Leading from the Front : The ' Service Members ' in Parliament , the Armed Forces , and British Politics during the Great War . Leading from the Front : The ‘ Service Members ’ in Parliament , the Armed Forces , and British Politics during the Great War

© The Author 2015. Published by Oxf ord University Press. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org /licenses/by/3.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the orig inal work is properly cited. Issue Section: Article Download all figures The Great War was widely seen in Britain as a struggle for civilian and constitutional standards of government against the evils of ‘Prussian militarism’. Yet the British political class itself was by no means a purely ‘civilian’ caste. During the war 264 MPs—some 40 per cent of the membership of the House of Commons—volunteered to serve in the armed forces. These men occupied a unique and controversial position both within Parliament and in the forces. A shared experience of military service could provide a common identity, and even a basis for common action, for MPs from rival parties, and many of these men came to support an apparently ‘military’ agenda at Westminster. At the same time, fighting MPs could act as agents of parliamentary oversight and control over the military establishment. Yet the importance of these ‘Service Members’ was not only evident in the realm of civil–military relations, and this article explores the significance and consequences of attempts by Service Members to claim a special political authority as the ‘representatives’ of the armed forces in the House of Commons, to offer an important new perspective on wartime British debates about the workings of representative politics, the nature of political citizenship, and the authority of Parliament as an institution. 1,462 Views 1 Citations


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The presence of military officers in the House of Commons during the Great War was not, of course, unprecedented.After the political upheavals of the Civil War and the Cromwellian Protectorate during the mid-seventeenth century, army officers had been a controversial presence in the parliaments of the later Stuart kings, where they operated essentially as royal placemen.Soldiers accounted for some 8 to 10 per cent of the membership of the House of Commons for most of the eighteenth century, and almost 20 per cent during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars with France.The number of military officers in Parliament declined during the nineteenth century, however, and in 1868 there were just thirty-four MPs who had served or were still serving in the regular army. 9Dozens of MPs took military commissions during the war in South Africa between 1899 and 1902, but the number serving in the forces during the Great War-accounting for some 40 per cent of 9. Strachan, Politics of the British Army, pp.26-30.Many more Victorian and Edwardian MPs could boast a connection with the nation's auxiliary forces, comprised of the Militia, Yeomanry and the Volunteer Force, or, after 1907, the Special Reserve and the Territorial Force.LEADING FROM THE FRONT the membership of the House of Commons-was unprecedented, and represented a remarkable political development.
The military service undertaken by these men took a variety of forms.The Royal Navy, despite its traditional status as the 'senior service' in Britain, was poorly represented in the wartime House of Commons, following a pattern already well established during the nineteenth century.Those naval officers who did sit as MPs tended to represent dockyard towns, as, for example, in the case of Admiral Sir Hedworth Meux, who was returned for Portsmouth in a by-election in 1916. 10A handful of MPs, including F.W.S. McLaren, Sir John Simon, and Lord Hugh Cecil, would serve in the new Royal Flying Corps.The overwhelming majority of Great War Service Members, however, were to be found in the army.In January 1916 the War Office published a list of 164 MPs serving with the forces at that time.Of these men, 114 were regimental officers in fighting formations; six were staff officers; four were with the Army Service Corps; and another twenty-six were employed in military training, administration, supply, or recruiting.A further ten MPs were employed in Intelligence work or on 'Special Service'; two were serving in the Royal Army Medical Corps; Hugh Cecil had already earned his pilot's wings in the RFC; and one MP, Dr. Charles Leach, was listed as a Chaplain to the Forces, 4th Class. 11MPs served in all of the major theatres of the war; nineteen were killed in action, and many more were wounded. 12Service Members were almost invariably commissioned officers.The January 1916 War Office list included six generals, six colonels, thirty-seven lieutenantcolonels, fifty-nine majors, forty captains and thirteen lieutenants.Hastings Bertrand Lees Smith, the Liberal MP for Northampton, was the only Service Member listed who did not hold a commission; he was a corporal in the Royal Army Medical Corps.A handful of other MPs had enlisted in the ranks earlier in the war, but these men had usually secured remarkably rapid promotion. 13ome of the MPs who served in the forces during the Great War could boast a military background prior to 1914.Sixty-two had served in South Africa during the Anglo-Boer conflict of 1899-1902, and many 10.Meux's predecessor as MP for Portsmouth had been Admiral Lord Charles Beresford, the former commander-in-chief for the Channel Fleet, who had vigorously used his parliamentary position to criticise the naval reforms of Sir John Fisher, the First Sea Lord.
