ALMOST immediately on his
arrival, Hardie found himself deeply immersed in work, and seemed bent
on squandering somewhat freely the energy he had gained during his
travels.
The period, indeed, is so
crowded with events in which he was involved that it is well-nigh
impossible to present a sequential account of his sayings and doings.
There was the usual round of welcoming demonstrations which were
calculated not only to show the esteem in which he was held by the
Labour movement, but also to act as a stimulus to that movement. The
meeting in the Albert Hall, London, was remarkable for size and
enthusiasm, and the recipient of so much adulation might have been
pardoned if he had succumbed, if only temporarily, to the disease known
as “swelled head”—a failing not unknown amongst popular politicians.
Hardie was not without his share of self-esteem, but he never allowed it
to magnify into a grotesque proportion his place in the movement. These
demonstrations he accepted as his due, but he valued them chiefly as
Labour’s answer to the misrepresentations and abuse that had been so
lavishly showered upon him. If his own people believed in him, he cared
not who was against him.
He had also to make a
tour of his constituency, where his reception was such as to assure him
that the attacks made upon him had not weakened, but had rather
strengthened, the fidelity of his supporters. South Wales had now become
a kind of second home to him, where he was as much at his ease, and had
friendships as intimate, as in Ayrshire or Glasgow.
Following quickly upon
these platform appearances came the I.L.P. Conference at Huddersfield,
at which there were some signs of division over the Party’s connection
with the Labour Party. The trouble centred round Victor Grayson, who had
been elected for the Colne Valley division in the previous year, under
conditions which did not strictly conform to Labour Party rules, and
which had prevented his official endorsement either by the N.A.C. or by
the Labour Party Executive. The former body, however, made itself
responsible for paying him his share of the Parliamentary Maintenance
Fund, from which the I.L.P. helped its Parliamentary representatives.
The Conference sustained the N.A.C. attitude by a large majority.
Thereafter, a resolution— to which Grayson agreed—was passed, declaring
that “during the remainder of Parliament his relations to the Labour
Party should be the same as that of all the other I.L.P. members, except
in the case of his being placed upon the Parliamentary Fund.” This
dispute, throughout which Hardie played the part of peacemaker, seems in
perspective somewhat trivial, but at the time it looked to be very
serious, and there were not wanting those who hoped to see it result
either in the break up of the I.L.P. or in its severance from the Labour
Party.
This Conference, however,
was chiefly remarkable for its pronouncements on foreign affairs, and
especially upon the agreement with the Russian Government, which it
declared was equivalent to “giving an informal sanction to the course of
infamous tyranny which has suppressed every semblance of representation
and has condemned great numbers of our Russian comrades to imprisonment,
torture and death.” A resolution was also passed protesting against the
“shameless exploitation of the Congo by the Government of King Leopold,
and calling upon the British Government to take such action as may
compel a more humane treatment of the natives of the Congo.” This was
followed by a resolution, moved by Hardie and seconded by Joseph
Burgess, demanding “that the people of India should be given more
effective control over their own affairs.” In the course of his speech,
Hardie cited the native States of Baroda, Mysore and Travancore as proof
of the fitness of the Indian people for self-government. In one or other
of these States, he affirmed, he had found parish councils established,
he had found the caste system disappearing, and he had found compulsory
free education, and in one of them there was a popularly elected Annual
Parliament meeting and discussing national affairs. “The whole of the
administration, from the humblest office right up to the chief, was
filled by natives and the administration of the affairs of those States
was a model to the rest of India.” In face of the momentous issues
raised by these resolutions, the Grayson incident dwindled into
insignificance, and the somewhat rancorous feelings which it had evoked
melted away in the. general recognition of the great purposes for which
the I.L.P. existed.
Three keenly contested
by-elections occurring almost simultaneously, at Dewsbury, Dundee and
Montrose Burghs, in all of which the Labour candidates were defeated,
afforded opportunity for big scale propaganda in which, as a matter of
course, Hardie played a prominent part, evidently quite forgetful of the
fact that only a year before he had been almost at death’s door.
At the same time,
Parliamentary affairs developed in such a way as to throw him once more
very prominently into the limelight. Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman had
retired from the Premiership and was succeeded by Mr. Asquith, a decided
change for the worse from the democratic standpoint, and almost of
sinister import having regard to the new Premier’s imperialistic
tendencies and the international alliances which were in process of
being formed. Notwithstanding the repeated inquiries of MacDonald and
other Labour Members for information concerning the agreements which had
been come to with'tEe Czar’s Government, no satisfactory or informative
statement had been vouchsafed, and there were strong reasons for the
suspicion that these agreements were of such a character as to involve
this country in grave and unavoidable responsibility in the event of an
outbreak of war in Europe. When, therefore, the announcement was made
that King Edward was to pay an official visit to the Czar at Reval,
these suspicions seemed to find confirmation, and it became the duty of
all friends of international peace to protest. The fact that it was a
Liberal Government which was pursuing a policy quite in line with the
designs of the Tory Party threw the onus of opposition upon Labour, and
against the combined forces of the two imperialist parties, Labour was
in a hopeless minority and could do little more than make its protest in
such a way as to arrest the attention of the nations.
