HARDIE was as
indefatigable outside of Parliament as inside, addressing propaganda
meetings all over the country, writing encouraging letters to branch
secretaries, and editing the “Labour Leader,” which on March 31st, 1894,
became a weekly, and for the financing and management of which he made
himself wholly responsible. The wages bill of the paper, exclusive of
printing, he estimated at £y50 a year, which he hoped would be covered
by income from sales and advertisements, an optimistic miscalculation
which involved him in considerable worry later on, when he found it
necessary to dispense with much of the paid service and rely to some
extent upon voluntary work by enthusiasts in the cause, who, it should
be said here, seldom failed him. The first weekly number contained
Robert Smillie’s election address as Labour Candidate for Mid-Lanark,
where a by-election in which Hardie took an active part was again being
fought. In the “Leader,” Hardie had an article on the election, a
leading article on Lord Rosebery as prospective Premier, and a page of
intimate chat with his readers under the heading of “Entre Notts”
afterwards changed to the plain English of “Between Ourselves,” and this
quantity of journalistic output he continued for years, while shirking
none of the other work that came to him as an agitator and public man.
This number contained also an article by Cunninghame Graham, the I.L.P.
Monthly Report by Tom Mann, “News of the Movement at Home and Abroad,”
besides literary sketches and verses by various contributors. The paper
was edited from London, but printed in Glasgow and distributed from
there. There was a working staff at both ends. Of the London
experiences, Councillor Ben Gardner of West Ham could doubtless give
some interesting reminiscences, while George D. Hardie, Keir’s younger
brother, could do the same for Glasgow. At the end of the first six
months, David Lowe, a young enthusiast from Dundee, with literary tastes
and Socialist beliefs, came in as sub-editor and to an appreciable
extent relieved Hardie of some of the management worries, besides adding
somewhat to the literary flavour of the paper.
With the re-assembling of
Parliament, Hardie resumed his efforts to focus attention on the
unemployment question, but on bringing forward his resolution, found
himself up against a dead wall in the shape of a countout. By this time,
also, his harassing of the Government had raised the ire of West Ham
Liberals who had not bargained for quite so much militancy on the part
of their representative. From them he received numerous letters of
protest with threats of opposition at the next election. To these he
made a reply which defined most explicitly at once his own personal
attitude and the Parliamentary policy of the I.L.P.
“The I.L.P.,” he said,
“starts from the assumption that the worker should be as free
industrially and economically as he is supposed to be politically, that
the land and the instruments of production should be owned by the
community and should be used in producing the requisites to maintain a
healthy and happy existence. The men who are to achieve these reforms
must be under no obligation whatever to either the landlord or the
capitalist, or to any party or organisation representing these
interests. Suppose, for the sake of argument, that twenty members would
be returned to Parliament who were nominally Labour Members but who owed
their election to a compromise with the Liberals, what would the effect
be upon their action in the House of Commons ? .When questions affecting
the interest of property were at s.take, or when they desired to take
action to compel social legislation of a drastic character, the threat
would be always hanging over them that unless they were obedient to the
party Whip and maintained party discipline they would be opposed. In my
own case, this threat has been held out so often that it is beginning to
lose its effect. I have no desire to hold the seat on sufferance and at
the mercy of those who are not in agreement with me, and am quite
prepared to be defeated when the election comes round. But I cannot
agree to compromise my independence of action in even the slightest
degree'. This plain speaking was not relished by his Liberal critics,
and at one of his meetings in the constituency there was some rowdyism.
In the first month of
this particular session, he had the satisfaction of speaking in support
of the Miners’ Eight Hours’ Day Bill, which he himself had helped to
draft years before, and of seeing the Second Reading carried by a
majority of 81. This result did not, of course, ensure its immediately
becoming law, for the obstructive resources of capitalism in Parliament
and the opposition of two sections of the miners were strong enough to
prevent that for many years to come.
At this time we also find
him addressing meetings in South Wales, as a result of which the I.L.P.
got a footing in the Principality which it has held ever since. He had
probably no premonition of how close would yet be his own connection
with Wales and the Welsh people. But he had made a good beginning
towards winning their gratitude, for it was doubtless as the natural
sequel to his Welsh visit that in June he blocked the Cardiff Dock 'Bill
and forced thereby the withdrawal of a clause which imposed a tariff of
twopence on each passenger landed at Cardiff and a charge for luggage.
