At the start of the war in 1899,
Liberal Party groups mobilized committees to protest the war, including the
South African Conciliation Committee and
W. T. Stead's
Stop the War Committee. A common theme among these groups was the argument that it was a
capitalistic desire to gain access to the gold and diamond deposits in the
Boer republics that motivated the
Unionist government to declare war. Angered crowds often broke up such anti-war meetings, viewing them as unpatriotic. The British press was overwhelmingly in support of the Unionist government's decision to go to war, with only the
Manchester Guardian and the
Westminster Gazette outspoken in their opposition. With the press against them, British anti-war elements relied heavily on street corner distribution of their numerous pamphlets. Nevertheless, large numbers of young men volunteered for the war, as many as 100,000 a month at the peak. Liberal Party members split, with many top leaders following
Lord Rosebery in support of the war. Many nonconformists, the backbone of the Liberal Party, likewise supported the war. The
1900 United Kingdom general election was known as the "
khaki election", where the Unionist government rallied patriotic voters. It resulted in a victory for the Unionist government on the back of recent British victories against the Boers. However, public opinion waned as it became apparent that the war would not be easy and moral unease developed following reports about
scorched earth policies adopted by British forces, which included the internment of Boer non-combatants in
concentration camps. Public and political opposition was expressed by repeated attacks on the British government's policies in South Africa by Liberal MP
David Lloyd George. Lloyd George made his name in opposition, as he alleged that
Joseph Chamberlain, his brother, and his son had large personal financial investments in a number of munitions firms that were making heavy profits in the war. The allegations of corruption and greed did not carry public opinion, so the anti-war elements switched to an emphasis on humanitarianism, with heart-rending depictions of the suffering of Boer civilians interned in the camps.
Emily Hobhouse in June 1901 published a fifteen-page pamphlet reporting on the horrific state of the camps, and Lloyd George openly accused the government of "a policy of extermination" directed against the Boer population. In June, 1901, Liberal party leader
Henry Campbell-Bannerman took up the assault and answered the rhetorical "When is a war not a war?" with "When it is carried on by methods of barbarism in South Africa," referring to those same camps and the policies that created them. In 1910, when the Boers came to friendly relations with the British, they pointed to the "barbarism" comment by Campbell-Bannerman as a mark of British good faith. In April 1900, Emily Hobhouse and her friend
Catherine Courtney organised a women’s branch of the
South African Conciliation Committee with a women’s protest meeting being held at
Queen’s Hall, Langham Place, London, on 13 June 1900. The
Women's Liberal Federation participated in the Second Boer War protest movement, then moved towards support for
women’s suffrage. Opposition to the war in the British Empire was strongest among Irish Catholics. Many
Irish nationalists sympathised with Boers, having a shared opposition to British imperialism. Though many Irishmen served in the
British Armed Forces, a small number fought for the Boers instead. Irish miners working in the
Transvaal when the war began formed the nucleus of two tiny
Irish commandos. ==Neutral countries==