Labour was opposed to the
ostentatious recognition of the Czar’s Government, not only because of
the dangerous international commitments which it implied, but also
because of the flagrantly despotic character of that Government which at
that very time was engaged in suppressing with calculated savagery every
semblance of constitutional rule. On every I.L.P. platform throughout
the country the King’s visit to the Czar was strongly condemned, Hardie,
of course, being in the very forefront of the attack. Under the title,
“Consorting with Murderers,” he contributed a powerful article to the
“Labour Leader/’ detailing the crimes of Czardom during the previous
three years since the formation of the first Duma, which he contended
had only been conceded for the purpose of giving confidence to European
financiers so as to induce them to advance money to the Czar’s
Government, a contention which had found confirmation in the fact that
immediately on the successful flotation of a loan of £90,000,000 the
newly-formed Duma had been forcibly disbanded, and one hundred and
sixty-nine of its members arrested and imprisoned on the flimsiest
charge, while seventy-four members of the second Duma had shared the
same fate. The article gave the official figures of persons butchered by
the Black Hundred under Czarist auspices as 19,000 in two years, and the
number of political prisoners executed during the same time as 3,205;
and it stated that, during two months of the current year, 1,587 persons
had been condemned to death or penal servitude for no other reason than
for being Radicals or Socialists. “The Czar and his Government have been
singled out for honour by a Liberal Government. What is the
explanation?” The article went on to show that Russian finances were
again in a bankrupt condition. The Budget for the year showed a deficit
of £20,000,000. The Russian debt was £665,000,000, and there were
projects for a new navy and a new military railway at a cost pf
£70,000,000. A new loan was necessary. “Financial reasons, therefore,”
continued the article, “probably explain why King Edward has been
advised by his responsible advisers to pay this official visit to a
monarch reeking with the blood of his slaughtered subjects. The Stock
Exchange hook needed to be baited. Two years ago the bait was a
popularly elected Duma; this time it is a Royal crown. Truly kings have
their uses.”
Language of this kind was
not calculated to raise its author in the esteem either of royalty or of
the financiers, nor was the persistence which the Labour Party showed in
bringing the question into the House of Commons likely to be viewed with
favour by the two other parties, who were at one on the question of
Russian policy.
On June 3rd, Hardie came
into conflict with the Speaker over the rejection of a question which he
had put down as to the persecution of political prisoners in
Russia—particulars of which he detailed—asking whether the British
Government meant to make any protest or to continue relations with the
Czar’s Government. The question was disallowed as reflecting upon “a
friendly Power”! Notwithstanding its rejection, he managed to gain full
publicity for it, which was all he would probably have got even if he
had been allowed to put it. With all his directness, he was an astute
parliamentarian.
The following day, in
committee on the Foreign Office vote, Mr. James O’Grady, speaking for
the Labour Party, in an exceedingly effective speech, moved that the
salary of the Secretary of State be reduced, in order that he might
raise the question of the King’s visit to Russia. In the subsequent
debate, Hardie again incurred the censure of the chairman, who objected
to the use of the word “atrocities” as applied to a friendly Power, and
on Hardie replying that he knew no other word in the English language to
express his meaning, a scene ensued, which provided the press with many
columns of sensational “copy.” The chairman insisted on the word
“atrocities,” which had only been used once, being withdrawn. Hardie
declined to withdraw it, and continued on his feet, debating the
chairman's ruling, and incidentally impeaching the Russian Government.
Other members intervened, mostly in support of Hardie’s position, until
at last the chairman threatened to name Hardie, with a view to his
suspension. His continued refusal brought the Prime Minister to his feet
with a dexterous definition of Parliamentary law, and a direct appeal to
Hardie to accept the chairman’s ruling. After a very evident mental
conflict, he reluctantly agreed to withdraw the term of offence, in
order, as he said, “to secure a division.” This was certainly a mistake
in tactics, and was one of the very few errors of judgment made by him
during the whole of his Parliamentary career. It was at least a
refutation of the charge often made against him of being a seeker after
notoriety. Suspension would have been his best card if notoriety had
been his object, but it would also have been the most effective way of
bringing home the nature of the controversy to the public mind, and for
that reason it would have been better if he had held his ground.
The most unfortunate
feature of this debate was the manner of its ending, Arthur Henderson
moving the closure just as Victor Grayson rose to continue the debate.
It was afterwards explained that an arrangement had been come to between
the leaders of the three parties that the debate should close at a
certain hour and be followed by a division, which Grayson’s intervention
would have prevented, but the fact that it was the Labour Party leader
who intervened gave some colour to the accusation made in some quarters,
that Grayson was being ostracised, and it certainly helped to roughen
the already existing friction.
On this occasion it is
noteworthy that more than one-half of the Liberal Party abstained from
voting, while the Tories voted solidly with the Liberal Government, thus
confirming Hardie’s oft-repeated declaration that on questions of
foreign policy, the Asquith-Grey-Haldane administration was in reality a
Tory Imperialist Government.
There was a remarkable
sequel to this debate, an account of which may be left to one of the
persons directly involved, all the more as it provides us with another
of those contemporary pen-portraits of Hardie which have genuine
biographical value. The witness is Arthur Ponsonby, who had recently
entered the House as the successor to Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman in
the representation of Stirling Burghs. Says Mr. Ponsonby: “I first met
Keir Hardie at a luncheon party in the House of Commons before I myself
was in the House. Amongst others, another highly placed, successful, and
prominent Labour leader was present. I remember contrasting the two, and
I was immensely struck by Keir Hardie’s reticence and his occasional
incisive remarks, which were very different from his colleague’s voluble
assurance. I decided inwardly that K.H. was the genuine article. My
upbringing and the fact that I was a Liberal connected more or less at
the time with officialism, I thought might give him a prejudice against
me, but, on the contrary, he regarded me approvingly and I felt sympathy
in his extraordinarily kindly smile. But I had only a nodding
acquaintance with him till 1908, when we were thrown together in very
peculiar circumstances. I had only been a fortnight in the House when a
debate came on in which the Government defended the advice they had
given King Edward to visit the Czar at Reval. This explanation appeared
to me entirely inadequate. The people of Russia were long oppressed and
persecuted in an abominable way, and I thought it morally and
practically wrong that this compliment should be paid to the oppressor
by a country which should always be on the side of the oppressed.
