Famous old girls and boys include actress Diana Rigg, Prime Minister Herbert Asquith and factory reformer Richard Oastler. |
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That same year he was named Chancellor of the Exchequer in the government of Herbert Asquith. |
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Mr. Baldwin was joined by Mr. Asquith in his condemnation of the tenebrosity of the Government statements. |
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In 1925 Asquith accepted a peerage as Earl of Oxford and Asquith and was created a knight of the garter shortly afterwards. |
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The Lords' veto on the budget was overturned, and Asquith fought an election on this very issue, establishing the primacy of the elected Commons over the unelected Lords. |
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Similar to the Asquith Colleges, they were governed by French university statutes, and the staff members were accorded the rights of French academics. |
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Bitter rivalries inside and between the three major parties worsened when Asquith was unable to forge the coalition into a harmonious team. |
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The resulting general election returned a hung parliament, but Asquith remained prime minister with the support of the smaller parties. |
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The Liberal government of the day led by Asquith responded with the Cat and Mouse Act. |
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Asquith in 1908, Churchill was promoted to the Cabinet as President of the Board of Trade. |
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These include the Duke of Norfolk, the Countess of Oxford and Asquith and the Duchess of Somerset. |
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Asquith introduced an Amending Bill reluctantly conceded to by the Irish Party leadership. |
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Matthew comments that the articles Asquith wrote for the magazine give a good overview of his political views as a young man. |
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Asquith was a strong, though not jingoistic, proponent of the Empire, and, after initial caution, came to support home rule for Ireland. |
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Much more remunerative were his new contacts with solicitors who regularly instructed Wright and now also began to instruct Asquith. |
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The Conservatives did not contest the seat, putting their support behind Kinnear, who stood against Asquith as a Liberal Unionist. |
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The Liberals lost the 1886 election, and Asquith joined the House of Commons as an opposition backbencher. |
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From the start of his parliamentary career Asquith impressed other MPs with his air of authority as well as his lucidity of expression. |
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For the remainder of this Parliament, which lasted until 1892, Asquith spoke occasionally but effectively, mostly on Irish matters. |
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In September 1891 Helen Asquith died of typhoid fever following a few days' illness while the family were on holiday in Scotland. |
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Asquith bought a house in Surrey, and hired nannies and other domestic staff. |
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Asquith, who was then only 39 and had never served as a junior minister, accepted the post of Home Secretary, a senior Cabinet position. |
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Asquith had known Margot Tennant slightly since before his wife's death, and grew increasingly attached to her in his years as a widower. |
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With no government post, Asquith divided his time between politics and a return to his law practice. |
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Asquith also introduced a distinction between earned and unearned income, taxing the latter at a higher rate. |
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Asquith planned the 1908 budget, but by the time he presented it to the Commons he was no longer Chancellor. |
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Asquith hoped to act as a mediator between members of his cabinet as they pushed Liberal legislation through Parliament. |
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The King was slow to agree, and Asquith and his cabinet informed him they would resign if he did not make the commitment. |
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Nevertheless, Asquith remained in Number Ten, with a large majority in the Commons on the issue of the House of Lords. |
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Asquith was an authority on Welsh disestablishment from his time under Gladstone, but had little to do with the passage of the bill. |
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Asquith had opposed votes for women as early as 1882, and he remained well known as an adversary throughout his time as prime minister. |
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Asquith was loud in his complaints against the Speaker, but was privately relieved. |
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Asquith belatedly came around to support women's suffrage in 1917, by which time he was out of office. |
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After 1910, though, Irish Nationalist support helped keep Asquith in office for the remainder of the prewar period. |
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Asquith led a deeply divided Liberal Party as Prime Minister, not least on questions of foreign relations and defence spending. |
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The declaration of war on 4 August 1914 saw Asquith as the head of an almost united Liberal Party. |
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Beyond the replacement of Morley and Burns, Asquith made one other significant change to his cabinet. |
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Significant though the loss was personally, its impact on Asquith politically can be overstated. |
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The formation of the First Coalition saw Asquith display the political acuteness that seemed to have deserted him. |
