There was a growing political awareness among the working class, leading to a rise in trade unions, the
Labour movement and demands for better working conditions. The aristocracy remained in control of top government offices.
Conservative Party The
Conservatives – at the time called "Unionists" – were the dominant political party from the 1890s until
1906. The party had many strengths, appealing to voters supportive of
imperialism, tariffs, the
Church of England, a powerful
Royal Navy, and traditional hierarchical society. There was a powerful leadership base in the landed aristocracy and landed gentry in rural England, plus strong support from the Church of England and military interests. Historians have used election returns to demonstrate that Conservatives did surprisingly well in working-class districts. They had an appeal as well to the better-off element of traditional working-class Britons in the larger cities. In rural areas, the national headquarters made highly effective use of paid travelling lecturers, with pamphlets, posters, and especially lantern slides, who were able to communicate effectively with rural voters – particularly the newly enfranchised agricultural workers. In the first years of the twentieth century, the Conservative government, with
Arthur Balfour as
Prime Minister, had numerous successes in foreign policy, defence, and education, as well as solutions for the issues of alcohol licensing and land ownership for the tenant farmers of Ireland. Nevertheless, the weaknesses were accumulating, and proved so overwhelming in 1906 that the party did not return to complete power until
1922. The Conservative Party was losing its drive and enthusiasm, especially after the retirement of the charismatic
Joseph Chamberlain. There was a bitter split on
"tariff reform" (that is, imposing tariffs or taxes on all imports), that drove many of the free traders over to the
Liberal camp. Tariff reform was a losing issue that the Conservative leadership inexplicably clung to. Conservative support weakened among the top tier of the working-class and lower middle-class, and there was dissatisfaction among intellectuals. The 1906 general election was a landslide victory for the Liberal Party, which saw its total vote share increase by 25%, while the Conservative total vote held steady.
Labour Party The Labour Party was emerging from the rapidly growing trade union movement after 1890. In 1903 it entered the
Gladstone–MacDonald pact with the Liberals, allowing for cross-party support in elections, and the emergence of a small Labour contingent in Parliament. It was a temporary arrangement until the 1920s, when the Labour Party was strong enough to act on its own, and the Liberals were in an irreversible decline. Subtle social changes in the working-class were producing a younger generation that wanted to act independently. Michael Childs argues that the younger generation had reason to prefer Labour over Liberal political styles. Social factors included secularised elementary education (with a disappearing role for Dissenting schools that inculcated Liberal viewpoints); the "New Unionism" after 1890 brought unskilled workers into a movement previously dominated by the skilled workers; and new leisure activities, especially the
music hall and sports, involved youth while repelling the older generation of Liberal voters. It contained numerous contradictory and hostile factions, such as imperialists and supporters of the Boers; near-socialists and laissez-faire
classical liberals; suffragettes and opponents of women's suffrage; antiwar elements and supporters of the military alliance with France. Nonconformist Dissenters – Protestants outside the Anglican fold – were a powerful element, dedicated to opposing the established church in the fields of education and taxation. However, the Dissenters were losing support and played a lesser and lesser role in party affairs after 1900. The party also included Roman Catholics, including the notable Catholic intellectual
Hilaire Belloc, who sat as a Liberal MP between 1906 and 1910. They included secularists from the labour movement. The middle-class business, professional and intellectual communities were generally strongholds, although some old aristocratic families played important roles as well. The working-class element was moving rapidly toward the newly emerging
Labour Party. One unifying element was widespread agreement on the use of politics and Parliament as a means to upgrade and improve society and to reform politics. In the House of Lords, the Liberals lost most of their members, who in the 1890s "became Conservative in all but name." The government could force the unwilling king to create new Liberal peers, and that threat did prove decisive in the battle for dominance of Commons over Lords in 1911.
Boer War The government entered the
Second Boer War with great confidence, little expecting that the two small rural Boer republics in southern Africa with a combined White population smaller than that of London would hold off the concentrated power of the
British Empire for years and take 400,000 Imperial troops to secure victory. The war split the Liberal Party into anti- and pro-war factions. Great orators, such as Liberal
David Lloyd George, who spoke against the war, became increasingly influential. Nevertheless, Liberal Unionist
Joseph Chamberlain, who was largely in charge of the war, maintained his hold on power. When
General Kitchener took command in 1900, he initiated a scorched earth policy to foil Boer
guerrilla tactics. Captured Boer combatants were transported overseas to other
British possessions as prisoners of war. However, he relocated non-combatant Boers—mostly women and children—into heavily guarded internment camps. The internment camps were overcrowded with bad sanitation and meagre food rations. Contagious diseases such as measles, typhoid and dysentery were endemic.
Australia In 1901, the six British self-governing colonies of Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania, South Australia, and Western Australia united to form the Commonwealth of Australia, with almost complete control of its internal affairs, but with foreign policy and defence handled by London.
Edmund Barton was the first prime minister.
The Liberal reforms The
Liberal Party under
Henry Campbell-Bannerman rallied Liberals around the traditional platform of free trade and land reform and led them to
the greatest electoral victory in Liberal Party history. The
Prime Minister was overshadowed by his frontbench, most notably
H. H. Asquith at the Exchequer,
Edward Grey at the Foreign Office,
Richard Burdon Haldane at the War Office and
David Lloyd George at the
Board of Trade. Campbell-Bannerman retired in 1908 and was succeeded by Asquith, who stepped up the government's radicalism, especially in the "
People's Budget" of 1909 that proposed to fund expanded social welfare programmes with new taxes on land and high incomes. It was blocked by the Conservative-dominated
House of Lords, but eventually became law in April 1910. Almost half of the Liberal MPs elected in 1906 were supportive of the "
new liberalism", which advocated government action to improve people's lives. Liberals in 1906–1911 passed major legislation designed to reform politics and society, such as the regulation of working hours,
National Insurance and the beginnings of the welfare state, as well as curtailing the power of the House of Lords. Women's suffrage was not on the Liberal agenda. There were numerous major reforms helping labour, typified by the
Trade Boards Act 1909 that set minimum wages in certain trades with a history of "sweated" or "sweatshop" rates of especially low wages, because of surplus of available workers, the presence of women workers, or the lack of skills. At first it applied to four industries: chain-making, ready-made tailoring, paper-box making, and the machine-made lace and finishing trade. Conservative peers in the House of Lords tried to stop the
People's Budget. The Liberals passed the
Parliament Act 1911 to sharply reduce the power of the
House of Lords to block legislation. The cost was high, however, as the government was required by the King to call two general elections in 1910 to validate its position and ended up frittering away most of its large majority, with the balance of power held by
Labour and
Irish Parliamentary Party members. == Foreign relations ==