Title: Lloyd George
1Lloyd George The Peoples Budget
- Related Reading
- McLean, Ch. 5 6 introduce you to Chamberlain,
Lloyd George, and broad politics of period. - Jenkins, Roy. 1954. Mr. Balfour Poodle.
London Heineman - Blewett, Norman. 1972. The Peers, the Parties
and the People. Toronto U of T Press.
2Lloyd George The Peoples Budget
- The Re-alignment of 1885 -86
- Salisburys gamble pays off the villa vote is
more Conservative than the politicians realized - Chamberlains populist rhetoric makes
middle-class Liberals jittery (Three acres a
cow!) - Gladstones policies are either unwelcome or
rejected outright - Tee-totaling
- Irish Home Rule
- Home Rule is the clincher 1886 election sees
Liberals wiped out in Ireland and lose 143 seats
in Great Britain - Liberals split Liberal-Unionists (led by
Chamberlain) fuse with Conservatives into the
Unionist Party
3The Parties Predicaments
- Twenty years of Conservative / Unionist
domination end in 1905-6 - Education Bill debacle
- Mismanagement of Boer War
- The cheap loaf re-imposition of Corn Duty in
1902 to provide war revenue - Chamberlains agitation inside party for
Imperial Preference -
- Liberals landslide victory of 1906
- Victory masks fundamental weakness of Liberals
position
4The Liberals Predicament
- Alliance with Irish Nationalists is constraining
- Irish Question internally divisive (Home Rule
Crisis, 1886) - Reliance on vagaries of SMP electoral system
- Class dividing the Liberals urban social base
- Liberals challenged on left by Labour an
unstable bargain - the greatest danger to the Liberals will arise
from a split between Liberalism and Labour, such
as destroyed liberalism in Germany and
elsewhere. (McLean, 1999, 158)
5The Strategic Prescription
- Liberals need to
- Widen partys social intellectual base
- Incorporate Labour position and support
- Get rid of Irish Question (i.e., make politics
uni-dimensional) - Curb House of Lords
- Note 1-3 are closely related strategies.
6The Conservative Blockade
- The difficulty the Conservatives use the Lords
to undermine the Liberal government - When the Conservative Party is in power there
is practically no House of Lords it takes
whatever the Conservative Government brings it
from the House of Commons without question or
dispute but the moment a Liberal Government is
formed, this harmless body assumes an active
life, and its activity is entirely exercised in
opposition to the Government. - (Lord Rosebery, quoted in Jenkins 1954, 17)
7Balfours Analysis of the Situation
- Exercise of Lords veto is not straightforward
- Balfour (the Unionist Commons leader) wrote to
Lansdowne (the Unionist leader in the Lords)
that, -
- I conjecture that the (Liberal) Government
methods of carrying on their legislative work
will be this they will bring in Bills in a much
more extreme form than the moderate members of
their Cabinet probably approve the moderate
members will trust to the House of Lords cutting
out or modifying the most outrageous provisions
the left Wing of the Cabinet, on the other hand,
while looking forward to the same result, will be
consoled for the anticipated mutilation of their
measures by the reflection that they will be
gradually accumulating a case against the Upper
House, and that they will be able to appeal at
the next election for a mandate to modify its
constitution (i.e., the make-up of the House of
Lords)
8Balfours Analysis of the Situation
Median Lord (Unionist)
Balfour (i.e. Unionist Commons Position)
Moderate Liberal Cabinet Minister
Extreme Liberal Cabinet Minister
Median Labour MP
Cabinet Median
Midpoint between Balfour and Moderate Liberal
Cabinet Minister
9Balfours Analysis of the Situation
- Unionists must employ Lords veto strategically
- How should Unionists proceed?
- Unionists could amend bills to a point where the
moderate cabinet members actually prefer the
amended bill to the Cabinets initial,
radical-left proposal. - Unionists might allow some bills through the
Lords without amendment leaving the moderate
Liberal ministers with the choice of voting with
their cabinet colleagues for a law that they do
not like or voting against their own colleagues
to prevent this outcome.
