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VI. The End of Laissez Faire and the Politics of Cotton

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2009

P. F. Clarke
Affiliation:
University College, London

Extract

There are grounds for arguing that the dynamic thrust of English Liberalism in the early twentieth century was in the direction of social democracy; and that this was a necessary condition of the survival of the Liberal party as a party of government. By 1910, according to this view, the party represented workingclass interests rather than those of any other class. But what about business Liberalism? We are likely to discover an upper limit of its strength among businessmen involved in the cotton trade (cotton bosses). As the party of Free Trade, the Liberals were well placed here. There was no sectional reason why the Conservative programme of Tariff Reform should attract these industrialists. Having no need of protection in home or Empire markets, the cotton industry had almost nothing to gain from an artificial restriction of competition, whereas it had much to lose if a system of tariffs increased production costs.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1972

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References

1 See my book, Lancashire and the New Liberalism (Cambridge, 1971) for a fuller treatment of all the broader political questions touched on here.Google Scholar

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30 Printed in Manchester Guardian, 2, 3 Dec. 1910.

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34 In claiming that the evidence he adduces from the Proceedings is representative, Smith writes confidently of the Chamber as ‘a cross-section of the Lancashire cotton business community” (loc. cit. p. 508) and of ‘the Manchester Chamber directors, representing the rank and file businessmen ” (p. 510). Both of these unexamined assumptions should be treated with scepticism.

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37 Not four as stated in Redford, Manchester Merchants, p. 108. The procedural debate of 1910 raised other issues which are touched on below.

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39 Ibid, xv (1904), 122–4. Unlike the previous year's crowded meeting in the Memorial Hall, this debate took place in the Chamber's own board room which was not used when large numbers (over two hundred) were expected.

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42 Ibid, xxi (1910), 46–9. Both sides were at pains to stress that the vote was on a procedural not a fiscal matter.

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