Without any Hesitation I voted with a small minority of Labour men and
Radicals against the Government. Keir Hardie was among the number.
Shortly afterwards, King Edward gave a garden party to which all Members
of the House of Commons were invited. But four exceptions were made. One
member whose financial reputation was not the best, Grayson, who had
made one or two ineffective demonstrations in the House, Keir Hardie and
myself. I did not pay much attention at first, thinking there was
probably some error. But when I discovered it had been done very
deliberately, and at the King’s orders, the incident assumed its honest
proportions. It was no longer a private affair but an insult to my
constituents and an attempt by the sovereign to influence votes of
Members by social pressure. Keir Hardie also had been inclined to let
the matter pass as an entirely unimportant incident. But when I put it
to him that it was not a personal matter, but an official aspersion on
our constituencies, he agreed, and he deliberated with his colleagues as
to what course should be taken. The press took up the matter with
embarrassing eagerness and the whole incident became embroidered out of
all proportion. I need not follow the course of events so far as I
personally was concerned, but Keir Hardie decided eventually to let the
matter drop after explaining the position publicly in an interesting
speech at Stockport in which he showed how throughout his career he had
seen clearly that an attack on monarchy and the advocacy of republican
principles was of very little consequence as compared with the attack on
the economic system.
“We had many a talk, and
need I say a laugh, over a cup of tea while the ‘crisis’ lasted, and we
sympathised with one another in our efforts to avoid the pressmen. As
regards the constitutional aspect of the incident, it is interesting to
recall that high officials in no way in sympathy with our views had no
doubt that the royal disapproval ought never to have been expressed in
this way. In the ‘Dictionary of National Biography’ the incident is
referred to thus: ‘Unwisely the King took notice of the parliamentary
criticism of his action, and cancelled the invitation to a royal garden
party of three Members of Parliament. It was the only occasion during
the reign on which the King invited any public suspicion of
misinterpreting his constitutional position.’
“Subsequently, whenever I
made a speech against the competition in armaments, or the policy of the
balance of power, or on any subject on which I could only expect the
support of a small minority, I invariably got a word of encouragement
and approval from Hardie.
“There was always
something in his uncompromising directness and complete indifference to
the approval of the majority which attracted me. He was often
blunderingly tactless and rough, and though he was strictly obedient to
the forms of the House, he never indulged in the little complimentary
politenesses which some Members find make life smoother. All this seemed
to me part of the armour he wore deliberately against the insinuating
influences of unaccustomed surroundings, and of the atmosphere of
authority to which men brought up in a very different sphere of life not
infrequently succumb. He seemed determined to preserve the integrity of
his opinions—dangerously extreme as they were thought in those days, and
to the end he succeeded. His geniality, his kindliness, and his
appreciation of the gentler arts of life, came as a surprise to those
who only knew him publicly. ”
Hardie’s own references
to the matter were characteristic. He had no use for Kings’ garden
parties. He had never attended any of them, and would probably never
have known that on this occasion the invitation had not been sent had it
not been that Ponsonby and Grayson were also implicated. “But,” said he,
“I am hot going to allow either my position as a member of the Labour
Party, or my Socialism, or my views concerning King Edward’s visit to
Russia, to control my principles as a Member of the House of Commons. I
don’t receive these invitations because I am Keir Hardie, but because I
am a Member of the House of Commons, and if I am fit to represent the
working classes of Merthyr, I am fit to attend the garden party at
Windsor. ” His views concerning the monarchy had been defined on several
previous occasions and it was hardly necessary for him to reiterate his
opinion that it was a wholly superfluous institution, only tolerable as
long as it did not actively interfere in the administration of the
nation’s affairs or in directing its foreign policy. That it was being
so used in Russian (and, as we now know, in other) affairs, there could
not be any doubt, and it showed its pettiness by this paltry ostracism.
The Labour Party at once took up the matter. If a king could take
cognisance of one Parliamentary act, then the constitutional theory of
Parliamentary independence was gone. That week it therefore passed the
following resolution and sent it to those concerned :—
“That the action of Mr.
Hardie regarding the King’s visit to the Czar, which incurred the
displeasure of His Majesty and led to Mr. Hardie’s name being removed
from the list of Members of Parliament recently invited to Windsor,
having been taken by instructions of the Party, the Party desires to
associate itself with Mr. Hardie, who, in its opinion, exercised his
constitutional right on the occasion of the Foreign Office debate, and
it therefore requests that, until his name is restored to such official
lists, the names of all its members shall be removed from them.”
As a result, assurances
were officially given that a mistake had been made, and the matter was
allowed to drop.