10Balfours Analysis of the Situation
- Above strategies are not unproblematic logically
- One must account for fact that
- The fact that the Liberals are aware of the
Unionists incentives and vice versa - Unionists want to limit policy change, create an
open split in the cabinet, and avoid raising
questions about the Lords veto - Liberals want to alter policy, avoid being split,
and build a case against the Lords veto - Actors cannot credibly commit to acting against
their own preferences
11Balfours Analysis of the Situation
sq
b1
B(U)
L(U)
M(L)
E(L)
LAB
- Assume sq to right of Unionist-Liberal midpoint
reasonable due to the fact that the Unionists had
been in power for an extended period of time. - Assume further that Balfour is correct left wing
of Cabinet succeeds in convincing moderates to
agree to a very left-wing bill, b1, at the ideal
point of the most left-wing cabinet member
12Balfours Analysis of the Situation
sq
b1
b2
L(U)
B(U)
M(L)
E(L)
LAB
- Amending to b2 leaves the all cabinet members to
the right of the cabinet median better off than
sq the cabinet accepts the amendments.
13Balfours Analysis of the Situation
sq
b1
b2
b3
B(U)
L(U)
M(L)
E(L)
LAB
- But Unionists would prefer amending to b3 rather
than b2 - b3 leaves M(L) better off than under b1 and sq
- b3 also leaves E(L) better off than under sq
- Cabinet therefore accepts the Lords amendments
- This just limits Unionists losses. Can
Unionists do even better?
14Balfours Analysis of the Situation
sq
b1
b4
B(U)
L(U)
M(L)
E(L)
LAB
- Amending to b4 leaves Unionists better off than
sq. - E(L) prefers b1 to b4, but also prefers sq to
b4. - M(L) prefers b4 to b1, but prefers sq to b4.
- Cabinet rejects the Lords amendments and sq
stands. -
- Inference If Unionists make rightward
amendments to sqs already to right of cabinet,
they will a) fail to move policy and b) end up in
a confrontation with the Liberal cabinet.
15Balfours Analysis of the Situation
sq
b1
b2
L(U)
E(L)
B(U)
M(L)
LAB
- Only way Unionists can split the cabinet is with
sq inside the cabinets Pareto set. - Then, Unionists may be able to amend so that
M(L) prefers the Unionists amended bill to both
sq and b1, e.g., b2. This would split cabinet - To avoid a cabinet split, Liberals should leave
sq policies inside cabinets Pareto set
untouched... or meekly accept any such amendments
16Balfours Analysis of the Situation
b1
b2
sq
L(U)
E(L)
B(U)
M(L)
LAB
- Unionists run into trouble when sq far to right,
near L(U)s ideal point - Balfour can direct Lords to amend to b2 (which
Cabinet would accept), but will Lords follow
Balfours orders? - As government, Liberals control agenda
17Balfours Analysis of the Situation
Policy change and amendments concentrated on
issues in this interval
L(U)
E(L)
B(U)
M(L)
LAB
- Policy changes and amendments concentrated on x
?(M(L), L(U) - Liberals avoid splits by ignoring sq ?E(L),
M(L) - Unionists have to worry about sq ?B(L), L(U)
- These insights arise once we stop thinking of
parties as monolithic entities
18Over-riding the Conservative Blockade
- A failure to curb Lords will undercut Liberals
attempts to deal with Ireland or outflank Labour - Consider their efforts on several policies
- Education Bill
- Licensing Bill
- Old Age Pensions
- Budget of 1909, The Peoples Budget
19The Education Bill
- Lords votes 132 52 insisting on amendments
gutting the bill - Liberals accept the amendments
- the great majority of Liberal MPs thought
that the education issue was not big enough to
afford favourable ground from which to force the
issue. - (Jenkins 1954, 25)
20Threatening Talk
- Liberals use 1907 Throne speech to sabre-rattle
- serious questions affecting the working of our
parliamentary system have arisen from unfortunate
differences between the two houses,and, His
Majestys Ministers have this important subject
under consideration with a view to a solution of
this difficulty. - (Jenkins 1954, 28)
-
21 But Little Action
- Liberals actually oppose a proposal to create a
nominated or elected Second Chamber - A Liberal Government would be extremely
ill-advised to touch the composition of the
Second Chamber until it had settled its powers.