And now, certain events
happened in the world which produced for Hardie a more trying
parliamentary ordeal than he had yet faced, and tested his moral courage
to the full. Let us look at these events in the sequence in which they
presented themselves to Hardie, and we shall be the better able to
understand the feelings and motives which impelled him to act as he did.
On June 23rd a terrible
explosion occurred at the Albion Colliery, Cilfynydd, South Wales, by
which two hundred and sixty men and boys lost their lives. On the same
day a child was born to the Duchess of York. On the following day, June
24th, M. Carnot, the President of the French Republic, was assassinated.
On June 26th, 70,000 Scottish miners came out on strike against a
reduction of wages.
Now turn to the House of
Commons. On June 25th, Sir William Harcourt moved a vote of condolence
with the French people. On June 28th, the same Cabinet Minister moved an
address of congratulation to the Queen on the birth of the aforesaid
royal infant. Never a word of sympathy for the relatives of the miners
who had been killed : never a word of reference to the serious state of
affairs in the Scottish coalfield. Only one man protested. That man was
Keir Hardie.
The House of Commons’
situation developed in the following' manner. When Harcourt gave notice
of his intention to move the vote of condolence with the French people,
Hardie inquired whether a vote of sympathy would also be moved to the
relatives of the two hundred and sixty victims of the Welsh colliery
disaster. “Oh, no,” said Sir William, “I can dispose of that now by
saying that the House does sympathise with these poor people.” Hardie
put down a notice of an addition to the motion, in which the Queen was
to be also asked to express sympathy with the Welsh miners’ friends, and
the House to be asked to express its detestation of the system which
made the periodic sacrifices of miners’ lives inevitable. His amendment
was ruled out of order, but when the congratulatory motion came on he
exercised his right to speak against it, as, he said, “in the interests
of the dignity of the House, and in protest against the Leader of the
House of Commons declining to take official cognisance of the terrible
colliery accident in South Wales.” He stood alone, deserted by every
other Member, including Labour’s representatives, and faced a scene of
well-nigh unexampled intolerance. A writer in the “West Ham Herald,”
describing it,, wrote: “I’ve been in a wild beast show at feeding time.
I’ve been at a football match when a referee gave a wrong decision. I’ve
been at rowdy meetings of the Shoreditch vestry and the West Ham
Corporation, but in all my natural life I have never witnessed a scene
like this. They howled and yelled and screamed, but he stood his
ground.” Outside, sections of the press acted i;n much the same way as
the House of Commons’ hooligans, and tried to represent his action as a
vulgar" attack on Royalty. It was, primarily, not an attack on Royalty.
He was certainly a Republican, but like most Socialists he regarded the
Monarchy as simply an appanage of the political and social system, which
would disappear aS a matter of course when the system disappeared, and
had it not been that the juxtaposition of events threw up in such
glaring contrast the sycophancy of society where Royalty was concerned,
and its heartlessness where the common people were concerned, he would
probably have allowed the vote of congratulation to go through without
intervention from him. But he was in fact deeply stirred in a way which
these people could not understand. £Ie had brought with him into
Parliament a humanism which was greater than ceremony and deeper than
formality. He was a miner, and to him the unnecessary death of one miner
was of more concern than the birth of any number of royal princes. He
regarded .these two hundred and sixty deaths as two hundred and sixty
murders. He knew that this colliery had long before been reported on as
specially dangerous, and that no preventive measures had been taken. He
understood, only too well, the grief and desolation of the bereaved
women and children. He had been through it all in his early Lanarkshire
days, and he was righteously and passionately indignant. The jeers and
hootings from Members of Parliament and abuse from the press did not
matter to him at all. He took his stand because it was the only thing he
could do, and the receipt of nearly a thousand letters of approval from
people in all social grades convinced him that besides satisfying his
own impulses, he had voiced a deep sentiment in the country.
