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The Things They Say: Lawson and The Independent
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Dominic Lawson and The Independent on Churchill, 1940, and the Vote Editor, Finest Hour
Our interest was piqued when Mr. Lawson ventured into history: "Indeed, it is an enduring myth that even as Prime Minister during the war itself, Churchill's offer of "nothing but blood, toil, tears and sweat" was invariably welcome to the British people. As Angus Calder pointed out in his iconoclastic book The People's War, strikes were common, the government not especially popular, and Churchill himself an object of much public disparagement-even if that didn't find expression in the columns of the newspapers. This pent-up discontent was one reason why the great war leader received an overwhelming raspberry from the public as soon as they had a chance to express their opinion at the ballot box, in July 1945."
But that was on May 13th, and Churchill's speeches quickly turned attitudes around. By June, after the French debacle and Dunkirk, there was a different mood. Churchill's postwar bodyguard, Ronald Golding, then an RAF Squadron Leader, recalled: "After his ‘fight on the beaches' speech, we wanted the Germans to come."
Further on, Lawson misrepresents Churchill's proposals for franchise reform: "Churchill, admittedly, had never been completely persuaded of the benefits of the universal franchise: in 1930 he had published an essay-Parliamentary Government and the Economic Problem-which advocated its abandonment and a return to a property franchise (combined with proportional representation). I imagine that if he were dropped into our present predicament, as some political time-traveller, Churchill would argue that it is next to impossible to persuade a majority of the need for sharp public expenditure cuts, when millions of households would feel that such a policy would cost them more in benefits than they would ever get back by way of a reduction in taxes." (Coincidentally, Finest Hour 146 contained a similar Churchill article from 1934, "Restoring the Lost Glory of Democracy.")
Churchill frequently floated "trial balloons," thinking out loud or in print about the nature of democracy. In both these articles, Churchill did ponder the benefits of a "bonus vote" to what he vaguely defined as the "more responsible" level of citizens; though it is salient to note that he never led a movement for such a reform. Moreover, neither there nor in "Parliamentary Government and the Economic Problem" (reprinted in Thoughts and Adventures), does Churchill advocate "return to a property franchise."
What he did suggest, in the midst of the Depression, was "...an Economic sub-Parliament debating day after day with fearless detachment from public opinion all the most disputed questions of Finance and Trade, and reaching conclusions by voting, would be an innovation, but an innovation easily to be embraced by our flexible constitutional system. I see no reason why the political Parliament should not choose, in proportion to its party groupings, a subordinate Economic Parliament of, say, one-fifth of its numbers and composed of persons of high technical and business qualifications."1
2. Ibid., 246-47. |
| Last Updated on Tuesday, 15 June 2010 13:41 |