The Liberal Party had divided into two factions following the ousting of
H. H. Asquith as prime minister in December 1916. From then until October 1922 the Conservatives had been in coalition with a Liberal faction (which later became known as the "
National Liberals") led by
David Lloyd George. Following the
Carlton Club meeting, Lloyd George resigned as Prime Minister and Bonar Law formed a Conservative majority government. Although still leader of the Liberal Party and a frequent public speaker, former prime minister Asquith was no longer a particularly influential figure in the national political debate, and he had played no part in the downfall of the Lloyd George coalition. Most attention was focused on Law and Lloyd George. Asquith's daughter
Violet Bonham-Carter, a prominent Liberal Party campaigner, likened the election to a contest between a man with
sleeping sickness (Bonar Law) and a man with
St Vitus Dance (Lloyd George). Some of Lloyd George's National Liberals were not opposed by Conservative candidates (e.g.,
Winston Churchill, who was
defeated at Dundee nonetheless), while many leading Conservatives (e.g., former parliamentary leaders
Arthur Balfour and Sir
Austen Chamberlain, and former Lord Chancellor
Lord Birkenhead) were not members of Bonar Law's government, and hoped to hold the balance of power after the election (comparisons were made with the
Peelite group—the ousted Conservative front bench of the late 1840s and 1850s); this was not to be, as Bonar Law won an overall majority. It was the first election at which Labour surpassed the combined strength of both Liberal parties in votes and seats. The election was also notable for Labour in that it saw future
prime minister Clement Attlee elected as MP for
Limehouse. Some Liberal candidates stood calling for a reunited Liberal Party, while others appear to have backed both Asquith and Lloyd George. Few sources are able to agree on exact numbers, and even in contemporary records held by the two groups, some MPs were claimed for both sides. By one estimate, there were 29 seats where Liberals stood against one another. This is thought to have cost them at least 14 seats, 10 of them to Labour, so in theory a reunited Liberal Party would have been much closer to, and perhaps even ahead of, Labour in terms of seats. However, in reality the two factions were on poor terms, and Lloyd George was still hoping for a renewed coalition with the Conservatives. Neither of the leaders of the two main parties succeeded in enjoying their achievement in the election for very long; within less than a month of the election, Clynes was defeated in a leadership challenge by former Labour leader
Ramsay MacDonald, while Bonar Law would only last a little over seven months as prime minister before being forced to step down due to a terminal illness, resulting in
Stanley Baldwin succeeding him as both party leader and prime minister. As a result, Bonar Law was the shortest-serving UK prime minister of the twentieth century. Parliament was dissolved on 26 October; Bonar Law died four days later. ==Party platforms==