Hardie was now nearly
thirty-eight years of age, and a recognised outstanding figure in
British political life. An unusual man, amenable neither to flatteries
nor to threatenings—one who could not be ignored. An impression of him,
contributed to the “Weekly Times and Echo” by John K. Kenworthy in this
same month of June, 1894, is worth reproducing.
“Above all things a
spiritual, and yet a simply practical man. Not tall, squarely built,
hard-headed, well bodied, and well set up, he is obviously a bona fide
working man. His head is of the ‘high moral’ type, with a finely
developed forehead, denoting perception and reason of the kind called
common sense. His brown hair is worn long and curling somewhat like the
‘glory5 round the head of a saint in a painted window, and he goes
unshaved. However, most readers will have seen him for themselves on
some platform or another, though one needs to be near him to perceive
the particularly deep, straight and steady gaze of the clear hazel eyes,
which is notable. Altogether, one judges him, by appearances only, to be
a close-knit, kindly and resolute man, all which his performance in life
bears out.”
A by-election at
Attercliffe in July calls for mention if for no other reason than that
it signalises J. Ramsay MacDonald’s entrance into the Independent Labour
Party. The circumstances of the contest confirmed the I.L.P. belief that
the interests behind Liberalism would not concede willingly a single
inch to the claims of labour for representation. The local Trades
Council had nominated their President, Mr. Charles Hobson, with the
tacit understanding that he would be allowed a clear field to fight the
Tory. Hobson was not what was called an extremist. He would probably
have been obedient in Parliament to the Liberal Whip, but the Liberals
were taking no risks, and Mr. Batty Langley, a local employer atid
ex-mayor, who had, as a matter of fact, promised to support Hobson, was
nominated as Liberal candidate. After some shilly-shallying Hobson
withdrew, and the I.L.P., with little time for organisation, determined
to fight with Mr. Frank Smith as their candidate. He was defeated, of
course, but secured 1,249 votes as against 7,984 for the two reactionary
candidates, a good enough foundation for the victory which was to come
later. The immediate result achieved was the clear exposure of
Liberalism’s hostility to labour.
The following letter from
MacDonald is of historical interest to the members of the I.L.P., and is
to some extent illustrative of the mental attitude of both the sender
and the recipient:—
“20 Duncan Buildings,
“Baldwin Gardens, E.C.
“My dear Hardie,—I am now
making personal application for membership of the I.L.P. I have stuck to
the Liberals up to now, hoping that they might do something to justify
the trust that we had put in them. Attercliffe came as a rude awakening,
and I felt during that contest that it was quite impossible for me to
maintain my position as a Liberal any longer. Calmer consideration has
but strengthened that conviction, and if you now care to accept me
amongst you I shall do what I can to support the I.L.P.
“Between you and me there
never was any dispute as to objects. What I could not quite accept was
your methods. I have changed my opinion. Liberalism, and more
particularly local Liberal Associations, have definitely declared
against Labour, and so I must accept the facts of the situation and
candidly admit that the prophecies of ,the I.L.P. relating to Liberalism
have been amply justified. The time for conciliation has gone by and
those of us who are earnest in our professions must definitely declare
ourselves. I may say that in the event of elections, I shall place part
of my spare time at the disposal of the Party, to do what work may seem
good to you.
“Yours very sincerely,
“J. R. MacDonald.”
In this manner came into
the I.L.P. one whom Hardie afterwards characterised as its “greatest
intellectual asset,” and whose influence on national and international
politics has been very great and still continues.
Meanwhile, the industrial
phase of the Labour conflict absorbed Hardie’s attention even more than
the political. The great strike of Scottish miners continued for sixteen
weeks, entailing much suffering throughout the mining community and
ending in virtual defeat for the men. Still, though this was foreseen
almost from the beginning, it was necessary that the stand should be
made for the safeguarding of the sense of unity which had now evolved in
Scotland. The strike was in some measure a consummation of Hardie’s
early efforts on behalf of a national organisation. It was not a
sectional strike, but national, embracing the whole of the Scottish
mining industry, and in that respect constituted a notable step towards
that all-British combination which to-day enables the miners from
Scotland to Cornwall to present a united front for the advancement of
their common interests. The West of Scotland leadership was now in the
capable hands of Robert Smillie, but, naturally, when at home during the
Parliamentary recess, Hardie gave all possible assistance and addressed
many meetings of the men in Ayrshire and Lanarkshire, besides giving
what counsel and support he could through the “Labour Leader.”