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Asquith first considered taking the vacant War Office himself but then offered it to Bonar Law, who declined it in favour of Lloyd George. |
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Until almost the end, both Bonar Law, and Lloyd George, wished to retain Asquith as premier. |
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This, Bonar Law presented to Asquith, who committed to reply on Monday the following week. |
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At Law's house, the Conservatives present drew up a resolution which they demanded Law present to Asquith. |
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Chamberlain felt that it left open the option of either Asquith or Lloyd George as premier, dependent on who could gain greater support. |
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Bonar Law then took the resolution to Asquith, who had, unusually, broken his weekend at Walmer Castle to return to Downing Street. |
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That it was never actually shown to Asquith is incontrovertible, and Asquith confirmed this in his writings. |
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The outcome of the interview between Law and Asquith was clear, even if Law had not been. |
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The only substantial amendment was that Asquith would have daily oversight of the War Council's work and a right of veto. |
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It was accompanied by an avalanche of press criticism, all of it intensely hostile to Asquith. |
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This is the first and only time the three of us met Asquith during those fateful days. |
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Jenkins argues that Asquith should have recognised it as a shift of allegiance. |
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Asquith discussed the crisis with Lord Crewe and they agreed an early meeting with the Unionist ministers was essential. |
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His achievement in creating a government was considerable, given that almost all of the senior Liberals sided with Asquith. |
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But the whole trouble arose from the fact that there was no fierce resolute Asquith to win this war or any other. |
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Asquith, not normally given to displays of emotion, confided to his wife that he felt he had been stabbed. |
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Press attacks on Asquith continued and indeed increased after the publication of the Dardanelles Report. |
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In April 1919 Asquith gave a weak speech to Liberal candidates, his first public speech since the election. |
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A Parliamentary seat was essential if Asquith was again to play any serious part in future events. |
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In 1920, as an economy measure, 20 Cavendish Square was sold to Viscountess Cowdray and Asquith and Margot moved to 44, Bedford Square. |
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In fact Asquith spoke in the House of Commons far more frequently than he had ever previously done when not a minister. |
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Asquith still maintained friendly relations with Lloyd George, although Margot made no secret of her enmity for him. |
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On 13 September 1922 Sir Donald Maclean told Harold Laski that Asquith was devoted to bridge and small talk and did not do enough real work. |
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Asquith and Lloyd George reached agreement on 13 November, followed by a Free Trade manifesto, followed by a more general one. |
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Many Liberals were also angered at MacDonald's pursuit of a trade agreement with the USSR, although Asquith rather less so. |
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The Liberal grandees, who hated Lloyd George, did not press Asquith to retire. |
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Asquith felt he was not rich enough to accept, and would have preferred to die a commoner like Pitt or Gladstone. |
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In May 1925 Asquith accepted the Order of the Garter from Baldwin, who was known to be a personal admirer of his. |
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At a meeting on 25 November 1925 Grey, Maclean, Simon, Gladstone and Runciman urged Asquith to have a showdown with Lloyd George over money. |
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Asquith wanted to think it over, and at the December 1925 Federation executive he left the meeting before the topic came up. |
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Asquith filled his retirement with reading, writing, a little golf, travelling and meeting with friends. |
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Jenkins considered Asquith as foremost amongst the great social reforming premiers of the twentieth century. |
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This led Asquith to declare the King's intention to overcome the majority in the House of Lords by creating sufficient new peers. |
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Asquith and his followers moved to the opposition benches in Parliament and the Liberal Party was deeply split once again. |
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Asquith and his Chancellor David Lloyd George, whose Liberal reforms in the early 1900s created a basic welfare state. |
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Asquith then proposed that the powers of the House of Lords be severely curtailed. |
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Asquith, asked King Edward VII to create sufficient new Liberal peers to pass the Bill if the Lords rejected it. |
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While Asquith became Leader of the Opposition, George forged a coalition with the Conservative leader Bonar Law, continuing to be Prime Minister. |
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Although Asquith was the Party leader, the dominant Liberal was Lloyd George. |
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The weakness of Asquith as a planner and organiser was increasingly apparent to senior officials. |
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Asquith, the Liberal leader in the House, took up the allegations and attacked Lloyd George, which further ripped apart the Liberal Party. |
