Britain The pact was met with a wave of moral indignation in Britain. On 10 December the Opposition
Labour Party claimed if the reports in the press of the contents of the Pact were true, the government had contradicted the pro-League policy on which it had just won the 1935 election. The Conservatives dominated the government and cared little for opinion on the left. They paid attention, however, when attacks came from the right. In an editorial titled ‘A Corridor for Camels’,
The Times on 16 December denounced the Pact and said there never was "the slightest doubt that British public opinion would recommend them for approval by the League as a fair and reasonable basis of negotiations". The Archbishop of Canterbury,
Cosmo Lang, condemned the Pact in a letter to
The Times, and many other bishops wrote directly to
Stanley Baldwin to oppose it.
Duff Cooper, the
Secretary of State for War, later wrote: But before the Duce had time to declare himself there arose a howl of indignation from the people of Great Britain. During my experience of politics I have never witnessed so devastating a wave of public opinion. Even the easy-going constituents of the
St. George's division were profoundly moved. The post-bag was full and the letters I received were not written by ignorant or emotional people but by responsible citizens who had given sober thought to the matter. The Conservative Chief Whip told Baldwin: "Our men won't stand for it". Sir
Austen Chamberlain in a speech to the Conservative Foreign Affairs Committee condemned the Pact and said: "Gentlemen do not behave in such a way".
Harold Nicolson later wrote that he had had sleepless nights worrying whether he could keep his seat.
France When the Chamber of Deputies debated the Pact on 27 and 28 December, the
Popular Front condemned it, with
Léon Blum telling Laval: "You have tried to give and to keep. You wanted to have your cake and eat it. You cancelled your words by your deeds and your deeds by your words. You have debased everything by fixing, intrigue and slickness.... Not sensitive enough to the importance of great moral issues, you have reduced everything to the level of your petty methods".
Yvon Delbos declared: "Your plan is dead and buried. From its failure, which is as total as possible, you could have – but you have not – drawn a personal conclusion. Two lessons emerge. The first is that you were in a dead end because you upset everyone without satisfying Italy. The second is that we must return to the spirit of the Covenant [of the League of Nations] by preserving agreement with the nations gathered at Geneva".
Paul Reynaud attacked the government for aiding Hitler by ruining the Anglo-French alliance. On the motion of censure, the French government had a majority of 296 votes to 276, with 37 Radicals voting for the government. ==Outcome==