Following close upon the
Government’s open declaration of friendliness to the Czar’s regime, came
a raging, tearing anti-German press campaign, and it was possible to
discern in the propinquity of the two manifestations something more than
accidental coincidence. Its tendency was undoubtedly to stimulate
animosity between the people of Britain and Germany and render it
difficult for peace lovers in both countries to make headway against
their respective militarist elements. The British press campaign,
naturally, had its reflection in the German press, which found in our
Dreadnought programmes, our alliance with Japan, our Persian policy, and
our highly demonstrative entente with France and Russia, the evidence of
a policy designed completely to encompass and isolate Germany.
The obvious duty of
Socialists in both countries was to give effect to the Marxian call,
“Wage-workers of all countries unite,” and the most serious feature of
the British war scare was that the scaremongers included two leading
Socialists, Blatchford of the “Clarion,” and H. M. Hyndman of the Social
Democratic Federation. Blatchford visualised an immediate German
invasion of Britain and told hair-raising stories of embarkation
rehearsals on the other side of the North Sea. Hyndman inveighed against
all things German, and advocated, as he had always done, the formation
of a citizen army, not primarily to resist capitalism, but to resist, if
not to attack, Germany. Even Lord Fisher, who was getting his
Dreadnoughts built, was constrained to characterise the scare as silly.
“The truth is,” said he, referring to the embarkation story, “that one
solitary regiment was embarked for manoeuvres. That is the truth. I have
no doubt that equally silly stories are current in Germany.”
Unfortunately, in this country the “silly stories” had the endorsement
of two prominent Socialists, one of whom was believed in Germany to be
representative of British working-class opinion. During the course of
this scare there were sneering references from Blatchford to the Labour
Party as the “Baa-Lamb School who believe that we ought not to defend
ourselves if attacked,” as the “Ostrich School who, because they want
peace, refuse to see any danger of war”; as the “Gilpin School, who had
a frugal mind and wanted peace at the lowest possible price.” There were
also references to Hardie which approached the verge of insult. Thus the
capitalist-militarist game was played and an international Socialist
movement, which alone could then have averted war, was weakened.
Hardie retorted with a
strong article, the very comprehensiveness of which renders it difficult
to summarise. After showing that Germany had nothing to gain from war
with Britain and that there were interests in both countries seeking
profit out of the increasing expenditure on armaments, he deprecated the
fomenting of antagonisms by avowed Socialists. He accused Hynd-man of
having ransacked the columns of the gutter press for inuendoes and
insults levelled against the representatives of the German Empire, and
of dishing them up with all the assurance with which he was accustomed
to predict die date of the Social Revolution. “Blatchford and Hyndman,”
he said, “seem to have set themselves the task of producing that very
feeling of inevitableness than which nothing could more strengthen the
hands of the warmongers on both shores of the German Ocean, now known, I
believe, as the North Sea. Is that work worthy of the traditions of
Socialism? I assure our German Socialist and Trade Union comrades that
Blatchford and Hyndman speak for themselves alone, and that their
attitude on this question would be repudiated with practical unanimity
by the Trade Union movement could it be put to the vote. The Labour
Party stands for peace. We are prepared to co-operate with our German
friends in thwarting the malignant designs of the small group of
interested scaremongers, who in both countries would like to see war
break out?
There was an immediate
response to this closing appeal. Bernstein wrote emphasising the danger
of stabilising the feeling of “inevitableness” as to war, and did not
minimise the fact that it had already taken deep root amongst sections
of the German people. He declared it to be “the duty of Socialists to
lift their voice against the mad race in armaments which makes civilised
humanity, to its shame, the slave of conditions which it ought to
master.” Bebel wrote prophetically : “A war between England and Germany
would lead to a European—that is to a world—conflagration such as has
never before taken place. The German Social Democratic Party will do its
utmost to prevent such, but should it happen in spite of all their
efforts, those who light this fire would also have to bear the
consequences that await them. The vast majority of Germans are not
thinking of war with England, and indeed do not do so for very sober,
selfish reasons. We have nothing to gain, but much to lose.”
This war scare
temporarily died down, but its evil effects remained. The rival
governments went on unrestrainedly building navies and increasing armies
against each other, and from this year, 1908, onward, it became more and
more difficult to contend against the fatalistic expectations of war
which had been created, alike by the jingoism of the press and by the
European alliances entered into by Great Britain on the one hand and
Germany on the other. We drifted into war. Few saw the tendency, and
fewer strove to stop it. When it came, the scaremongers who made it
hurried round and said with the air of prophets : “We told you so.”
Meantime, Hardie was once
more on the high seas, bound for Canada, having been invited by the
leaders of the Dominion Trade Union movement to attend the Congress in
Nova Scotia, on September 21st; On this occasion he was accompanied by
Mrs. Hardie and Agnes, their daughter. He had also for ship companion
Mr. Fels of America, the millionaire disciple of Henry George, with whom
he had long been on friendly terms, and would fain have persuaded to
accept the complete Socialist conception of an ideal society. There is
nothing of much note to record concerning this Transatlantic trip. He
took part in the Congress as an. honoured guest, and endeavoured to
convince the Canadians of the value of Labour representation as a means
of reconciling elements which in Canada at that time were
irreconcilable. He augmented his stock of knowledge regarding the
industrial conditions of the Dominion, and crossed over into the United
States, where he gathered impressions of the Presidential election then
taking place, the Socialist candidate being Eugene Debs, who, for a
wonder, was not in prison. But, on the whole, it was more of a pleasure
trip than was usual with him, the companionship of his wife and daughter
tending to save him from the propaganda traps lying in wait for him
everywhere. He arrived back in Glasgow on October nth, and, after a few
days spent at Cumnock, was in London in time to take part in the welcome
to Kautsky and Ledebour of Germany who had come on the invitation of the
British section of the International Bureau. At the public meeting which
took place in the St. James’s Hall, both German delegates deprecated
energetically the idea of war between the two nations. Kautsky
especially, in language which to-day reads at once futile and prophetic,
declared that capitalists themselves would be opposed to war.
