with Hamlet O cursed spite that ever I was born to set it right Perhaps I wasn t 566 Asquith s fall also saw the end of the Liberal Party as one of the great parties of state 567 According to Koss Asquith s memory has lingered over the successive crises that continued to afflict his party Each glimmer of a Liberal revival has enhanced his historical stature if only as the victim or agent of the Liberal decline 568 After 1922 the Liberals did not hold office again except as junior partners in coalition governments in 1931 1932 in 1940 1945 s and as today s Liberal Democrats in 2010 2015 Leonard considers that responsibility for this must also be carried in part by Asquith this gifted fastidious proud yet ultimately indecisive man must bear his share of the blame 567 Koss concludes that in a long eventful and complex career that does not admit easily of a summing up Asquith s failings were no less manifest than his achievements 569 Michael and Eleanor Brock maintain that his peacetime record of legislative achievement should not be overshadowed by his wartime inadequacy 570 Of those achievements his colleague Lord Buckmaster wrote The dull senses and heavy lidded eyes of the public prevent them from seeing now all that you have accomplished but history will record it and the accomplishment is vast 571 Among his greatest domestic accomplishments reform of the House of Lords is at the zenith Yet Asquith s premiership was also marked by many difficulties leading McKenna to write in his memoirs friends began to wonder whether the highest statesmanship consisted of overcoming one crisis by creating another 572 Hazlehurst writing in 1970 felt there was still much to be gleaned from a critical review of Asquith s peacetime premiership certainly the record of a prime minister under whom the nation goes to the brink of civil war over Ireland must be subjected to the severest scrutiny 572 Blue plaque 20 Cavendish Square London Perhaps Asquith s greatest personal attainment was his parliamentary dominance From his earliest days in the House he spoke with the authority of a leader and not as a backbencher 573 As Campbell Bannerman s sledgehammer his debating power was unequalled 574 Lord Curzon extolled his skill in parliamentary dialectic Whenever I have heard him on a first rate occasion there rises in my mind the image of some great military parade The words the arguments the points follow each other with the steady tramp of regiments across the field each unit is in its place the whole marching in rhythmical order the sunshine glints on the bayonets and ever and anon is heard the roll of the drums 575 Jenkins considered Asquith as foremost amongst the great social reforming premiers of the twentieth century His Government s social and political reforms were unprecedented and far sighted paving the way for the welfare state legislation of the Attlee government in 1945 1951 as well as Blair s constitutional reforms after 1997 567 According to Roy Hattersley a changed Britain entered the war in 1914 the political social and cultural revolution had already happened Modern Britain was born in the opening years of the twentieth century 576 Asquith also worked strenuously to secure a settlement of the Irish question and although unsuccessful his work contributed to the 1922 settlement 577 Lastly as a great head of a Cabinet 578 Asquith directed and developed the talents of an extraordinary array of parliamentarians for an extraordinarily long period 554 Hazlehurst contends that this ability to keep so gifted and divergently inclined a group in harness was one of his major achievements 84 Overall the Brocks argue that on the basis of his achievements 1908 to 1914 he must rank among the greatest British statesmen of any era 570 His oldest political and personal friend Haldane wrote to Asquith on the latter s final resignation