11. Hansard, The Official Report, House of Commons, 5th ser.[hereafter Hansard, Commons], 6 Jan. 1916, vol.77, cols.1118-24.12.The MPs killed while on service were: T.C.R. Agar-Robartes, G.V. Baring, F. Bennett-Goldney, D. 13.Sir Herbert Raphael, for example, a wealthy baronet and the Liberal MP for South Derbyshire, briefly came to enjoy some fame as the 'millionaire private' after joining the ranks of the Royal Fusiliers in February 1915, but within four months he had received a temporary commission as a major in the King's Royal Rifle Corps.See The National Archives [hereafter TNA], WO 339/50142, Personnel file of Sir H.H. Raphael; The Times, 10 Feb. 1915; The Argus, LEADING FROM THE FRONT Division, which soon found itself deployed to Antwerp in an attempt to slow the German advance through Belgium.Josiah Wedgwood, MP for Newcastle-under-Lyme, later recalled how Churchill 'showered commissions on Members of the House of Commons to lead his amphibian Forces, till the War Office, in sheer self-defence, had to do the same'. 19he spectacle of Members of Parliament apparently receiving favourable treatment in the distribution of military commissions provoked resentment in some quarters.The selection of the former Liberal Cabinet minister J.E.B. Seely to command the Canadian cavalry brigade in France was criticised by Unionists who felt that the appointment must have been 'due to politics', and Walter Long complained that the War Office had been 'gravely, unduly remiss, in allowing these plums of the Army to be given to the men who are only amateurs, instead of giving them to professionals'. 20One critic sarcastically suggested the creation of a special 'Politicians Brigade' within the army, in which senior command might alternate between Seely and Churchill. 21n fact, political influence could cut both ways.While the military careers of some Service Members benefitted greatly from an informal system of patronage, others found their prospects hindered by interference from their political opponents.Leo Amery, the Unionist MP for South Birmingham, found himself removed from the staff of General Rawlinson in Flanders, and later from the staff of General Ian Hamilton before the latter's departure for Gallipoli, as a consequence of the disapproval of the (Liberal) Prime Minister Asquith. 22In the winter of 1915-16, Churchill himself, having resigned from the Cabinet in the wake of the Dardanelles disaster a few months earlier, secured from Sir John French, the British commander-in-chief, a promise of the command of a brigade in France.Unionist critics, already suspicious of Churchill's pretensions as a military strategist, reacted to rumours of the appointment with fury.Sir Evelyn Cecil warned the government that Churchill's promotion to so senior a military post would be widely regarded as a 'grave scandal', and Asquith felt obliged to veto Churchill's elevation to brigadier-general, suggesting to French that he be appointed to a more junior military post instead.It was therefore only as a lieutenant-colonel that Churchill found himself in January 1916 in command of the 6th battalion of the Royal Scots Fusiliers on the western front. 23uite apart from the issues raised by their appointment to particular positions of responsibility, the presence of the Service Members in Parliament raised difficult constitutional questions.The elevation of distinguished military figures to the House of Lords generally attracted little controversy, but the presence of serving soldiers in the Commons was potentially more problematic.Could a military officer, as a subordinate of the Crown, also be a Member of Parliament, and therefore a servant of the people?When this question had been raised during the 1880s, the War Secretary, Hugh Childers, and the clerk of the House of Commons, Sir Thomas Erskine May, had declined to lay down any definitive principle on the matter, treating the problem as one of practicalities.They argued simply that the exigencies of military service (which in practice often meant imperial service overseas) rendered a political career at Westminster 'inconvenient'. 24In November 1914, however, Asquith informed the House of Commons that any MP who took a military commission during the war would technically be accepting 'an office of profit' under the Crown, and would therefore be obliged to vacate his parliamentary seat, in line with the provisions of the Succession to the Crown Act of 1707. 25Faced with a large number of MPs who had unwittingly forfeited their right to sit in the Commons, the government was forced to introduce emergency legislation exempting wartime Service Members from the provisions of the 1707 statute. 26here remained, however, significant practical difficulties confronting those who sought to combine military responsibilities with their political duties in Parliament.In December 1915, Captain Stanley Wilson, the Unionist MP for Holderness, was carrying military despatches from the Eastern Mediterranean to London when the Greek steamer on which he was travelling was intercepted by an Austrian submarine.Wilson was interned in an Austrian prisoner-of-war camp, and the electors of Holderness remained effectively unrepresented at Westminster until their MP was released in August 1917. 27This case was perhaps extreme, but the problem of how MPs could continue to As the Attorney-General Sir John Simon explained, the terms of the 1707 statute applied only to sitting MPs who accepted military commissions in the regular armed forces.No part of the constitution of the country or the rules of the House of Commons prevented serving officers from being elected as MPs, and men who took commissions in the Territorial Force after 1907 were deliberately exempted from the provisions of the 1707 Act.