“Capitalism feared war to-day because it knew that after war there would
be revolution. It was the certainty of revolution that would deter the
exploiting capitalists of Europe from entering upon a struggle which
would be death to capitalism itself.” One can only say, alas! alas! We
now know that though the war was followed by revolution, the fear of
revolution had no deterrent effect upon capitalism.
Hardie’s contribution to
the speech-making was an impassioned appeal to organised labour to place
no faith in armies, “whether citizen or by whatever name they might be
called”—an exhortation which immediately roused the ire of the chairman,
Mr. Hyndman, who, as we know, was a strong supporter of the citizen army
idea. The fact that there were these divisions among British Socialists
themselves, detracted largely from the value of this meeting as an
influence for international peace.
Whilst this darkening
shadow of impending international war was slowly gathering and filling
the minds of serious men, with ominous forebodings, there was serious
enough trouble in the industrial world at home. A period of trade
depression had again come round— had indeed hardly been absent for
several years—and month by month the records of unemployment went on
increasing, accompanied by even stronger manifestations of discontent
than on previous occasions. There had been disturbances in most of the
big towns. At Glasgow a great crowd of workless men, led by members of
the I.L.P., themselves unemployed, had stormed the City Council Chambers
demanding work, and from thence had marched threateningly into the West
End. At Manchester there had been similar scenes and violent conflicts
with the police, resulting in arrests, and in several persons being
sentenced to long terms of imprisonment. All through the summer, the
Parliamentary Labour Party had been pressing the Government to give the
financial aid which alone could make the Unemployment Act really
serviceable, and to make the Distress Committee powers compulsory
instead of permissive, and it had at last secured the promise of a
statement from the Government as to its intentions.
On the day following that
on which this promise was made, Mr. Victor Grayson created a scene in
the House by moving the adjournment, his expressed desire being “that it
should consider a matter of urgent importance —the question of
unemployment.” and on being told by the Speaker that, under the rules of
the House, he could not move the adjournment at that juncture, he
declared that he refused to be bound by the rules. After a somewhat
lengthy altercation with the Speaker and many interjections from the
members, he withdrew from the House, but not before he had stigmatised
the Labour Members as “traitors to their class, who refuse to stand by
their class.” The following day, while the House was in Committee on the
Licensing Bill, a similar scene ensued, which ended in Grayson being
suspended.
Hardie’s view of the
matter had best be given in his own words: “Grayson came to the House of
Commons on Thursday, but spoke to no one of his intentions, consulted no
one and did not even intimate that he meant to make a scene. That may be
his idea of comradeship; it is not mine. Nor is it what the I.L.P. will
tolerate from one of its members. If the Labour Party, or if the I.L.P.
members, had been invited to take part in a protest and had refused,
then Grayson’s action might have been justifiable, but acting as he did,
no other result could be expected than that which happened. If a protest
is to be made, it must be done unitedly, and in a manner to command
respect."
Hardie, as we know, had
no reverential regard for the rules of the House—though he had known how
to make use of them for his own purposes, but he had very great regard
for the prestige of the Labour Party in the House and in the country.
He, of all men, could not be accused of indifference to the claims of
the unemployed. What legislation on their behalf did exist was mainly
the outcome of his efforts at a time when he stood alone. But now that
there was a Labour Party in the House, he held that upon that Party
rested the responsibility of forcing the hands of the Government, and
that isolated action by one individual could only have a disruptive
effect upon the Socialist movement without being helpful to the
unemployed.
There was, moreover, some
reason to believe that the Grayson histrionics were deliberately
intended to produce the disruption deprecated by Hardie, and an incident
which occurred outside the House, almost immediately after, seemed to
verify that belief. Grayson and Hyndman refused to appear on the same
platform as Hardie at a public meeting under the auspices of the Clarion
Van Committee, a body existing for the purpose of promoting the Clarion
Van propaganda carried on in connection with Blatchford’s paper. Hardie,
Hyndman and Grayson had been invited by the Committee to speak at
demonstrations in the Holborn and Finsbury Town Halls. Hardie had agreed
to do so and was much surprised to receive a letter from the secretary
on the day previous to the meetings, requesting him to “refrain from
attending the meetings,” the reason given being that Hyndman and Grayson
were unable to join with him as speakers.
That this extraordinary
and insulting attitude towards the greatest of all working-class
agitators was the outcome of something more than mere personal pettiness
was evidenced by the fact that the “Clarion” was at this time devoting
its columns to the promulgation of a new Socialist Party, with the
Clarion Scouts and the Clarion Fellowship as the nucleus, and
dissentient I.L.P. members as potential recruits; whilst Hyndman
justified his action by reference to Hardie’s anti-war scare article,
and to his attack on a citizen army at the reception to the German
delegation. The best comment upon this disgraceful episode was supplied
by an unsolicited letter to the “Labour Leader” from M. Beer, London
correspondent of “Vorwarts,” whose recently published “History of
British Socialism” is recognised as the standard authority on the
subject. Beer had dissented strongly from Hardie’s views at the time of
the class-war discussion, and his support of Hardie now was therefore
all the more valuable. The letter has both biographical and historical
interest, and is therefore reproduced here intact. As an exposition of
the practical philosophy of the British Labour Party movement from the
point of view of a Marxian disciple it is worth considering at the
present time. The letter was as follows :—
“To the Editor of the
‘Labour Leader.’