My Dear A a time has come in both of our lives when the bulk of work has been done That work does not pass away It is not by overt signs that its enduring character is to be judged It is by the changes made in the spirit of things into which the work has entered 579 See also EditLiberalism in the United KingdomNotes Edit Some sources mention only two daughters See Bates p 9 The brother and sister who survived into adulthood were William Willans and Emily Evelyn See Margot Asquith 1962 p 263 The surname a variant of Askwith a village in North Yorkshire derives from Old Norse ask vidr ash wood See Ekwall p 16 The English legal profession is split into two branches At that time any member of the public needing legal representation in the High Court or Court of Appeal had to engage a solicitor who would in turn instruct or brief a barrister who had the sole right to appear before the higher courts but was not permitted to take work direct from the public without a solicitor as intermediary A barrister without good contacts with solicitors would therefore go short of work The distinctions between the two branches of the profession have been relaxed to some extent since Asquith s time but to a considerable degree barristers remain dependent on solicitors for work See Terrill p 58 According to the official biography by J A Spender and Cyril Asquith he had a profound respect for the mind and intelligence of women But he considered politics to be peculiarly the male sphere and it offended his sense of decorum and chivalry to think of them as engaged in the rough and tumble of this masculine business and exposed to its publicity He always vehemently denied that the question had any relation to democratic theory or that the exclusion of women from the franchises was any reflection on their sex See Spender amp Asquith p 360 He was the first former cabinet minister to resume practice at the bar after leaving government office All cabinet ministers were and are appointed as lifetime members of the Privy Council and there had been an uncodified feeling before 1895 that it was inappropriate for a Privy Councillor to appear as an advocate in court submitting to the rulings of judges who for the most part ranked below him in the official order of precedence See Jenkins pp 90 91 A biographer of Campbell Bannerman A J A Morris suggests that Balfour was motivated in this unusual step by the vain hope that minority government would open up the many divisions within the Liberal party 72 Jenkins with a reference to Asquith s own reputation in that sphere comments that Asquith did his personal best to reverse the downward trend in alcohol sales Notice before one s employment is terminated The imbalance in the Upper House had been caused by the Liberal split over the First Home Rule Bill in 1886 in which many Liberal peers had become Liberal Unionists who by this time had almost merged with the Conservatives As had happened in the Liberal Governments of 1892 1895 a number of bills were voted down by the Conservative dominated House of Lords during Campbell Bannerman s premiership Although the Lords passed the Trade Disputes Act the Workmen s Compensation Act and the Eight Hours Act they rejected the Education Bill of 1906 an important measure in the eyes of Liberal nonconformist voters See Magnus 1964 p 532 That is half a penny in a pound at a time until 1971 when the pound sterling was made up of 240 pence thus the tax was 1 480 of the land s value annually Asquith had to apologise to the King s adviser Lord Knollys for a Churchill speech calling for a Dissolution and rebuked Churchill at a Cabinet Meeting 21 July 1909 telling him to keep out of matters of high policy as the monarch s permission was needed to dissolve Parliament prematurely See Magnus 1964 p 527 Irish nationalists unlike Liberals favoured tariff reform and