It
IS
not often that we care to dwell at length on the incidents of English
politics in which, as a rule, India is not concerned nor affected by the
results. A Brodrick to a Hamilton, a Morley to a Brodrick succeeds, and the sublime continuity
of British policy, continuous in nothing else but this one determination to
maintain absolutism in India, takes care that India shall have no reason to
interest herself in Imperial affairs. The present crisis in England, however,
is so momentous and its results so incalculable that it is impossible to say
that India will not be affected by its gigantic issues. The importance of the
election turns not upon the issues of the Budget, though these are of no small
magnitude, but upon the great constitutional question of the House of Lords and
its veto. The veto of the House of Lords is the drag on the Parliamentary
locomotive. It is the one obstacle that stands between England and a peaceful
revolution. It is true that this veto has been exercised very sparingly and
only when the Liberals have introduced measures of a revolutionary character or
containing clauses which meant a too rapid subversion of ancient landmarks and
safeguards; but this is precisely the use in
the British Constitution of the otherwise useless, ineffective and somnolent
Upper House. It has used the veto if not
with perfect wisdom, yet with a moderation and an eye to "its own safety that betokened at least a
perfect discretion. In spite of this reserve the obstruction offered by the Lords
to Liberal measures and their complacent acceptance of Conservative
legislation has become more and more exasperating to the Liberal party and has
often threatened a collision which was averted either by the submission of the
Lords or the support of its obstructive policy by the electors at the polls. So
long as the social preponderance of the aristocracy and the possession of land
and wealth, on which that preponderance rested, was not touched, the Lords have
submitted to the gradual loss of political preponderance and the slow advance
of England from an
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aristocratic to a middle-class rule and even
from a middle-class rule to a limited democracy, limited by the existence of
the Lords themselves and the restriction of the franchise. A new force, a fatal
solvent of established institutions, has entered European politics with the
steady slow irresistible advance of Socialism, and England, long exempt from
the working of this great tide of idealistic thought, is being more and more
swiftly undermined, its cherished ideals sapped, its administrative and social
structure threatened by the wash of the advancing waters. The uneasiness
engendered in the more richly propertied classes by this advance of the
destroyer has come to a head as a result of the provisions of the Budget by
which the land, emblem and guarantee of English Conservatism, of the
inviolability of private property and the survival
of the old world society in its most vital features, has been subjected to
substantial taxation. The innovation creates a probability of continual
nibbling until under the impulse of a growing Socialism, land is nationalised,
its proprietors bought out, and aristocracy destroyed. The Lords have either to
resist the process in its first step or make up their minds to gradual
extinction.
The question for the Upper House is how they
will resist. It is open to them either to reject the Budget altogether — a
measure of too drastic severity, — to throw out the Land clauses, — a device
which will expose the Peers to the charge of violating the unwritten
Constitution for the selfish purpose of saving their own pockets and throwing
the burden of taxation on the middle class and the working men, — or to amend
the Budget so as to lighten the land taxes and deprive them of their more
inoffensive features. The last device has the disadvantage of being no more
than a palliative, while it amounts to as serious a breach of the financial
privilege of the House of Commons as the others. The omens point to a rejection
of the bill by the Peers, but we doubt whether they will care to incur the
odium of so disturbing the finances of the country. In all probability they
will amend and leave to the Ministry the responsibility of dissolving
Parliament with no Budget sanctioned and the insecurity to the tax-payers
resulting from this unprecedented and anomalous situation. The burden of
choice will then fall upon the Com-
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mons
who must either submit to the destruction of the first
and most essential safeguard of popular liberty in England, the popular control
of taxation and the Exchequer, or take up the challenge given by the Peers. The
first course is unthinkable. No Liberal Ministry especially, would care to go
down to posterity as having betrayed the people of England and the future of
democracy by such a sacrifice of the
palladium of British liberty. Mr. Asquith
may either dissolve as soon as the Lords refuse to withdraw their amendments or
he may ask the King to create a number of Liberal Peers large enough to swamp
the Conservative majority in the Lords, or he may at once bring in a bill for
the limitation of the veto of the Upper House and dissolve upon it so as to
raise definitely the question of the veto as the one real issue before the
electors. The first course has this great disadvantage, that the real issues
may be covered over by the clamour of the Conservative party against the
socialistic trend of the new taxation and by the cry of Tariff Reform. By dint
of repeated iteration the Conservatives have created an impression in many
minds that the present Ministry is deeply tinged with Socialism and the Budget
a deliberate attack on property. The effect
this cry is having on the mind of the wealthier classes is shown by the number
of defections in the Liberal ranks, — not so many, however, as might have been
expected, — and the diminution of the Liberal vote at the bye-elections. The
Budget opens the door to Socialism, but is in none of its provisions
Socialistic, the only real novelty of importance being the land taxes which
have their counterpart in countries the reverse of Socialistic. The Ministry is
itself a curious conglomeration of Moderates, Radicals, and extreme Radicals,
but there is not a single Socialist in its ranks and many of its members are
avowedly anti-Socialistic in their temper and opinions. Nevertheless, the cry
is having its effect on the susceptible British elector and, unless it is met,
will imperil a great number of Liberal seats. The cry of Tariff Reform has its charm for a certain number of
working men, but is not in itself so
formidable as the catchword of Property in Danger. To dissolve upon the
rejection of the Budget will have the effect of preventing a clear issue from
being raised and confusing the public mind by the entanglement of three
separate questions. Socialism
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and
the Budget, Free Trade or Tariff Reform, and the veto of the House of Lords.