When it was all over he
drove home the Socialist lesson in an article which, by reason of its
date, October 20th, 1894, is a complete answer to those who now regard
the claim for the nationalisation of the mines as a new revolutionary
demand. Revolutionary it may be, but it is not new.
“Now, why,” he asked,
“were the masters, the Government, the press and the pulpit all arrayed
against you?
“There is but one answer.
All these are controlled by the rich and you are the poor. Take the
miners. The minerals are owned by the landlords, and they insist on
having a royalty of from eightpence to one shilling per ton of coal
brought to the surface. The pits are owned by the mineowners, and they
and the landlords have the power to say that not one ton of coal shall
be dug except on the terms they are willing to grant. Here are the
people of Scotland—over four million of them, wanting coal to burn, and
willing to pay for it. Here are you, the miners of Scotland, seventy
thousand of you, willing to dig the coal in exchange for a living wage.
But between you and the public stand the landlords and the mineowners,
who say: ‘The coal is ours and we won’t allow the miners to work nor the
public to be supplied unless on our terms.’ So long as the landlords and
the mineowners own the mines they are within their rights when they act
as they have been doing, and the cure lies not in cursing the mineowners
nor in striking, but in making the mines public property”
It should be noted that
it was only before or after a strike, not while it was taking place,
that Hardie asked the men to listen to counsel of this kind. He knew
that in the fight for wages, a strike, or the threat of a strike, was
the only available weapon, and in the use of it he was with them every
time. He knew that they must fight for wages, but he wanted them to have
something bigger than wages to fight for, and a different weapon than
the strike.
In September the Trades
Union Congress was held >at Norwich, and Hardie attended practically for
the last time as a delegate. He had some time previously relinquished
all official positions in the Miners’ Association and was therefore
disqualified by the new standing order passed this year which declared
that a delegate must be either working! at his trade or be a paid
official of a Trade Union. And so passed from the Trades Union Congress
three men who had taken a prominent part in its deliberations—Keir
Hardie, John Burns and Henry Broadhurst. Hardie especially had left his
mark on the Congress. His connection with the Congress had only existed
over a period of eight years, beginning in 1887, when the formation of
the Ayrshire Miners5 Union gave him a standing as a delegate. In that
time the outlook of the Congress towards the principle of Independent
Labour Representation, and also towards Socialism, had almost completely
changed. That Hardie’s personality had much to do with that change is
beyond doubt.
As far back as 1869 the
Congress had declared in favour of Labour Representation and had
reaffirmed the principle on several subsequent occasions. But no steps
had ever been taken to give practical effect to the logical electoral
policy implied by such resolutions— unless the return of a few working
men to Parliament as adherents of the Liberal Party could be so
regarded. Most of the men who had been so returned were members of the
Congress. Mr. Broadhurst, the Secretary of the Parliamentary Committee,
had indeed accepted office in the Government as Under-Secretary of the
Home Office, and he has himself stated in his autobiography that the
Parliamentary Committee functioned as the Radical wing of the Liberal
Party. He had voted in Parliament against the Miners’ Eight Hours’ Day
Bill, and in all election campaigns he was the Liberal Party’s chief
platform asset wherever working-class votes required to be influenced.
Naturally, he and his Liberal-Labour colleagues resented vigorously the
new policy of absolute political independence, of which Hardie made
himself the spokesman. Doubtless they represented quite faithfully the
general Trade Union-attitude on the question. To change that attitude
was the purpose of Hardie and the new men who were pushing their way
into the Labour movement.
At first Hardie’s
position was that of almost complete isolation, as the votes of the
Congress testify. At the 1888 Congress, his motion impeaching Broadhurst
for having “in the name of the Congress” voted against the Miners’ Eight
Hours’ Day Bill received only 15 votes against 80, while the following
year at Dundee, when he made a frontal attack and moved that Broadhurst
“was not a fit and proper person to hold the office of Secretary” and
accused him of supporting employers of labour and holding shares in
sweating companies (a charge which was not denied), he was defeated by
177 to 11.