LEADING FROM THE FRONT represent their constituents in Parliament while on active service proved a difficult one to resolve.Some MPs quickly reconciled themselves to the fact that the demands of military service might limit their ability to attend to political matters at home.In November 1914, Charles Bathurst, the Unionist MP for Wilton who had taken a wartime commission in the Royal Monmouthshire Royal Engineers, wrote to inform his party leader Andrew Bonar Law that 'my soldiering shall take the precedence of my parliamentary work' and that he did not expect to attend the House of Commons unless his presence should be specifically requested. 28Similarly, John Gilmour sent a circular letter to his constituents in East Renfrewshire, informing them that he was 'relinquishing, for the time being, my Parliamentary duties', having volunteered for active service abroad. 29Henry Page Croft later claimed that on securing a commission 'one had ceased to be a politician except in name, and thenceforth a soldier's work called'. 30ome Members offered to resign their seats before departing for the front, and in February 1916 John Lyttelton formally stood down as MP for Droitwich in order to devote himself to his military duties.31Not all Service Members, however, were prepared to abandon their political responsibilities for the duration of the war.By February 1915 the government was coming under pressure to allow MPs absent from the Commons on military service to register votes by proxy in important divisions, but these suggestions were rejected by Asquith on the grounds that proxy voting would negate Parliament's function as a deliberative assembly. 32Service Members who wished to retain some influence over parliamentary proceedings would therefore need to attend the House of Commons in person.This was not always straightforward, but in practice the military authorities were usually content for MPs to take limited periods of leave in order to attend to their duties at Westminster.Indeed, when Parliament debated questions seen as vital to the war effort, Service Members often contrived to attend the House in considerable numbers.
The presence of uniformed officers in the Commons Chamber raised a number of new problems.Should these MPs, for example, be allowed to comment on military operations in which they themselves had participated-or even on military questions generally?King's Regulations forbade serving soldiers from publishing, directly or indirectly, 'any information of a professional nature which [they] may 'SERVICE MEMBERS' DURING THE GREAT WAR acquire while travelling or employed on duty'.Regulation 453 also prohibited officers from taking part, 'in public, in a discussion relating to orders, regulations or instructions issued by [their] superiors'. 33ut, as the Under-Secretary of State for War, H.J. Tennant, noted in June 1915: 'it has been the immemorial custom to consider statements made inside Parliament as privileged'.Traditionally, MPs in the forces who wished to attend the House of Commons had circumvented the problem of military regulations by being placed on half-pay or being seconded from their units.The sheer number of MPs who came forward to serve after August 1914, however, and the nature of the conflict in which they were engaged, meant that this practice was abrogated during the Great War.In these circumstances the government was reluctant to debar MPs who had patriotically offered their military services to the nation from taking part in parliamentary debates on general 'questions of policy'.Tennant warned, however, that this indulgence might not extend to the discussion of matters such as military discipline.In other words, there were limits to the extent to which parliamentary privilege accorded Service Members freedom to speak on military questions, although Tennant confessed that defining those limits precisely would be as difficult as 'delimiting the boundaries of good taste'. 34n practice, the government was initially willing to leave this question to the discretion of the MPs themselves.During the early months of the war, Service Members appeared to regard themselves as bound by a strict interpretation of army regulations, and were often reluctant to make public use of knowledge gained in the course of their military duties.In May 1915 the Unionist MP Captain Charles Hunter wrote to Bonar Law, complaining about the shortage of arms and ammunition supplied to his division.Hunter was incensed at what he regarded as the way in which the Liberal government was deliberately misleading the public over the equipping of the army, but lamented that 'in my military position, responsible for rifles and ammunition, I cannot of course use this information in detail as yet'. 35Two months later, Colonel John Gretton rose in the House of Commons to offer comments on the Munitions of War Bill.Gretton declared that he considered himself 'precluded from discussing the matter very closely, owing to the fact that I have been in military training, have had considerable periods at the Front and in the trenches, and have had considerable means of obtaining information at first hand as to how matters stand'.He felt able to intervene in this debate, he explained, only because 'it is a matter of common knowledge, and it has been admitted, that munitions have not been dealt with adequately hitherto'. 36In other words, Gretton felt able 622 EHR, CXXX.544 (June 2015) LEADING FROM THE FRONT to speak in the House on military questions only by circumscribing his own military credentials, and presenting himself as an 'ordinary' MP.