“Comrade,—Kindly permit
me to express, first of all, my sincere and respectful sympathy for Keir
Hardie with regard to the deplorable Holborn Town Hall incident. As a
close observer of the British Labour movement, I regard the work of Keir
Hardie to be of much more permanent value than that of Hyndman, Shaw,
Blatchford, Wells, let alone Grayson. Of all British Socialists none, in
my judgment, has grasped the essence of modern Socialism—aye, of
Marxism—better than Hardie. Moreover, none has done in practice better
work than Hardie. His silent, clear-headed and consistent efforts in the
first years1 of the L.R.C. on behalf of the unity and independence of
organised Labour, would alone be sufficient to raise him to the front
rank of Socialist statesmanship. For what is the essence of modern
Socialism as Marx taught it?—The political independence of Labour. And
what is the foremost duty of a Socialist in the class struggle?—To
divorce Labour from the parties of the possessing class. All that Keir
Hardie has done, more by virtue of a practically unerring proletarian
instinct than by theorising and speculating about revolution and
so-called constructive Socialism. Socialism is not made, but it is
growing out of the needs and struggles of organised Labour. The most
simple Labour organisation, fighting for high wages, shorter hours and
better Labour laws, does more for Socialism than all the Utopian books
of Wells, all the Swiftean wit of Shaw, all the revolutionary speeches
of Hyndman, and all the sentimental harangues of Grayson. I have been
saying that for years in the ‘Vorwarts,’ in the ‘Neue Zeit,’ and
sometimes in ‘Justice.’ And now let me make a confession. Soon after the
election of Grayson, my editor asked me whether I did not think it
advisable to interview
Grayson for the ‘Vorwarts.’
I replied it would be better to wait; the British Socialists, with their
wonted hero-worship, were already spoiling him; there would be a meeting
at the Caxton Hall (in September, 1907), when Grayson was to speak. I
should then have an opportunity of arriving at some judgment about him.
The meeting took place, MacDonald being the chairman, Curran and Grayson
the chief speakers. After that meeting, of which I gave a report in the
‘Vorwarts,’ I wrote about Grayson. ‘He is very self-conscious; his
Socialism consists of commiseration with the poor; in his speech he
didn’t mention the Labour movement at all. Now, modern Socialism has
very little to do with poor men stories but a great deal with organised
Labour. Grayson has still much to learn about Socialism and he may learn
it if he remains in close touch with the Labour Party.’ (‘Vorwarts,’
September, 1907.) In approving wholeheartedly of the policy of Hardie, I
also approve of the general policy of J. R. MacDonald. At the
publication of his ‘Socialism and Society’ he had no severer critic than
myself, because I: suspected him of attempting to weaken the
independence of the Labour Party. I still consider him what the Germans
call a ‘Revisionist,’ but at the same time I cannot help perceiving that
his general policy is at present thoroughly in conformity with the
mental condition of the British Labour movement. Any other policy might
at the present juncture spell disruption. We can’t force movements of
oppressed classes. We must allow them to develop and to ripen. ‘Ripeness
is all.’—Fraternally yours,
“M. Beer,
“London, November 22nd,
1908.”
It should be said that
this letter was followed by one from H. G. Wells protesting against
being “lumped with Hyndman, Shaw, Blatchford and Grayson, as being
opposed to the work of Hardie,” and viewing “with infinite disgust the
deplorable attacks upon the I.L.P. leaders.” These attacks upon Hardie
had the usual effect of strengthening the loyalty of the I.L.P. rank and
file who, through their branch secretaries, literally bombarded him with
assurances of esteem and confidence.
Amid it all, he went on
with his work, and in the same issue of the “Leader” in which Beer’s
appreciation appeared, he had an appeal to the local education
authorities to give effect to the Provision of Meals for Children Act
and reminded them that they possessed powers to supply each scholar in
every public school with two or three substantial meals each day. “I
have frequently,” he said, “had occasion to point out that if in this
and other respects the existing law were put into operation the
hardships and suffering due to unemployment would be mitigated.”
There never was a more
practical idealist than J. Keir Hardie. By blocking a North British
Railway Bill, he compelled that company to withdraw its dismissal of a
number of its employees who had been elected as Town Councillors, and in
December he introduced an “Emergency Unemployment Bill” to enable
Distress Committees to use the penny rate levy for the payment of wages,
and to provide for special Committees where no Distress Committee was in
existence. His object was to make the present Act workable during the
winter, pending the promised Government measure. He also protested
strongly against the mutilation by the House of Lords of the Miners’
Eight Hours’ Day Bill, but as the Miners’ Federation had agreed to
accept the amendments rather than lose the Bill altogether, he had to
waive his objections. Every hour of his waking time seemed to be filled
with work. “I envy the editor of the ‘Clarion/ ” he wrote, “the quiet
day at home in which to write his article on the political situation.
Some of us are nomads and vagrants all the time, and have to write as
odd moments offer, in the midst of many other and divers duties.”