To set up a nominated Second Chamber composed of
grave and reverend i.e., legitimate but
necessarily conservative-minded individuals
would, if such a Chamber succeeded to the powers
of the present House, both increase the evil and
abolish the remedy which the present system
provided - (Jenkins 1954, 29-30)
22The Licensing Bill A First-Class Funeral
- Bill to regulate public houses and liquor reduce
licenses by 1/3 - Resented by Irish (whiskey industry)
- Brewers fund popular campaign against it Hyde
Park riot - Tories bitterly (opportunistically?) opposed
- Bill takes 8 months to get through Commons
- Tories kill it in the Lords 272-96.
23Old Age Pensions
- Lords is opposed so prodigal of expenditure as
likely to undermine the whole fabric of the
Empire, and destructive of all thrift.
(Jenkins 1954, 37) - But Lansdowne convinces Tory Lords to defer to
Commons The bill is primarily financial in
nature, and finance is by constitutional
principle the Commons preserve.
24Stalemate
- Session of 1908 ends with Liberals in retreat
- A string of by-election losses
- Lack of legislation sparks an internal revolt in
Commons - Only financial matters pass through Lords
- Financial needs critical Pensions and German
military build-up - Lord Carrington The session is spoilt and...
Balfour the Lords are masters of the situation
(Blewett 1972, 48) - Liberal retreats suggest that Liberal cabinet has
concentrated on issues inside their own cabinets
Pareto set - Only pensions seems to have caused Unionists angst
25Constitutional Chicken
- Can we think of this as a Chicken game?
- Liberals can continue to issue populist
legislation to provoke Lords - Lords can continue to use veto to frustrate the
Liberal Government - Are both actors willing to risk the damage to the
political elite a social not a just a political
revolution (Goschen) that a Peers vs. People
constitutional crisis might spark? - Still, both actors have incentives to take
advantage of the others loss of nerve
26Constitutional Chicken
27Constitutional Chicken
- Note
- If Liberal Govt submits populist bills, the
Lords accept - But if Lords can commit to veto, Liberals
submit moderate bills
28Constitutional Chicken
- Note
- If Liberal Govt submits populist bills, the
Lords accept - But if Lords can commit to veto, Liberals
submit moderate bills - Thus, there are 2 Nash equilbria, and neither
is the reasonable compromise nor the disastrously
irrational one.
29Constitutional Chicken
- The normal form does not capture true legislative
sequence - An extensive form version of the game does
- Only one NE survives backward induction! Never
get to (moderate, accept) in equilibrium - Lords promise to accept moderate bills are not
credible not subgame perfect.
0, 0
Veto
Populist
Accept
3, 1
Liberal Govt.
Lords
2, 2
Accept
Moderate
Veto
1, 3
30Constitutional Chicken
- Puzzle Even if we concede that Liberals stand
to gain from forcing a Peers v. people election,
we dont get to the Populist, Veto outcome.
0, 0
Veto
Populist
Accept
3, 1
Liberal Govt.
Lords
2, 2
Accept
Moderate
Veto
1, 3
31Circumventing the Veto
- Liberal must incorporate social policy into
budgets - Accordingly he Lloyd George proceeded to
frame his Budget for 1909 with the threefold
purpose of raising the extra funds needed for old
age pensions and other intended reforms of
making provisions for these reforms in the
finance bill and of adopting tax-raising devices
which would be particularly distasteful to the
Peers and might rouse them to throw out the
Budget. - (quoted by Jenkins 1954, 41)
32The Peoples Budget
- Introduced 29 April 1909
- Addressed budget shortfall by increased taxation
- On incomes (Irish opposition)
- On spirits
- On land!