opposed the planned increase in whisky duty but an attempt by Lloyd George to win their support by cancelling it was abandoned as the Cabinet felt that this was recasting the Budget too much and because it would also have annoyed nonconformist voters See Magnus 1964 p 548 553 By April the King was being advised by Balfour and the Archbishop of Canterbury to whom he had turned for relatively neutral constitutional advice that the Liberals did not have sufficient electoral mandate to demand creation of peers See Magnus 1964 pp 555 556 King Edward thought the whole proposal simply disgusting and that the government was in the hands of Redmond amp Co Lord Crewe Liberal leader in the Lords announced publicly that the government s wish to create peers should be treated as formal ministerial advice which by convention the monarch must obey although Lord Esher argued that the monarch was entitled in extremis to dismiss the Government rather than take their advice See Heffer pp 294 296 Definition The real effective cause of damage That evening Aitken and Churchill were dining with F E Smith at the latter s Grosvenor Gardens home The dinner ended acrimoniously as Aitken records Smith said Winston with great emphasis This man knows I am not to be in the Government He picked up his coat and hat and dashed into the street a curious end to the day Churchill was detested by the Conservatives for his defection to the Liberals in 1904 for his role as an active partisan Liberal thereafter and for his role in the disastrous Dardanelles campaign despite his energy and ability Lloyd George was not able to bring him back into the government until the summer of 1917 385 The exact nature of the slander is not specified The Asquiths had been the subject of rumour about their supposed pro German sympathies and Noel Pemberton Billing had put it about that they had been amongst public figures seduced by German agents with sexual favours lesbian ones in Margot s case Churchill s wife remonstrated with him that Asquith had seen his sons killed and maimed Churchill replied that Asquith had left him to be a scapegoat over the Dardanelles had refused to appoint him Commander in Chief in East Africa or to give him the brigade command on the Western Front which he had promised him at the end of 1915 or to appoint him to the vacancy for Minister of Munitions in the summer of 1916 468 Asquith re established friendly relations with Churchill after they were sat together at the wedding of the Duke of York and Elizabeth Bowes Lyon writing of him as Chancellor of the Exchequer in 1925 that he was a Chimborazo or Everest among the sandhills of the Baldwin Cabinet 469 Koss observes that this was not without recent precedent as Campbell Bannerman had sometimes excluded Asquith and the other Liberal Imperialists at the time of the Boer War The National Liberals a breakaway faction confusingly bearing the same name as Lloyd George s followers of the early 1920s and led by Asquith s former protege Sir John Simon were in coalition throughout the 1931 1945 period and eventually merged with the Conservatives References Edit Cameron Hazelhurst Herbert Henry Asquith in John P McIntosh ed British Prime Ministers in the 20th Century 1977 105 6 a b c Jenkins p 13 Davies Edward J The Ancestry of Herbert Henry Asquith Genealogists Magazine 30 2010 12 pp 471 479 Alderson p 1 Margot Asquith 1962 pp 194 195 Margot Asquith 1962 p 195 Jenkins p 15 Levine p 75 Bates p 10 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Matthew H C G Asquith Herbert Henry first earl of Oxford and Asquith 1852 1928 Archived 23 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 Retrieved 6 June 2015 subscription or UK public library membership required a b Dinner to Mr Asquith The Times 25 November 1892 p 6 Alderson p 10 Bates pp 10 11 Alderson p 3 Jenkins p 17 Spender amp