The Congress and the
Trade Union movement were evidently overwhelmingly against-him. A weaker
man would have accepted defeat of this kind as final. It only made
Hardie more stubborn and stimulated him to greater effort. Hardie’s
Congress record is something of a paradox. He was being defeated all the
time, and all the time he was winning. Even in 1891, when he got only
eleven supporters to his proposal for a Trade Union Parliamentary Fund
for securing Parliamentary representation that was a move forward, being
an attempt to give practical effect to the decision which the Congress
had just previously arrived at calling for a “strong and vigorous Labour
Party” in Parliament. Hardie’s amendment was as follows: “and would
suggest to the organised trades of this country so to alter their rules
as to admit of their subscribing to a Parliamentary Fund to be placed at
the disposal of the Congress to secure Labour Representation based upon
the decision of this Congress.” We have here the germ of present day
Labour Party finance. Yet, in 1891, it had only eleven supporters in the
Trades Union Congress. Similarly, when, in 1892, on the motion of Ben
Tillett, it was decided to recommend the formation of a Parliamentary
Fund, and also to give no support to any candidates but those who stood
for the “collective ownership of the means of production, distribution
and exchange,” Hardie was again to the fore with an amendment which
placed him once more in the minority. His proposal was for the formation
of an Independent Parliamentary group, but it was defeated by 119 votes
to 96. Hardie’s minorities were always the heralds of future victory.
At that same Congress he
had gathered together the elements out of which in the following year
was evolved the Independent Labour Party, and now, this year, with the
I.L.P. in being, and himself in Parliament as its representative, he
could take leave of the Trades Union Congress assured that his eight
years of struggle and pioneering had not been in vain.
It was probably on the
occasion of this visit to Norwich that an incident occurred revealing to
his Trade Union friends another aspect of his nature than that to which
they were accustomed in the stress of industrial and political strife.
The incident is related by Mr. S. G. Hobson. “Of my various pleasant
memories of Norwich,” says Mr. Hobson, “perhaps the sweetest was one
evening in the Cathedral grounds under an old Norman arch where we stood
and watched the sun go down and darkness creep silently upon us. The
greensward—smoothed by careful hands for centuries back— seemed to
gradually recede from our view. By and by the lights twinkled from many
windows, and we knew that worshippers were there to chant the evening
service and sing their vesper hymns. Suddenly the voice of old Hardie
rose through the stillness, giving vocal expression to the Twenty-third
Psalm, and we all joined—Christians and agnostics—blending our voices,
not so much in any devotional spirit as out of deference to the
influence of the place.”
This inherent spiritual
emotionalism—if it may be so called—was continually manifesting itself
in various ways all through life, whether, as in the early Ayrshire
days, in evangelising on the Ayrshire highways and byways, or, as in
later days, preaching in Methodist pulpits or on Brotherhood platforms,
or in association with the votaries of spiritualism and theosophy. He
was imbued with an imaginative catholicity of spirit which rendered him
responsive to every expression of religious feeling which seemed to him
sincere. There is no need to try to explain it. It was involuntary, a
part of his nature, and it never hindered, but rather intensified and
idealised, his work for Socialism. His spiritual enthusiasm never led
him out of touch with reality. In a very literal sense, “the poor he had
always with him.” He was one of them. And to him their cause was a cause
of the devotional spirit.
Just about this time he
was penning his letter to the Scottish miners which was afterwards
circulated in pamphlet form under the title of “Collier Laddies.” We
find him also addressing propaganda meetings as far north as Arbroath,
and across the channel speaking in Waterford and in the Rotunda at
Dublin and reporting upon the Labour movement in Ireland with an
optimism which can hardly have been based upon an accurate estimate of
the all-absorbent character of the Nationalist movement in that country.