In proof of this, he
appended his week’s diary of work, which included attendance and
speech-making in the House of Commons, six hours’ sitting on the “Coal
Mines Eight Hours’ Bill Committee,” a “Right to Work Executive” meeting,
a “Labour Party” meeting, a conference with French workmen delegates, an
I.L.P. Parliamentary Committee meeting, a weekend public meeting at
Halifax, besides correspondence entailing over a hundred replies to
personal letters. Hardie did not really envy Blatchford his life of
leisured journalism, but he resented strongly the habitual assumption of
pontifical authority on working-class questions by one who had no
practical connection with the working class, who did not participate in
any of the drudgery inseparable from the work of labour organisation,
who was not in a position to understand working-class psychology, and
who held himself safely aloof from all official responsibility. Hardie
was amongst the workers every day. He knew every phase of working-class
life, not only that of the toiling underground collier, but of the
skilled artisan, the sweated labourer, the under-paid woman. His life
purpose was to make the working class united and powerful, and conscious
of its power; and he believed he knew better than Hyndman and Blatchford
the methods whereby that purpose could be achieved. It had been no easy
task to call the Labour Party into being, and he was certainly not going
to allow it to be destroyed by the subversive and divisive tactics which
were now being used. New parties might be formed bearing all manner of
names, but the Labour Party would remain and be moulded towards
Socialism by the I.L.P. as long as the breath of life remained in the
founder of both organisations.
The climax came at the
1909 Conference of the I.L.P. held at Edinburgh. At this Conference, a
proposal that the I.L.P. should sever itself from the Labour Party found
only eight supporters against three hundred and seventy-eight in favour
of “maintaining unimpaired the alliance of Labour and Socialism as
affording the best means for the expression of Socialism to-day.” A
further resolution declaring that “no salary be paid to Members of
Parliament unless such Members sign the Labour Party constitution” was
adopted by 352 votes to 64. Thus was reaffirmed with emphasis the
fundamental principles of the Labour Party alliance. It was otherwise
when the same principle reappeared in a form involving the discussion of
Grayson’s conduct outside the House of Commons.
A paragraph in the N.A.C.
report explained the reasons why that body had ceased to arrange
meetings for Grayson. They were that he had failed to fulfil engagements
already made, and that his refusal to appear with Hardie on the Holborn
Town Hall platform made it useless to fix up meetings for him through
the Head Office. On the motion of Grayson himself, this paragraph was
“referred back”—that is to say, deleted from the Report—by 217 to 194
votes. This could only be interpreted as an approval of Grayson’s
action, and of the motives which had actuated it. Hardie, Glasier,
Snowden and MacDonald so interpreted it, and resigned from the N.A.C. to
which they had just been re-elected by large majorities, Hardie, as
usual, being at the top of the poll—a paradoxical state of matters which
evinced considerable mental confusion on the part of the delegates. The
resignations were announced by MacDonald, who was chairman, in a firm
speech in which he declared that he and his three colleagues declined to
associate themselves with the growth of what seemed to them an
impossiblist movement within the Party, with its spirit of
irresponsibility, its modes of expression, and its methods of bringing
Socialism; and he affirmed that it was not the mere reference back of
the paragraph which made them take that action, but the source and
antecedents of that event. The Conference, thus brought to face the
implications of its censuring decision, quickly realised its mistake,
and with only ten dissentients, passed the following resolution, which
was, of course, equivalent to a rescinding of the Grayson motion: “That
this Conference hears with regret the statement made on behalf of the
outgoing National Administrative Council, and desires to express its
emphatic endorsement of their past policy, and its emphatic confidence,
personal and political, in Messrs. MacDonald, Keir Hardie, Bruce Glasier,
and Snowden, and most earnestly requests them to withdraw their
resignation.” This the four members declined to do; Hardie, who spoke
with strong feeling, declaring that they had been regarded as limpets
clinging to office, and that members present and a section of the
Socialist press had put forward that statement. The trouble with Grayson
was that success had come to him too easily, and he was surrounded by
malign influences that would ruin his career—a prediction that was
unfortunately amply fufilled. Grayson, Hyndman and Blatchford had
refused to appear on the same platform with him, and it had gone abroad
that he had lost the confidence of the movement. Self-respect demanded
that a stand should be made. He valued the opinion expressed by the
Conference. He would like it sent down to the branches, especially to
those where there was that small, snarling, semi-disruptive element.
They must fight that down, and if need be fight it out. With his
colleagues he was going to test the question whether the I.L.P. was to
stand for the consolidation of the working-class movement, or whether,
departing from the lines of sanity, they should follow some chimera
called Socialism and Unity spoken of by men who did not understand
Socialism and were alien to its very spirit.
Thus, in the sixteenth
year of the I.L.P., its founder ceased to be a member of its executive,
and with him the three men most representative to the public mind of the
spirit and policy of the Party. Of the four, Glasier was the only one
who was not a Member of Parliament, but he was editor of the “Labour
Leader,” which expressed the policy of the Party. During his
four-and-a-half years of editorship, the circulation had increased from
13,000 to 40,000, but, nevertheless, his editorial conduct had been
severely and unfairly criticised during this Conference from the same
sources which had promoted the disruptive tactics, and in addition to
resigning from the N.A.C. he announced his intention of ceasing to be
editor as soon as another could be found to take his place.
Superficially, it seemed
as if the designs of the enemies of the I.L.P. had been accomplished,
and that the Party had been rent in twain. Those who thought so knew
little of the I.L.P. or of the men who had resigned from office in order
to meet disaffection in the branches. The influence of the four retiring
men had increased rather than diminished. The work of the I.L.P. lay,
where it has always been, in the country, and the branches continued to
do the work with an energy that this internal strife only stimulated.