Asquith p 30 Political Notes The Times 23 July 1908 p 12 Spender J A and Cyril Asquith Lord Oxford The Times 12 September 1932 p 11 Spender amp Asquith pp 31 32 Spender amp Asquith p 33 Spender amp Asquith p 34 Spender amp Asquith pp 33 34 Jenkins p 24 Spender amp Asquith p 32 Jenkins p 23 Levine p 76 Bates p 12 a b Jenkins p 25 Rintala p 111 Rintala p 118 a b Jenkins p 27 Alderson p 36 a b Spender J A and Cyril Asquith Lord Oxford The Times 13 September 1932 p 13 Whitfield p 228 Jenkins pp 31 32 a b Death of Mr Justice Wright The Times 15 May 1904 p 2 Jenkins p 37 Douglas p 71 Jenkins pp 38 40 The General Election The Times 9 July 1886 p 10 and The Election The Manchester Guardian 9 July 1886 p 8 Spender amp Asquith p 52 Alderson pp 37 38 Jenkins pp 42 43 Alderson p 44 Jenkins p 44 Spender amp Asquith p 48 Jenkins p 47 The Riots in London The Manchester Guardian 15 November 1887 p 8 Central Criminal Court The Times 19 January 1888 p 10 Police The Times 11 August 1888 p 13 and Central Criminal Court The Times 1 November 1888 p 13 Alderson p 33 Jenkins p 49 Parnell Commission The Manchester Guardian 20 February 1889 p 5 Popplewell pp 24 25 Alderson pp 33 34 Popplewell p 25 Popplewell pp 28 30 The Baccarat Case The Times 2 June 1891 p 11 and Queen s Bench Division The Times 20 June 1892 p 3 Jenkins p 52 Jenkins p 56 Jenkins Roy 2012 Churchill A Biography UK Pan Macmillan p 199 ISBN 9780330476072 Jenkins pp 72 73 a b Brock Eleanor Asquith Margaret Emma Alice Margot countess of Oxford and Asquith 1864 1945 Archived 23 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2014 Retrieved 14 June 2015 subscription or UK public library membership required Jenkins p 92 Compute the Relative Value of a U K Pound Archived from the original on 31 March 2016 Retrieved 27 March 2016 Bates p 33 Koss pp 282 283 Hattersley p 60 Jenkins pp 200 105 Hattersley p 65 Jenkins p 140 a b Morris A J A Bannerman Sir Henry Campbell 1836 1908 Archived 4 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2008 Retrieved 22 June 2015 subscription or UK public library membership required Jenkins p 155 Spender amp Asquith pp 172 173 Jenkins p 158 Jenkins p 164 Jenkins p 161 Jenkins pp 162 164 Hattersley pp 132 136 Douglas p 123 Jenkins pp 179 180 Jenkins p 181 Hazlehurst pp 504 505 a b Hazlehurst p 506 Asquith 1985 p 470 Koss p 93 Asquith 1985 p 13 Jenkins pp 259 261 Tyack Bradley amp Pevsner p 553 Jenkins p 259 Margot Asquith 2014 p xli Koss p 94 a b Asquith 1985 p 471 Margot Asquith 2014 p xlviii Asquith 1985 preface Asquith 1985 p 3 Koss p 140 Margot Asquith 2014 p xcv a b Adelman p 11 Marvin Rintala Taking the Pledge H H Asquith and Drink Biography 16 2 1993 103 135 online Archived 5 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine Robert Duncan 2013 Pubs and Patriots The Drink Crisis in Britain During World War One pp 86 88 ISBN 9781846318955 Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 5 October 2018 Hugh Purcell 2006 Lloyd George pp 42 43 ISBN 9781904950585 Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 5 October 2018 Ben Wright Order Order The Rise and Fall of Political Drinking 2016 ch 4 David Owen 2014 The Hidden Perspective The Military Conversations 1906 1914 pp 115 6 ISBN 9781908323675 Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 11 November 2018 a b Spender amp Asquith p 239 Weston p 508 Weston pp 508 512 Koss p 112 Spender amp Asquith pp 254 255 Jenkins p 199 Jenkins pp 198 199 Magnus 1964 pp 232 527 Lloyd George David 1929 Budget Newcastle Speech In Guedalla Philip ed Slings and Arrows Sayings Chosen from the Speeches of the Rt Hon David Lloyd George OM MP London Cassell and Company Ltd p 111 Heffer pp 281 282 Magnus 1964 p 534 Heffer pp 283 284 Koss pp 116 117 Neal Blewett Peers the Parties and the People General Election of 1910 Macmillan 1972 Koss p 118 Magnus 1964 p 548 Heffer pp 290 293 Koss p 121 Jenkins pp 208 210 Heffer pp 286 288 Heffer p 293 Spender amp Asquith pp 298 299 Matthew H C G 2004 George V 1865 1936 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 33369 Retrieved 28 July 2015 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b Koss p 125 Spender amp Asquith pp 299 300 Jenkins pp 222 230 Jenkins p 231 Koss p 230 Jenkins pp 166 167 188 Jenkins p 167 Devlin Carol A September 1994 The Eucharistic Procession of 1908 The Dilemma of the Liberal Government Church History 6 3 408 409 doi 10 2307 3167537 JSTOR 3167537 S2CID 161572080 However the organizers expected few problems because of the English reputation for religious tolerance and hospitality Jenkins pp 190 193 Spender amp Asquith p 356 Koss p 131 Jenkins p 247 a b Adelaide Knight leader of the first east London suffragettes East End Women s Museum Archived from the original on 2 April 2020 Retrieved 1 March 2018 Rosemary Taylor 4 August 2014 East London Suffragettes History Press pp 32 ISBN 978 0 7509 6216 2 Atkinson Diane 17 April 2018 Rise up women the remarkable lives of the suffragettes London ISBN 9781408844045 OCLC 1016848621 Jenkins pp 247 248 Kennedy Maev 29 September 2006 Government feared suffragette plot to kill Asquith The Guardian London Archived from the original on 6 February 2018 Retrieved 15 April 2011 Jenkins pp 248 250 a b c Jenkins p 467 Garner Les 1984 Stepping Stones to Women s Liberty Feminist Ideas in the Women s Suffrage Movement 1900 1918 Rutherford New Jersey Fairleigh Dickinson University Press p 96 ISBN 978 0 8386 3223 9 George Dangerfield The Strange Death of Liberal England 1935 pp 74 76 a b Pearce amp Goodlad p 30 Hattersley pp 184 185 Jenkins p 215 Hattersley pp 215 218 Pearce amp Goodlad pp 30 31 Jenkins p 281 Jenkins p 274 Koss pp 134 135 Hattersley p 190 a b Pearce amp Goodlad p 31 O Brien Jack 1989 British Brutality in Ireland Dublin The Mercier Press p 128 ISBN 0 85342 879 4 Hattersley pp 192 193 Jenkins pp 311 313 Pearce amp Goodlad p 27 McEwen pp 111 112 Koss p 143 Jenkins pp 242 244 Hattersley pp 474 475 Koss pp 108 109 Hazlehurst pp 518 519 Mulligan p 71 Jenkins pp 242 245 Hazlehurst p 519 Cassar p 11 a b Gilbert 1995 p 23 Cassar p 19 Lloyd George Volume I p 66 Asquith 1985 p 123 Cassar p 20 Asquith 1985 p 133 Gilbert 1995 p 27 Cassar p 15 Asquith 1985 p 146 a b Koss p 159 Hastings p 88 Hastings p 93 Liddell Hart p 50 Margot Asquith 1962 pp 294 295 Asquith 1928b p 10 Hobhouse p 180 Cassar p 234 Cassar p 31 Cassar p 232 Asquith 1923 pp 220 221 a b Cassar p 38 Asquith 1923 p 219 Cassar p 37 Cassar p 36 Liddell Hart p 69 Gilbert 1995 p 37 Liddell Hart p 131 Cassar p 93 Cassar p 171 Cassar p 144 Taylor p 109 Asquith 1928a p 154 Grigg 1985 p 390 Clifford pp 273 274 Tom Curran Who was responsible for the Dardanelles naval fiasco Australian Journal of Politics amp History 57 1 2011 17 33 Jenkins p 354 Jenny Macleod 2015 Gallipoli Great Battles Oxford UP pp 65 68 ISBN 9780191035227 Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 6 October 2018 Cassar p 84 Asquith 1985 p 497 Cassar p 87 Cassar p 88 Margot Asquith 2014 p 128 Riddell p 111 Thompson p 237 Scott p 124 Jenkins p 355 Asquith 1985 p 593 Asquith 1985 p 101 Clifford p 271 Koss p 186 Koss pp 186 187 Riddell p 112 Toye p 136 Cassar p 100 Koss p 193 a b Jenkins p 360 a b Grigg 1985 p 254 Haldane p 286 Jenkins p 362 Trevelyan p 278 Adams p 188 Adams p 193 Hobhouse p 247 Leonard p 68 Jenkins p 368 Jenkins p 370 J A R Marriott Modern England 1885 1945 4th ed 1948 p 376 Riddell p 147 Grigg 1985 p 308 Jenkins p 371 Cassar p 151 Jenkins p 373 Bonham Carter p 33 Cassar p 150 Toye p 155 Amery p 124 Margot Asquith 2014 p 180 Margot Asquith 2014 p 175 Cassar p 162 Cassar p 163 Simon p 107 Margot Asquith 2014 p 257 Cassar p 169 Jenkins p 395 Grigg 1985 p 348 Jenkins p 398 Grigg 1985 p 351 Grigg 1985 p 352 Riddell p 166 Riddell p 