The Ministry have everything to lose, the Opposition everything to gain by
this confusion of issues.
The
second device is being urged upon the Prime Minister by some of his supporters
who are rather short-sighted politicians than men with the outlook of the
statesman. The temporary difficulty would no doubt be surmounted, but it is a
matter of unfailing experience that Liberal Peers so created gravitate in a
very short time to Conservatism. If these Peers had to be actually created, the
Liberal Ministry would very soon be face to face again with a similar situation,
and the drastic remedy of doubling the bulk of the House of Lords could not be
repeated ad infinitum. On the other
hand, if the Peers yielded in order to avoid so great an indignity to their
rank and order, they would do so under the most rigorous compulsion and be all
the more eager to hamper and distress their victors in less vital matters. Mr. Asquith would avoid a particular difficulty, but
only to perpetuate the great stumbling-block of all Liberal Ministries, a permanently
Conservative Upper House. On the other hand he has a chance, if he boldly
seizes on this issue, of avoiding a fight on the weaker points of the Budget,
of forcing to the forefront a great constitutional issue in which everything
liberal or even truly conservative in England ought to be on his side, and
destroying at one blow and forever this perpetual thorn in the side of Liberalism
and obstacle to radical legislation.
The
drastic device of swamping the Lords with newly created Liberal Peers will be
too much needed shortly to be thrown away now. When in the new Parliament, the
bill for the limitation of the Peers' veto has been carried through the
Commons, it will have to be carried through the Lords as well before it can
receive the King's sanction and become law, and, since the Lords as they are
will not consent to their own nullification, it is only by the swamping device
that this great resolution can be effected. The only question is whether the
bill should be brought in before or postponed till after the election. To bring
in the bill before, pass it formally through the Commons without permitting
much debate and immediately dissolve for a mandate from the country, would be
the boldest but also the best policy for Ministers. It
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would
definitely raise the question as the one issue of the election and, if confined
to the limitation and not the destruction of the veto, — so as to avoid the
charge of destroying the constitution, — would rally the whole force of
Liberalism behind Mr. Asquith. We do not
know whether the course has suggested itself to the tacticians of the party,
but it seems to us that it gives the only chance of a really effective and
victorious electioneering campaign.
With
all this, what are the chances of a Liberal victory ? Very small, unless the Labour-Socialist vote is conciliated. The great feature of the recent
bye-elections has been the repeated splitting of the democratic vote between
Labourite and Liberal, the substantiality of the Labour vote and the consequent
defeat of the Ministerial candidate and return of the Conservative in spite of
a democratic majority in the constituency. For the Socialist Party this is the
right policy, by their independent attitude on an occasion of such vital
importance to convince the Liberals that they cannot hope to exist as a power
without coming to terms with the Socialist vote. But for the Liberals to accept
a triangular contest would be sheer suicide. It would mean either a
Conservative majority, not in the country — for the pendulum has not swung back
so far — but in the House, or a Conservative Ministry with the Irish
Nationalists holding the balance of power. It would be well worth Mr. Asquith's while to give the Socialist-Labour faction the
80 seats they hope to win, on condition of holding the other Liberal seats
secure from competition. But an accommodation of this kind would mean an
alliance with Socialism, as well as with Ireland, and some very drastic
legislation in the next Parliament. It is difficult to gauge the weight of the
Moderate element in the Cabinet, and it may be strong enough to face defeat
rather than permit such an alliance.
We
have dealt with this subject and its issues at length, partly in order to draw
the attention of our readers to the issues and methods of a great and critical
election in a democratic country. The introduction of democratic institutions
in India, more genuine than the present Reform Scheme, cannot be long delayed,
and it will be well for those of us who think to study their working in the
European country which serves as a model to others. But beyond this aspect of
the elections, there is a deeper
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interest
to us Indians in the great constitutional struggle now at hand. The abolition
or limitation of the Lords' veto is a question of supreme importance to the
Indian politician. When the time comes, — and it is coming surely — that
popular assemblies have to be established in India, the veto of the Lords will
be the one instrument that reaction will use to stay reform for a long season.
It is that instrument which has baffled Irish Nationalism. If it continues to
exist, it will baffle Indian Nationalism also. Although, therefore, Liberal and Conservative are one in their
attitude towards India, every Indian patriot must watch with keen interest the
result of the struggle and desire, not the success of the departing Ministry,
but victory for the destroyers of the Lords' veto.
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