Edwards began his Parliamentary career by moving a
motion calling for the location of industry to be planned, in which he called for an area of 40 miles around
London to be closed to new industry. He was concerned about a government proposal to help the iron and steel industry in
Jarrow, arguing that it would become a competitor to his own constituency. In April 1937 he opposed the Conservative government's proposal for assistance to 'special areas', complaining that it had the deliberate intention of depriving Middlesbrough of the advantages other areas were to have. He made a failed attempt to get Middlesbrough included during the passage of the Bill, in which he was joined by the
Middlesbrough West MP
Frank Kingsley Griffith. In 1937 he took up the issue of producing oil from coal, and claimed that the
Falmouth Committee looking into the question had deliberately restricted its remit and sent an insulting letter to a company which might have helped it. Early in 1939 he protested against criticism of the police voiced in Parliament by
Communist Party of Great Britain MP
Willie Gallacher.
Second World War Edwards greeted the threat of war with concern that the British Empire had supplied raw materials to enable Germany, Italy and Japan to build up vast armaments. He called for the United Kingdom and
United States to join together to deny raw material to aggressive nations. When
conscription was announced, Edwards pressed the Prime Minister to commit to conscription of wealth as well as man-power. He complained that "two gentlemen who are dictators in certain European countries" had a monopoly of the British press. During the
Second World War Edwards kept up pressure on the Government to assist industry. In 1941 he proposed that all import duties be abolished, and in December the same year he made a speech deploring the low rate of production placing the blame on the
Treasury's "throttling hands". At the time when Sir
Oswald Mosley was released from detention due to ill health, Edwards put down a question to ask how long it would take for him to get better before his return to prison. He called for the war-time coalition government to be broken up in January 1944, so that the country could benefit from "organized opposition". The issue of housing rebuilding concerned him, and in September 1944 he announced a scheme for a
garden city to be built on the outskirts of
Guisborough.
Excess profits tax Re-elected in the
1945 general election with a majority of 8,075, Edwards raised the plight of some new Members of Parliament who were unable to find anywhere to stay in London. Edwards had been a critic of the
Excess Profits Tax during the war, and called for its abolition after the end of the war, a campaign he continued despite Government resistance.
Christian Science His faith as a
Christian Scientist, which was said to be "unshakable", When the Ministry of Health acquired the power to control the title 'nurse', he moved his own motion to allow the Christian Science use to continue, arguing that it had been stopped through a loophole in the law. ==Steel nationalisation==