Towards the end of this
year, the I.L.P. had an accession of a kind more valuable than it could
then know. Philip Snowden, a man quite unknown to public life, joined
the I.L.P. He had been living quietly in a remote village amongst the
Yorkshire hills, recovering from a very serious illness, and in the
period of convalescence had given his mind to a study of social
problems, which ended in his becoming a convinced Socialist. The I.L.P.
was steadily becoming equipped with capable leadership, and with men of
experience in administrative r work. Keir Hardie, Ramsay MacDonald,
Philip Snowden, Bruce Glasier, Fred Jowett, to name no others,
constituted a group which for all-round ability on the platform or in
the council chamber could not be surpassed by any of the other political
parties.
In the Liberal camp there
were evident signs of alarm at the activities of the new party. In July,
following close upon the Attercliffe election, Joseph Burgess had polled
a substantial vote in a by-election at Leicester, and all over the
country the I.L.P. was busy selecting its candidates and choosing the
constituencies in which it would fight, many of these being places where
the Liberal hold was already somewhat precarious. Lord Rosebery, now
Prime Minister, found it expedient to address a meeting in Hardie’s
constituency at which he demonstrated to his own satisfaction that a
united democracy was only possible through the Liberal Party. Hardie,
characteristically, replied both by speech and pen, thereby focussing
more than ever, national attention on himself as a political
personality, and an article which he contributed to the January, 1895,
“Nineteenth Century” explaining and vindicating the I.L.P. policy and
tactics, attracted much attention.
Nor did his practical
work in the House of Commons go entirely without recognition. On January
19th, for example, he was the guest of the Fawcett Association, at that
time the one body ventilating the grievances of postal servants, and was
presented with an illuminated address, “for the valuable services you
have rendered us in the House of Commons on every occasion when you have
found it possible to effectually advocate our cause.” The address
concluded : “We thank you for your resolute adherence to the cause of
truth and justice, and esteem you as a man whose promise may be relied
on.” An extremely comforting assurance to a man who was at that very
time being more virulently assailed by the party politicians than any
other public man in the country.
Hardie was now preparing
for his third Parliamentary session and was determined to go to
Westminster this time fortified by an outside agitation which would
compel the Government to act on behalf of the unemployed, or to resign,
a formidable objective for an apparently solitary and friendless
commoner. The distress throughout the country, instead of lessening, was
becoming more acute and widespread. Well-intentioned local distress
committees and soup kitchens only emphasised, without materially
alleviating, the misery, and although the contending politicians might
make platform play with Armenian atrocities and with their rival plans
for pacifying Ireland, it was not possible to get hungry British
electors to concentrate on either of these questions as an election
issue. The difficulty was—and is—to get them to concentrate upon
anything. That, in fact, is the trouble with which the Labour Party is
still faced.
In the first week of
January, he appealed through the “Labour Leader” for a small fund with
which to begin a national unemployed agitation, and by the time
Parliament met in February, with a comparatively trifling expenditure of
money, big demonstrations had been held in many of the great industrial
centres, Hardie himself taking a leading part in most of them. Many of
the
J. Keir Hardie, 1893
Liberal Members, with a
general election impending, were compelled to make promises to their
constituents which it was necessary they should make at least some
pretence of redeeming. It was, therefore, with some tremors that the
Government faced the House of Commons, notwithstanding Harcourt’s
jocular attempt to make light of the Opposition forces. “There was no
‘true blue’ now. They had instead the faded yellow of Birmingham, a
little dash of green from Waterford, and a little splotch of red from
West Ham. Thus—deliberately or not—reckoning the solitary Keir Hardie as
of equal importance with the great Unionist Party. “A splotch of red”
said one of the clever rhymers of the “Labour Leader” :—
“A splotch of red, Sir
William V.,
Only a little splotch of red.
Your friends sit back and broadly smile
As you the weary hours beguile
With little jokes—but time will be
When you’ll not treat so jestin|gly
That tiny little splotch of red.
A hearty, healthy little splotch
And growing fast; full firmly bent
On turning out the fools that sport
With sample men and women’s woes,
Your office is your only thought,
Your friends but on their seats intent.
Think you it can be ever so?
Sir William V., we tell you, no;
And all your mocking Parliament.”
Hardie’s amendment to the
address was in exactly the same terms as the one he had moved two years
before on first taking his seat, but the circumstances were different.