167 Jenkins p 380 Gilbert 1971 p 562 Jenkins p 381 Sheffield amp Bourne p 172 Cassar p 136 Toye p 156 a b Gilbert 1972 p 1249 Cassar p 134 Grigg 1985 p 325 Gilbert 1971 p 564 Grigg 1985 pp 322 324 Gilbert 1995 p 231 Cassar p 185 Grigg 1985 p 342 Newton p 222 Jenkins p 405 Jenkins pp 406 407 Margot Asquith 2014 p 268 Grigg 1985 p 360 Jenkins p 410 Jenkins p 411 Clifford p 367 Raymond Asquith pp 286 287 Bonham Carter p 95 Jenkins p 415 Churchill p 1139 Koss p 217 Cassar p 211 Adams p 243 Fry Michael September 1988 Political Change in Britain August 1914 to December 1916 Lloyd George Replaces Asquith The Issues Underlying the Drama The Historical Journal Cambridge University Press 31 3 609 627 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00023517 JSTOR 2639759 S2CID 153441235 John M McEwen The Struggle for Mastery in Britain Lloyd George versus Asquith December 1916 Journal of British Studies 18 1 1978 131 156 Adams p 222 Koss p 214 Koss p 215 Margot Asquith 2014 p 306 Grey p 248 Bridgeman pp 111 112 Adams p 223 Jenkins p 418 Jenkins p 419 Pope Hennessy p 181 a b Cassar p 212 Riddell p 181 Adams p 224 a b Taylor p 121 Scott p 243 Adams p 226 Grigg 1985 p 444 Taylor p 110 Grigg 1985 p 441 Lloyd George Volume II p 982 Beaverbrook p 403 Pound amp Harmsworth p 513 Riddell p 157 Margot Asquith 1962 p 308 a b Jenkins p 445 Lee p 160 Pound amp Harmsworth p 514 Pound amp Harmsworth p 508 Jenkins p 450 Thompson p 264 a b Adams p 227 a b Cassar p 213 Jenkins p 426 Jenkins p 427 Chamberlain p 117 Grigg 1985 p 450 Jenkins p 430 Beaverbrook p 406 Morgan Kenneth O 19 October 2017 7 December 1916 Asquith Lloyd George and the Crisis of Liberalism Parliamentary History 36 3 361 371 doi 10 1111 1750 0206 12318 Beaverbrook p 410 Taylor p 113 Beaverbrook p 411 Jenkins p 435 Beaverbrook p 413 Grigg 1985 p 453 Grigg 1985 pp 453 454 Beaverbrook p 414 Dutton pp 132 133 Gilmour p 455 Adams p 231 Ramsden p 132 Koss p 218 Jenkins p 439 Asquith 1928b p 131 Adams p 232 Jenkins p 440 Beaverbrook p 420 Adams p 233 a b Dutton p 133 Asquith 1928b p 132 a b Jenkins p 441 Grigg 1985 p 457 a b Cassar p 219 Pope Hennessy p 185 Herbert Asquith p 272 Cooper p 40 a b Cassar p 221 Koss p 219 a b Grigg 1985 p 460 Cassar p 222 Jenkins pp 447 448 a b Cassar p 224 Beaverbrook p 441 Asquith 1928b p 133 a b Cassar p 223 a b Chamberlain p 123 Lindsay pp 372 373 Gilmour p 457 Adams p 234 Lindsay p 373 Grigg 1985 p 461 a b Grigg 1985 p 462 a b Jenkins p 453 Cassar p 226 Jenkins p 454 Chamberlain p 124 Samuel p 122 a b Asquith 1928b p 134 Asquith 1933 p 241 Cynthia Asquith p 241 a b De Courcy 2014 pp 330 340 Chisholm amp Davie p 149 Sheffield amp Bourne p 259 a b Jenkins p 455 a b Adams p 238 Taylor p 107 Pope Hennessy p 187 Koss p 222 Cassar p 231 Grigg 1985 p 481 Young p 370 Egremont p 280 Taylor p 119 Jenkins pp 461 462 Newton p 230 Young p 371 a b Egremont p 281 Koss pp 224 227 Koss pp 225 228 Jenkins p 465 a b Koss pp 227 228 Grigg 2002 p 20 Jenkins p 466 Cynthia Asquith p 384 Clifford p 451 Woodward pp 209 210 Clifford p 453 Grigg 2002 p 493 Grigg 2002 p 494 George H Cassar 2009 Lloyd George at War 1916 1918 Anthem p 268 ISBN 9781843317937 Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 5 December 2018 Bridgeman p 132 Adams p 272 Grigg 2002 p 498 Ramsden p 115 Grigg 2002 p 499 Koss pp 228 230 Asquith 1933 pp 67 68 a b Liddell Hart p 531 Adams p 273 Jenkins p 475 a b Asquith 1933 p 81 Jenkins pp 475 476 Jenkins p 476 a b Koss p 236 Ramsden p 139 a b Jenkins p 477 a b c d Koss pp 236 239 Jenkins p 478 a b Jenkins p 479 a b Koss p 240 a b Jenkins p 481 Bonham Carter p 99 Margot Asquith 1962 p 334 Jenkins p 480 a b c Jenkins p 483 a b c Koss p 243 Koss pp 241 242 a b Koss pp 242 244 a b Koss p 244 Koss p 245 Asquith 1933 p 125 Jenkins p 485 Koss pp 246 247 Jenkins p 486 Asquith 1933 p 130 Koss pp 248 249 a b Jenkins p 487 Bonham Carter p 113 