Hodge was a member of the
Manchester City Council from 1897 to 1901. At the
1900 general election, Hodge unsuccessfully contested
Gower. He was unsuccessful again in
Preston at the
by-election in May 1903. From December 1916 to August 1917, Hodge was the first
Minister of Labour and had a seat in the Cabinet. At this job Hodge claimed that all strikes during war-time were acts of
treason and Hodge successfully made striking boilermakers go back to work by threatening to charge them under the
Defence of the Realm Act. Hodge supported the Empire Resources Department Committee, signing its manifesto. From August 1917 to January 1919, Hodge was
Minister of Pensions in the
Lloyd George Coalition Government. In 1919 he appeared in the film
Broken in the Wars directed by
Cecil Hepworth to advertise a fund set up for ex-servicemen. Hodge kept his seat in both the
general election of 1918 and the
general election of 1922 but retired from
Parliament at the
general election of 1923. Hodge continued to argue against strikes during the
General Strike of 1926 and retired from the presidency of the British Iron, Steel & Kindred Trades Association in 1931. Hodge was turned down for military service because he was too old.
Arthur Griffith-Boscawen, who served under Hodge, called him a "fat, rampaging and most patriotic Tory working man". ==References==