Monday, 18 June 2018
1943 Alfred Newbould
Constituency : Leyton West 1919-22
The 1918-22 parliament was an eventful one with Lloyd George having a bumpy ride. The post-war promises of "homes fit for heroes" fell victim to the Geddes Axe on public spending and surreptitious Tory opposition in the form of the Anti-Waste League. The situation in Ireland deteriorated into violence and Lloyd George's personal standing was harmed by the actions of the Black and Tans. The sale of honours corroded it further. Politically, talk of a centre party foundered due to opposition from both wings of the coalition and Lloyd George's position steadily deteriorated as his followers were depleted by defections and by-election losses. In November 1922, the Tories decided they could do without him and he resigned ( rather precipitately ), prompting a general election.
The small band of independent Liberals soldiered on and their interim leader Donald Maclean acquitted himself rather well so that Asquith's return in a convenient by-election in 1920 probably did them no favours.
They didn't have to wait long for a boost in their numbers. Before Parliament met, the Tory MP for Leyton West died of flu. In the general election, Alfred had been thrashed by his opponent who received the coupon in a straight fight. He comfortably turned that round just weeks later campaigning for the abolition of conscription and restrictions on profiteering. He was actually struck down by a cold himself during the campaign and his wife did much of his canvassing.
Alfred was from Staffordshire and was educated at Burton Grammar School. Alfred joined the army and fought in the Boer war. He then moved into the film industry. He was a director of a number of film companies and a publicist for Gaumont. He sat on a number of trade bodies.
Alfred's maiden speech called for the speedy release of service personnel and he put his own victory down to the votes of wives of absent soldiers retained against their will.
Alfred was a leading supporter of Liberal reunion. In June 1921 he and the Coalition Liberal John Wallace co-hosted a dinner for Liberal MPs on both sides to stimulate the process and re-affirm Liberal policy on Free Trade and Ireland.
Alfred's final speech in the Commons called for a reduction in the Entetainments Duty which he claimed was killing the film industry.
Alfred lost his seat in 1922 due to the intervention of a Labour candidate. He missed out on regaining it by just 64 votes in a tight three-cornered contest. In 1924 he slipped to third place.
In 1927, Alfred was nominated to a committee of the London Liberal Federation to look into the organisational health of the party in London. He stood unsuccessfully for the L.C.C. in 1928.
He died in 1952 aged 78.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment