Title: Issue 4
1Issue 4
- How did the First World War affect Scottish
politics?
2This issue is about how the war made people
think more about politics, how people became more
political and what happened to the political
parties.
3To cover the syllabus you should know about the
following
- What radicalism is and how Scots were affected by
it. - What the ILP was and why many Scots supported it.
- What was meant by Red Clydeside.
- Why many Scots supported the union and wanted to
be part of Scotland within Britain.
4Radicalism and post-war Scottish politics?
- What were the main changes in Scottish politics
caused by the war? - The great war made many Scots more politically
aware. - A word used to describe that increasing awareness
and willingness to become politically involved is
radicalisation.
5The main changes in the political parties
involved the Liberals and the Labour Party.
- Before the war the Liberal Party was the most
powerful political party in Scotland. - After 1918 the Liberal Party was split and after
the mid-1920s they would never again be such a
significant force in British politics until the
coalition government of 2010.
6The Independent Labour Party was stronger in 1918
than it had been in 1914, and the mainstream
Labour Party was about to become one of the two
big parties in British politics.
- The Conservative and Unionist Party recovered
from their pre-war unpopularity and began to
attract new voters from the middle classes living
in the cities.
7What does radicalisation mean and what effect did
it have on post-war politics in Scotland?
- To become politically radicalised means to want
fundamental changes in the way politics operate. - During the war, the radicalisation of politics in
Scotland at times meant people taking direct
action to cause or prevent changes to their own
lives. (rent strikes)
8Examples..
- Women who were involved in the rent strikes went
on to became local councillors in Glasgow. - Shop steward in the CWC went on to become MPs
representing the ILP and the UK Parliament. - Others became much more involved in trade unions
or anti-war groups of the 1920s.
9The radicalisation of politics in Scotland
greatly affected the main political parties.
- Many voters began to support the ILP or the
Labour Party as a way of challenging the old ways
of doing things. - In that sense support for Labour could be seen as
the radicalisation of Scottish politics.
10The radicalisation of Scottish politics also had
an effect on those who did not want to change.
- Those people who were against the political
changes supported by Labour also became stronger
and more confrontational in their views.
11The Conservative and Unionist Party became the
party of choice for many who saw it as the only
way of stopping Scotland from sliding into Red
Revolution.
12The events of Red Clydeside had given hope to
people who wanted change in Scottish society but
had also scared the middle and upper classes, who
saw it as the possible start of revolution.
- In that sense Red Clydeside was a major cause of
the radicalisation of Scottish politics
13The revolutionary flags flying during the Russian
Revolution were all red so the nickname of red
for revolutionary stuck.