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Asquith and Lloyd George reached agreement on 13 November 1923 and issued a joint Free Trade manifesto, followed by a more general one. |
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Abbott, a distinguished classical scholar, Asquith became an outstanding pupil. |
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In 1908, Asquith succeeded him as prime minister, with David Lloyd George as chancellor. |
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Asquith called an election for January 1910, and the Liberals won, though were reduced to a minority government. |
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Asquith remained as leader of the Liberal Party, but was unable to quell the internal conflict. |
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He and his brother were educated at home by their parents until 1860, when Dixon Asquith died suddenly. |
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Asquith later recalled seeing, as a schoolboy, the corpses of five murderers left hanging outside Newgate. |
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In November 1869 Asquith won a classical scholarship at Balliol College, Oxford, going up the following October. |
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While still at Oxford Asquith had already entered Lincoln's Inn to train as a barrister, and in 1875 he served a pupillage under Charles Bowen. |
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The two had been in love for several years, but it was not until 1877 that Asquith sought her father's consent to their marriage. |
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Between 1876 and 1884 Asquith supplemented his income by writing regularly for The Spectator, which at that time had a broadly Liberal outlook. |
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Asquith was blamed for the poor British performance in first year. |
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As Asquith brought MacDonald in so, later in the same year, he had significant responsibility for forcing him out over the Campbell Case and the Russian Treaty. |
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Asquith returned to parliament in 1920 and resumed leadership. |
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Asquith died in 1928 and the enigmatic figure of Lloyd George returned to the leadership and began a drive to produce coherent policies on many key issues of the day. |
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In 1912, Asquith reluctantly agreed to permit a free vote on an amendment to a pending reform bill, allowing women the vote on the same terms as men. |
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The Liberal leader, Asquith, and most of his leading colleagues left the government and took up seats on the opposition side of the House of Commons. |
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Although Asquith continued to be the leader of the Liberal Party, as he was not a member of the House of Commons he was not eligible to be Leader of the Opposition. |
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The King said he would not be willing to do so unless Asquith obtained a clear mandate for such sweeping change by winning a second general election. |
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Like Sir Robert Peel after 1846 Asquith still controlled the party machinery and resented those who had ousted him, but showed no real interest in reuniting his party. |
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Asquith, David Lloyd George, Bonar Law, Stanley Baldwin, Ramsay MacDonald, Stanley Baldwin, Ramsay MacDonald, Stanley Baldwin, Neville Chamberlain and Winston Churchill. |
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When no solution could be found, Asquith and his cabinet planned further concessions to the Unionists, but this did not occur as the crisis on the Continent erupted into war. |
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After a rough start in industrial mobilisation, Britain replaced prime minister Asquith in December 1916 with the much more dynamic Liberal leader David Lloyd George. |
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News of his plans soon reached Asquith, causing considerable concern. |
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When he learned of them, Asquith was concerned that the French took for granted British aid in the event of war, but Grey persuaded him the talks must continue. |
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Before the 1923 election, he resolved his dispute with Asquith, allowing the Liberals to run a united ticket against Stanley Baldwin's policy of protective tariffs. |
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Asquith mediated among his colleagues and secured a compromise whereby four ships would be laid down at once, and four more if there proved to be a need. |
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Steve Asquith, who was part of the original production team since 1984, took over as director, while Simon Spencer replaced Phil Fehrle as producer. |
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Walter Runciman held the most senior positions in Education, Agriculture and Trade taking together the period from 1908 until 1916 during the Asquith ministry. |
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At the poll on 14 December, Lloyd George's coalition won a landslide, with Asquith and every other former Liberal Cabinet minister losing his seat. |
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Asquith's father owned a small business but died when Asquith was seven. |
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Asquith was educated at City of London School and Balliol College, Oxford. |
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Having persuaded Sir John Simon and Lord Beauchamp to remain, Asquith suffered only two resignations from his cabinet, those of John Morley and John Burns. |
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Bramsdon, who claimed that he had been elected at Portsmouth only by promising not to support Asquith, protested openly at his remaining leader from outside the Commons. |
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Asquith was less successful in dealing with Irish Home Rule. |
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Using the result as a mandate, the Liberal Prime Minister, Herbert Henry Asquith, introduced the Parliament Bill, which sought to restrict the powers of the House of Lords. |