Other Service Members, however, were less reticent on this score.During another debate on the munitions question, in June 1915, the Liberal MP Captain Freddie Guest declared explicitly that he offered his opinion 'both as a soldier and as a Member of Parliament'. 37eturning to the Commons a month later, Guest burnished his military credentials further, arguing that in the context of wartime politics 'an opinion worth considering and bearing in mind ... is the opinion of the soldier', and urging that 'some special use' should be made of MPs who possessed first-hand military experience, 'instead of being, as it almost appears they are, regarded as a nuisance'. 38In a similar vein, Major George Bowden, the Unionist MP for North East Derbyshire, felt himself particularly entitled to speak in the Commons during a debate on the Defence of the Realm Bill in May 1915 because, as he declared, 'I speak as a soldier with some capacity to appreciate the military situation'. 39he increasing readiness of some Service Members to identify themselves in Parliament 'as soldiers' was politically significant.Many MPs serving with the forces during the war came to adopt political positions that seemed to reflect a distinctly 'military' perspective on the conflict.Some appeared to have imbibed military values to an extent that coloured even their views of civilian society.Bowden, for example, was highly critical of the effect that the problem of 'drink' was supposedly having on the production of munitions, and complained that government proposals to tackle this problem were 'quite inadequate ... from a military point of view'.Declaring that 'we should not be too squeamish about our methods of dealing with the men who have been proved at this time of national danger to be deliberately endangering the safety of the nation', he called for munitions workers to be made subject to military law, on the grounds that 'the military authorities could be trusted to see ... that there was no slackness owing to drink'. 40owden, of course, belonged to a party which had not always been in close sympathy with the labour movement even prior to 1914.During the war, however, it was not only Unionist Service Members who could be found urging the imposition of military discipline on civilian factory workers.Bowden's call was soon taken up by the left-wing Liberal Josiah Wedgwood, recently returned to the Commons after being wounded at Gallipoli, who declared that: Anti-militarist as I am, I admit that I should like to see them [the workers] in uniform ... I should like to see these people, when they are going to the 'SERVICE MEMBERS' DURING THE GREAT WAR workshops, marched there.... Keep them at work, not seven, eight or twelve hours a day, but fifteen hours a day, provide them with food, and let them work, not necessarily for the extra pay it will bring in, but for the sake of their country. 41dgwood's attitude on this question in 1915 represented a marked departure from the independent-minded radical politics with which he had been associated before the war. 42Observers such as Edward Turnour, the Conservative MP for Horsham, who also saw action at Gallipoli, believed that Wedgwood had 'become a patriot' while in the armed forces. 43Yet the apparent adoption of a 'military' perspective on important questions during the war did not necessarily signify that MPs serving in the forces were simply becoming more 'right-wing' in a traditional sense.Prior to the war, the Unionist Party had been united in its condemnation of the 'socialistic' assault on property rights which they believed to have underpinned the Liberal government's budget of 1909.After August 1914, however, Unionist MPs who were now risking life and limb in the trenches often proved particularly quick to embrace a form of 'war socialism' that subordinated respect for private property rights to the pursuit of victory.In March 1916, Ion Hamilton Benn, an RNVR officer and MP for Greenwich, who had been a prominent member of the London branch of the Budget Protest League before the war, wrote to Bonar Law to complain that British shipping policy was being 'muddled and mismanaged'.Revealingly, Benn attributed these problems to 'an exaggerated respect for property', and demanded of his party leader: 'Why should one man have to fight, lose his life, let his business go bankrupt, leave his widow in poverty and his children dependent on charity, while another must have his profits guaranteed before the essentials of victory may be required of him?' 44 Leo Amery similarly urged the government to place vital war industries under state control, where profits as well as wages would be fixed. 45Hostility towards war 'profiteers' was widespread in British society by this time, but many Unionists remained wary of calls for the 'conscription of wealth'. 46Support from Service Members such as Benn and Amery for greater state direction of the economy during the war thus fed into a wider, contentious and continuing debate on the political right about the merits and problems of economic collectivism. 