Koss pp 247 248 Jenkins pp 487 488 Jenkins p 489 Cowling p 100 a b Clifford p 460 a b Herbert Asquith p 371 Cavendish Square 4 No 20 the Royal College of Nursing UCL Survey of London Blogs ucl ac uk 29 April 2016 Archived from the original on 23 September 2016 Retrieved 4 August 2016 Koss p 249 a b c d e Jenkins p 498 a b c Koss p 250 a b Koss p 251 Jenkins pp 490 491 a b Koss p 252 Jenkins pp 491 492 a b Koss p 255 Jenkins pp 492 493 a b Koss pp 253 255 Jenkins p 497 Jenkins p 493 Koss pp 255 256 Jenkins p 494 Jenkins p 495 Herbert Asquith p 367 Adams pp 327 328 Jenkins p 496 Jenkins pp 495 496 a b c Craig F W S 1977 British Parliamentary Election Results 1918 1949 revised ed London The Macmillan Press Ltd p 605 OCLC 26407514 a b c Koss pp 259 261 M S R Kinnear 1973 The Fall of Lloyd George The Political Crisis of 1922 Palgrave Macmillan p 213 ISBN 9781349005208 Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 5 December 2018 Taylor p 219 a b c d Koss pp 261 263 Jenkins p 499 a b Jenkins p 500 Koss pp 264 265 a b Jenkins p 501 Middlemas amp Barnes p 253 Koss p 265 Ramsden p 183 a b c d e Jenkins p 502 a b c Koss p 266 Marquand p 373 Marquand p 376 a b Jenkins p 503 Jenkins p 504 a b Koss pp 267 268 Bonham Carter p 164 Cowling p 414 Cowling p 1 Jenkins p 505 a b Koss p 274 Jenkins p 506 Bonham Carter p 167 Jenkins p 508 Jenkins p 509 Jenkins p 512 Koss p 271 a b c Jenkins pp 513 514 Asquith 1934 p 135 Campbell p 709 Koss pp 274 275 Jenkins p 511 Jenkins p 510 Scott p 467 Herbert Asquith p 362 a b Koss pp 272 274 Koss p 275 Koss p 276 a b Jenkins pp 514 516 a b Koss pp 276 280 Koss p 277 Koss p 278 Koss p 281 a b c Jenkins p 517 Herbert Asquith p 365 a b Bonham Carter p 172 Taylor p 236 a b Bonham Carter p 173 Koss p 282 Jenkins p 518 Herbert Asquith p 377 Asquith 1934 Epilogue Koss p 283 Herbert Asquith p 378 ASQUITH Herbert Henry 1st Earl of Oxford and Asquith 1852 1928 English Heritage Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 29 July 2016 Herbert Asquith Earl of Oxford and Asquith Westminster Abbey Archived from the original on 23 September 2016 Retrieved 4 August 2016 Trevelyan p 333 UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2017 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 11 June 2022 OXFORD AND ASQUITH probatesearchservice gov UK Government 1928 Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 7 August 2019 Spender amp Asquith a b c d Jenkins p 30 Clifford p 173 Clifford p 474 Clifford p 475 Spender amp Asquith p 49 a b Clifford p 476 Margot Asquith 1962 Appendix 1 Iggulden Amy 24 March 2006 Bonham Carter buys back family heritage for 2 9m Telegraph Archived from the original on 7 July 2016 Retrieved 18 September 2016 Dominic Asquith is new British high commissioner to India Hindustan Times 9 March 2016 Archived from the original on 23 September 2016 Retrieved 18 September 2016 The Earl of Oxford and Asquith Telegraph 17 January 2011 Archived from the original on 10 October 2016 Retrieved 18 September 2016 Gilbert Gerard 20 December 2014 Anna Chancellor has a lineage worthy of Tatler but has had to scrap to establish herself as one of our finest actors The Independent Archived from the original on 11 December 2017 Retrieved 18 September 2016 Pearce amp Goodlad p 32 Liddell Hart p 384 a b Grey p 241 Birkenhead p 30 Lindsay p 363 Dutton p 131 Riddell p 149 Bridgeman p 95 Middlemas amp Barnes p 57 Grigg 1985 pp 470 471 Cassar p 236 Birkenhead p 32 Bridgeman p 112 Sheffield amp Bourne p 496 Asquith 1933 p 8 a b c Leonard p 71 Koss p 233 Koss p 284 a b Margot Asquith 2014 p cxlvii Asquith 1928b p 242 a b Hazlehurst p 531 Spender amp Asquith p 29 Wilson p 508 Rose p 132 Hattersley p 481 Jenkins p 402 Jenkins p 463 Asquith 1928b p 244 Sources Edit section, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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