Eight months later came
the General Election, with the I.L.P. and Labour Party candidates in the
field working together, and the membership unitedly behind them,
fighting for Socialism and for working-class political power. The
efforts to disintegrate the Labour movement had failed.
In the months prior to
the General Election there occurred opportunities of a kind to test the
moral courage of the Parliamentary Labour Party and demonstrate the need
for the existence of such a Party. The most outstanding of these was the
visit of the Czar to this country and his official reception by the
Government at Cowes. The significance of this would have passed almost
unnoticed but for the protest of the Labour Party, so much at one were
the Liberals and Tories on the question of foreign policy. On July 22nd,
on the Civil Service vote, Arthur Henderson, as leader of the Labour
Party, delivered a strong speech denunciatory of the Government’s action
as being in effect a condonement of the crimes of the Czar and his
Government against the common people of Russia. His recital of those
crimes drew from Sir Edward Grey the memorable and immoral declaration
that “it is not our business even to know what passes in the internal
affairs of other countries where we have no treaty rights,” an avowal
which Hardie, who followed, had no difficulty in proving to be without
either historical or political vindication, by recalling the action of
Mr. Gladstone with regard to the internal affairs of Naples and the
tyranny of King Bomba, and also the more recent interventions in the
matter of the Congo and of Armenia. This was one of the finest
utterances Hardie ever made in the House of Commons. In his closing
words he appealed for a clear vote of the House on this subject of the
Czar, as apart from the general discussion which had included other
topics. “It was because he belonged to a Party whose whole sympathies
were with the people of Russia in the great fight which they were
making, and because he knew that every section of the advanced movement
in Russia, from the extreme Socialist to the mildest Liberal, regarded
the visit of the Czar to this country as, to some extent, throwing back
their cause by giving him the official recognition of a great democratic
State, that he, and those with him, opposed the visit.”
This protest, which was
re-echoed from every Labour platform in the country, had its effect. Not
only did it wash the hands of British organised labour from the
blood-guiltiness involved in the Russian alliance and left the Party
free to oppose the development of the policy which that alliance
implied, but, as a result, the Czar remained on board his yacht at Cowes
and did not set foot on English soil. It is true to say that at the
forging of every link which bound Britain to Imperialist Russia in a
common policy, the Labour Party made an effort to prevent the chain from
being completed; and it is also true to say that this was mainly due to
the influence of the I.L.P. within the Labour Party, seeking thereby to
perform its duty as a part of the International Socialist movement.
And not only with regard
to Russia did the Labour Party maintain this attitude of sympathy with
the oppressed, but with regard to every land whose affairs came in any
way under the cognisance of the British Parliament. It championed the
claims of the South African natives during the passage of the Draft
Constitution of the South African Union; it protested by speech and vote
against the suppression of civil liberty and the right of free speech in
India; it supported the Irish Nationalists in their claims for Home Rule
and joined hands with the Egyptian people in their demands for the
establishment of their long withheld national independence. On foreign
and colonial policy the Labour Party was, in fact, at this time, the
only Parliamentary Opposition, and the only source from which emanated
any virile criticism.
In all this work Hardie
was bearing a very large share, not only in Parliament, but in the
country and in the world. Thus, for example, we find him with George N.
Barnes, representing the Labour Party at the Annual Conference of the
Young Egyptian Party at Geneva, and hailed there as a valued friend and
counsellor. One passage of his speech on that occasion should be
preserved, if for no other reason than that it is in direct contrast to
the conception of him prevalent in some quarters as an irresponsible
firebrand and mischief maker. “Beware,” he said, “of secret organisation
and of all thoughts of an armed rising for the overthrow of British
authority. Every patriotic movement which indulges in secret forms of
organisation places itself in the power of the Government. Such
organisations are sure to be honeycombed by spies and traitors. The
experience of Ireland in former times, and of Russia at present, is all
the proof needed on this score. Work openly and in the light of day for
the creation of public opinion in Egypt and Great Britain, and have no
fear of the result.”
With this wide outlook
upon the progress of democracy throughout the world, it is not
surprising that abstract contentions about Socialist dogma sometimes
seemed to him irrelevant and trivial, and the intrigues within the
Labour and Socialist movement, petty and vexatious.
Nor must it be forgotten
that all this time the Women’s Suffrage movement was becoming more
violently militant in its tactics, breaking up meetings of friends and
foes alike, and acting generally on the principle that every other cause
must stand still until the women’s claims had been conceded. The women
themselves were consistent and courageous in carrying through this
policy, and nearly all the time there were numbers of them suffering
imprisonment. To Hardie and Snowden they looked chiefly to champion
their cause in Parliament and exploit their martyrdoms for propaganda
purposes, and it is to be feared that they did not reflect that while
harassing the Government they were also harassing their best friends and
putting a serious strain upon physiques already overwrought. Nor was
this all. Miss Mary Macarthur, of the Federation of Women Workers, has
told us how, in the midst of her work of organising the underpaid and
sorely sweated women of East London, Hardie was the one Labour Member
upon whom she could always rely to come down and speak words of sympathy
and encouragement to those victims of commercialism.
He responded to every
call, and never counted the cost to himself, and when occasionally he
ran off for a brief spell of rest it was an extremely wearied, though
undaunted man, whom his friends among the Welsh hills welcomed to their
firesides. |