- In as much as land had never been taxed, the land
tax - arouses Aristocratic opposition
- represents movement from a sq very favourable to
Lords
33The Peoples Budget
- Conservatives are implacably opposed
- Balfour vindictive, inequitable, based on no
principle, and injurious to the productive
capacity of the country. - Carson the beginning of the end of all property
rights. - Landowne It is a monument of reckless and
improvident finance. - Rosebery It is inquisitorial, tryannical, and
Socialistic. - Blockade the Commons 554 divisions over 6 months
34The Limehouse Speech
- Lloyd George ratchets up the rhetoric
- We are placing the burdens on the broadest
shoulders. Why should I put burdens on the
people? I am one of the children of the people.
I was brought up amongst them, I know their
trials, and God forbid that I should add one
grain of trouble to the anxieties which they bear
with such patience and fortitude. - (Jenkins 1954, 56)
35Overreaction
- Aristocrats threaten massive reductions in staff
on their estates - They become shrill a Conservative MP noted
- He only wished the Dukes had held their
tongues, every one of them. It would have been a
good deal better for the Conservatives Party if,
before the Budget was introduced, every Duke had
been locked up - (Jenkins 1954, 57)
36Continued Provocation
- Lloyd George implicitly threatens the Lords
should they exercise their veto - The question will be asked Should 500 men,
ordinary men, chosen accidentally from among the
unemployed, override the judgement the
deliberate judgement of millions of people who
are engaged in the industry which makes the
wealth of this country?. The answers are
charged with peril for the order of things which
the Peers represent. - (Jenkins 1954, 57)
37Damn the Consequences
- Tories driven by Chamberlains extremism (and
Chamberlain was electorally popular) - the peers are not worthy of their seats if
they do not reject the budget. - The King, anxious to avoid a crisis, urges
cross-party talks both sides refuse - Tories prepare to veto
38A Pyrrhic Victory?
- Not all Tories convinced
- A general election immediately following the
rejection of the Budget would, beyond all doubt,
be disastrous to the fortunes of the Unionist
Party. The Government would be returned with a
sufficient majority to re-enact the Budget and to
remain in office another five years. This would
be bad enough, but it would be still worse if
they obtained as the must inevitably try to
obtain power to curtail the veto of the House
of Lords. - (Lord Lytton, quoted in Jenkins 1954, 62)
39A Pyrrhic Victory?
- Lyttons opinion is not isolated
- My Lords, if you win, the victory can at most
be a temporary one. If you lose, you have
altered and prejudiced the position, the power,
the prestige, the usefulness of this House - (Balfour of Burleigh, quoted in Jenkins 1954,
66)
40The Die is Cast
- Lansdowne moves on second reading,
- that this House is not justified in giving
its assent to the Bill until it has been
submitted to the judgement of the country. - On 28 November 1909, the Budget is defeated by
the Lords, 75-350
41The Aftermath
- Two election take place in 1910
- The January election results in a hung
Parliament, but the Peoples Budget is passed
after land tax dropped. - A December election fails to break deadlock
- Liberals rely on Irish nationalists to govern
- Pass the Parliament Act 1911 undercutting Lords
veto.
42Oligarchies are seldom destroyed and more
frequently commit suicide (Lord Reay)
- Why did the Unionist leadership act so
recklessly? - Moderates (e.g., Lytton) were free-traders,
disliked by Whole-Hoggers (Chamberlain-protectio
nists) - Balfours leadership hinged on Whole-Hoggers
- Whole-Hoggers were a powerful lobby
-
- The agents, the organisations, and the Licensed
Victuallers Trade all demand it. They know
nothing of, and care nothing for constitutional
Law.
43Policy, Office, and Votes?
- Rejection suited the whole-hoggers policy goals
- What, then, are the two ways, and only two
ways, before the country of meeting the
necessities of the nation? On the one hand, you
may do as we are doing. You may impose. taxes
on accumulated wealth. What is the other?, the
only other that has yet been disclosed or even
foreshadowed to Parliament and the country? It
is to take a toll of the prime necessaries of
life. it is to surround your markets with a
tariff wall - (Asquith, quoted in Jenkins 1954, 64)
- Defeating the Budget, left protectionism as the
only alternative. - Intra-party victory for whole-hoggers at expense
of inter-party defeat - Suggests that the spatial model we started out
with is broadly accurate depiction of the
situation Unionists torn apart by Liberals
moves on issues inside the Unionist Pareto set