The unemployed agitation had assumed big proportions, the pressure from
the constituencies was having considerable effect upon many of the
Government supporters who would be compelled to vote with, Hardie unless
their own leaders could provide them with a plausible alternative; and
there was the Tory opposition, willing to use the unemployed question,
or any other question, as a means of bringing about a Government defeat.
Mr. T. P. O’Connor,
himself an experienced wire puller, described in the “Weekly Sun” the
manoeuverings which took place. “Some shrewd friends of the Government
knew what was in store for them if they were to receive the motion of
Mr. Keir Hardie with a blank negative. The Government accordingly
considered the situation, with the result that they went carefully
through the suggestions that were made to them for meeting with this
terrible difficulty which comes periodically athwart the opulence and
comfort of this mighty nation and this vast city. The information was
conveyed to the friends of the Government that they saw their way to
propose a committee which would get a very practical bit of work to do,
and which would be obliged to go into the question of the unemployed
promptly as well as seriously. Friends of the Government, having
considered the terms of what it was proposed to do, were able to
announce in turn to the Government that in their opinion this was as
much as could be expected, and so all danger of defections from the
Liberal ranks disappeared. Whatever happened on other amendments,
Ministers were safe on the amendment of Mr. Keir Hardie— safe, but
considerably shaken. Hardie had proved himself a good parliamentary
strategist; but he was more than a strategist. He was, in a good cause,
perhaps the most stubborn man alive. He persisted with his motion
notwithstanding the promised concession, in the value of which he had no
faith at all. The scene which ensued was thus described by a Press
correspondent:—
“As soon as it was known
he was up, Members poured in from every part, until every bench had its
full quota of Members, whilst a crowd stood below the bar and another
crowd behind the Speaker’s chair. Both front benches were crowded with
Ministers and ex-Ministers and the attention of the House was kept
unbroken from start to finish.
“The speech was not of
the fighting order; the concession just offered by the Government of a
special committee having made that impossible, but the interest never
flagged for a moment and the chorus of cheers from all parts at the
close showed that a responsive chord had been struck. Sir Charles Dilke
followed and congratulated Mr. Hardie on having gained the point which
for two and a half years he had been constantly fighting for. He quoted
Mr. Gladstone’s reply to a question put by the Member for West Ham in
1893, in which the Prime Minister refused to agree to the appointment of
a committee because it was not the business of the Government to deal
with such questions.”
Another contemporary
impression, contributed to a Northern paper, preserves for us with
remarkable vividness the nature of the ordeal through which Hardie had
to pass when opposing the Government motion :— “When the Member for West
Ham moved his second amendment, Sir William Harcourt appealed to him to
withdraw it, an appeal which was backed by Sir John Gorst, Mr. J. W.
Benn, and Sir Albert Rollit, whilst a number of Members tried their
influence privately. ‘If the Government can find the committee and make
an interim report, I will withdraw my amendment’; and the knit brow and
the firm mouth showed that the words meant what they said. It was a
strange and significant scene as the representatives of rank and titles
tried to bend the shaggy pitman to their will. In the end he conquered,
and the cheers with which Sir William Har-court’s capitulation was
received were really a tribute to Keir Hardie’s firmness. It was a
little incident, but of great significance.”
The “splotch of red” had
made an indelible mark. He got the assurance that the committee would
get to work immediately and bring in an interim report with all possible
speed. He, for his own part, having little faith in a committee
appointed reluctantly to save the Government from immediate downfall,
refused to associate himself with it.
And now, finally, to
complete the picture, take this other contemporary comment from the
London “Echo.” “Possibly the new Parliament may see nothing of Keir
Hardie, but the chronologist will at least do him the justice of
recording how he threw the Government of the day into a blue funk,
forced their hand, and then haughtily left the Chamber, disdaining with
almost a refinement of cynicism to support their tardy concession, and
at the same time deftly eluding the grasp of the clever intriguers who
hoped to jockey into a follower the free lance whom their caste pride
would not permit to lead them. Verily, the game of party politics is a
truculent business, and the fact has never been more poignantly
illustrated than in the incidents of a week in which, shocking as it is,
the almost houseless poor have been the sport of the strategists in
‘high places.’
In this fashion did Keir
Hardie earn the title of “Member for the Unemployed.” |