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Lloyd George succeeded Asquith at the Exchequer, and was in turn succeeded at the Board of Trade by Winston Churchill, a recent defector from the Conservatives. |
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Dixon Asquith inherited the Gillroyd Mill Company, founded by his father. |
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In the autumn of 1925 Hobhouse, Runciman and the industrialist Sir Alfred Mond protested to Asquith at Lloyd George organising his own campaign for reform of land ownership. |
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Abbott remarked on the cogency and clarity of his pupil's speeches, qualities for which Asquith became celebrated throughout the rest of his life. |
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However, neither he, nor Asquith, appreciated the extent of Tory opposition, the plan was strongly attacked in the House of Lords, and was abandoned thereafter. |
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Asquith was lukewarm at the thought of returning to Scotland, and regarded his gamble with trepidation, although he grew more confident as the campaign progressed. |
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The abstract side of philosophy did not greatly attract Asquith, whose outlook was always practical, but Green's progressive liberal political views appealed to him. |
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Asquith was to be retained as prime minister, and given honorific oversight of the War Council, but day to day operations would be directed by Lloyd George. |
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Asquith set up a legal practice with two other junior barristers. |
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The result was stupendous, with Asquith defeating his Labour opponent by a majority of over 2000 votes, with the Coalition candidate a very poor third. |
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Paisley was a false dawn, for the Liberals and for Asquith personally. |
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Lloyd George had also been reflecting on the substance of the scheme and, on Friday 1 December, he met with Asquith to put forward an alternative. |
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Margot's extravagance was legendary and Asquith was no longer earning either the legal fees or the prime ministerial salary they had enjoyed in earlier years. |
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He was succeeded by Asquith, who stepped up the government's radicalism. |
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He put Asquith's name forward as a replacement for Kinnear, and only ten days before polling Asquith was formally nominated in a vote of the local Liberals. |
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Asquith at the Exchequer, Edward Grey at the Foreign Office, Richard Burdon Haldane at the War Office and David Lloyd George at the Board of Trade. |
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Lloyd George's letter of 10 May had not been published, making it appear that Asquith had fired the first shot, and Lloyd George sent a moderate public reply, on 25 May. |
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Asquith achieved more success with a major speech at Westminster Central Hall in January 1922, in reply to a speech by Lloyd George a few days earlier. |
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Asquith immediately decided that an accommodation with Lloyd George, and a substantial reconstruction to placate the Unionist ministers, were required. |
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Asquith had with some difficulty been persuaded to make the maximum possible reference to his renewed alliance with Grey, but Haldane had refused to join the platform. |
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Asquith, Clement Attlee, Harold Macmillan, Edward Heath, Harold Wilson, Margaret Thatcher, Tony Blair, David Cameron and most recently Theresa May. |
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It is unclear exactly whom Asquith spoke with on 4 December. |
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But Chamberlain himself was adamant that he and his colleagues met Asquith only once during the crisis and that was on the following day, Tuesday 5 December. |
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Asquith became a son in law of Sir Charles Tennant, 1st Baronet. |
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Asquith then proposed that the powers of the Lords be severely curtailed. |
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Asquith also saw Bonar Law who confirmed that he would resign if Asquith failed to implement the War Council agreement as discussed only the day before. |
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In the evening, and having declined two requests for meetings, Asquith threw down the gauntlet to Lloyd George by rejecting the War Council proposal. |
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Above all else, Asquith thrived on company and conversation. |
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Asquith was never in doubt as to the correctness of his approach, although a deluge of correspondence urged him to save the country from Socialism. |
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With another general election likely before long, Asquith had to make clear the Liberal policy on constitutional change to the country without alienating the Irish and Labour. |
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Asquith dispirited his supporters by stating in Parliament that he had neither asked for nor received a commitment from King Edward to create peers. |
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Asquith believed that MacDonald would soon be discredited both in the eyes of the country and of his own more extreme supporters, and the Liberal revival would continue. |
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Later that evening Bonar Law, who had been to the Palace to receive the King's commission, arrived to enquire whether Asquith would serve under him. |
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Despite the distraction of the problem of the House of Lords, Asquith and his government moved ahead with a number of pieces of reforming legislation. |
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The Asquith government proved ineffective but when David Lloyd George replaced him in December 1916 Britain gained a powerful and successful wartime leader. |
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