Anthony A. J. Williams

The Christian Left


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1929–31, and were joined by Margaret Bondfield (1873–1953) and George Lansbury (1859–1940). Snowden was a strict Methodist, who came to politics via the ILP and the Free Church Socialist League, of which John Clifford had been a keen member. As Chancellor of the Exchequer, Snowden was committed to maintaining free trade, balancing the budget and remaining on the gold standard, enduring criticism that he did not allow for a truly socialist budget; in his defence, however, both of these Labour governments were minority administrations that relied upon the support of Liberal MPs.92 Henderson was brought up as a Congregationalist but later committed himself to Wesleyan Methodism along with trade unionism; he was a key figure in the creation of Labour’s 1918 constitution, including the Clause IV, which would generate so much heated discussion in the decades which followed; he went on to serve as leader of the Labour Party from 1931 to 1932, after MacDonald had formed the National Government coalition.93

      Bondfield, a Congregationalist and trade-union activist, became the first female cabinet minister in 1929. Although she spent a part of her life away from the church after a deacon admonished her to choose between church and union – taking him at his word she chose the latter – it was her Nonconformist upbringing that provided the basis for her socialism and the campaigns against the exploitation of female shop workers such as she had been.99 Bondfield’s aim was to see the Golden Rule – ‘Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself’ – applied to economy and society, suggesting that this would involve state ownership of key industries and the financial sector.100 Crucially for Bondfield it was not sufficient merely for industries to be nationalised, but that their priority should be service to the public rather than the pursuit of profit.101 Neither would state ownership go far enough if workers and consumers were not involved in the management of industry; while such a situation would be an improvement upon private ownership, it would not allow fully the spirit of co-operation to develop. Socialism, Bondfield argued, must involve ‘the reorganisation of society on the basis of both political and industrial democracy’.102 Another noteworthy figure is Ellen Wilkinson (1891–1947), distinguished by her role as co-author of the 1945 Labour Party manifesto, who declared the need to combat ‘injustice’ wherever it afflicted ‘human beings, the children of God’.103

      It is easy from our historical vantage point to hold in contempt those such as Lansbury – a sincere and unyielding pacifist in any and all circumstances – who, even faced with such evil, sought peace at all costs. We need to remember that the Great War – the first total war, unprecedented in its bloodshed and carnage – was still fresh in the minds of those who hoped they could prevent another cataclysm. Lansbury in particular has been painted as naive, too saintly minded for the dirty world of real-life politics. This view is mistaken: it overlooks Lansbury’s hard-headed leadership of the Poplar Rates Rebellion in which many concessions were won for the residents of that impoverished borough; it cannot account for Lansbury’s achievements as the First Commissioner for Works in the 1929–31 government; nor does it give Lansbury enough credit for sustaining the Labour Party after the electoral disaster of 1931, ensuring, with Clement Attlee as his deputy, that there remained a genuine opposition to MacDonald’s Conservative-dominated National Government and an alternative vision for the country which could be put to the electorate in 1945.

      Tawney’s socialism was clearly and unapologetically Christian. For Tawney, the ‘essence of all morality’ is ‘to believe that every human being is of infinite importance, and that no consideration of expediency can justify the oppression of one by another’. But, he added, ‘to believe this it is necessary to believe in God’.112 This remark, though, was made in Tawney’s private diary and only published posthumously. Some have suggested, on the basis of Tawney’s public writing, that he is rather more secular-minded than is often interpreted; some of Tawney’s key works – for example, most of The Acquisitive Society, published 1920 – keep rather quiet about any religious basis for socialism.113 This argument, though, is hard to square with the final chapter of The Acquisitive Society, which sets out unmistakably