Snowden was again appointed Chancellor after Labour formed a government in 1929, after emerging as the largest party in the general election. His economic philosophy was one of strict
Gladstonian Liberalism rather than socialism. His official biographer wrote, "He was raised in an atmosphere which regarded borrowing as an evil and free trade as an essential ingredient of prosperity". He was the principal opponent to any radical economic policy to tackle the
Great Depression, and blocked proposals to introduce
protectionist tariffs. In 1930 he rejected the Mosley Manifesto issued by junior Labour ministers led by
Oswald Mosley proposing a programme of high spending on
public works and
autarkic Imperial Preference to combat unemployment. The government eventually collapsed over arguments about a
budget deficit when Snowden accepted the
Committee on National Expenditure's recommendations for budget cuts while a significant minority of ministers led by
Arthur Henderson, the
National Executive Committee, and the
General Council of the Trades Union Congress refused to enact cuts in
unemployment benefits. Snowden retained the position of Chancellor during the
National Government of 1931. As a consequence he was expelled from the party, along with MacDonald and
Jimmy Thomas. In a
BBC Radio broadcast on 16 October 1931, he called Labour's policies "
Bolshevism run mad" and contrasted them unfavourably with his own "sane and evolutionary Socialism". Snowden decided not to stand for parliament in the
election of October 1931. At that election, Labour's number of seats declined catastrophically from 288 to 52. It was during that year he had
prostate gland surgery, following which his health and mobility declined. However, with the
decline of Keynesianism as a model after 1968, historians have re-evaluated Snowden in a more favourable light.
Ross McKibbin argues that the Labour government had very limited room to manoeuvre in 1929–31, and it did as well as could be expected; and that it handled the British economy better than most foreign governments handled theirs, and the
Great Depression was less severe in Britain than elsewhere. Future Prime Minister
Harold Wilson would also be inspired by Snowden's policies to resist a devaluation of the pound sterling in 1967. ==Later life: 1931–1937==