4724 EHR, CXXX.544 (June 2015) LEADING FROM THE FRONT As the war progressed, the extent to which first-hand experience of military service was shaping the political attitudes of individual MPs became increasingly apparent.In turn, the activities of Service Members in Parliament were to have a profound effect on the wider political landscape-and, in particular, on the operation of party politics at Westminster.Of the 264 MPs who served in the forces during the war, 185 were Unionists, sixty-six were Liberals, seven were Irish Nationalists, four were members of the Labour Party, and two sat as Independents.The disproportionate number of Unionists among the ranks of the Service Members is unsurprising.The Unionist Party had long regarded itself as the party of British (or at least English) patriotism and traditionally boasted strong links with the armed forces.During the early months of the war, Unionist party managers actively encouraged MPs to regard their military responsibilities as paramount, and Edmund Talbot, the Chief Whip, let it be known that Members serving with the forces would not be required to attend Parliament. 48et the departure of large numbers of Unionist MPs for the theatre of war also created potential problems for the party at Westminster.Following the general elections of 1910 the strength of the Liberal and Unionist parties in the House of Commons had been finely balanced.By January 1915, however, ninety-eight Unionists had joined the colours, compared to twenty-nine Liberals, and senior figures within the party were expressing alarm at the 'weakness of the Opposition in Parliament caused by the War'. 49he political significance of the Service Members was not felt simply-or even primarily-in terms of the balance of strength between Liberals and Unionists in the House of Commons.Their influence also proved to be important in the context of the shifting internal dynamics of the parties during the war.Fighting MPs were prominent in the 'ginger groups' that sprang up in both the Unionist and Liberal parties to promote a more vigorous prosecution of the war effort, and often operated beyond the control of the leaders of their parties.In January 1916, The Nation observed that the 'Khaki brigade' on the Unionist benches in the Commons was providing conspicuous support for the Unionist War Committee (UWC)-an organisation of backbench MPs, led by Sir Edward Carson, who were strongly critical of what they regarded as Bonar Law's failure to promote a more energetic war policy. 50Service Members were also prominent among the leadership of the UWC's Liberal counterpart, the Liberal War Committee, which repeatedly complained about Asquith's shortcomings as a war leader, and would eventually form the core of the Liberal parliamentary support for David Lloyd George after he supplanted Asquith as premier, with Unionist support, in December 1916. 51In August 1917 a group of six fighting MPs formed the core of a new 'National Party', an ultranationalist, imperialist, and 'anti-corruption' right-wing organisation led by Brigadier General Sir Henry Page Croft, which broke away from the official Unionist Party. 52t the same time, the activities of Service Members had an important effect on relations between the major parties.British politics in the years preceding 1914 had been unusually polarised and partisan.Following the outbreak of the war, however, an electoral truce was arranged between the parties, and in May 1915 Asquith announced the creation of a coalition government.With the normal rules of party politics thus to some extent suspended during the war, military service could provide a common identity, and even a basis for common action, for MPs from rival parties.Nine Service Members-six Unionists and three Liberals-were among the founding members of the Parliamentary Recruiting Committee, a cross-party organisation formed in March 1915, which campaigned to ensure that 'the grave issues of the War should be fully comprehended by the people and thereby give a powerful impetus to recruiting'. 53More controversially, in the summer of 1915 the Liberal Freddie Guest and a handful of his parliamentary colleagues serving in the armed forces launched a secret initiative to rally fighting MPs from all parties behind a campaign to pressure the government into introducing compulsory military service.Once sufficient support from MPs in the field had been secured, Guest proposed, these men should arrange to take a week's leave and return en masse to the House of Commons to force a debate on the question. 54Pressure was also to be brought to bear outside of Parliament.During August and September 1915 a considerable number of Service Members signed manifestoes calling for compulsory military service, which were then published in national newspapers.Many also delivered public speeches on the subject across the country, often while wearing military uniform. 5551.M. LEADING FROM THE FRONT When the government finally brought a Military Service Bill before the Commons in January 1916, proposing compulsory service for unmarried men between the ages of eighteen and forty-one, 114 of the 164 MPs listed by the War Office as serving with the forces at that time returned to Westminster to support the measure.Only four Service Members voted against the bill on its introduction, and only two of those maintained their opposition during its second and third readings. 56Some of the pro-conscription MPs of January 1916 (including Leo Amery) had previously been members of Lord Roberts's National Service League, which had agitated for the introduction of compulsory military service before the war.Yet many others had expressed no sympathy for conscription prior to 1914, and the wartime conversion of Liberal MPs such as Guest to conscription was regarded as a highly significant development. 57Liberals came to support (or at least acquiesce in) the introduction of conscription in 1916 for a number of different reasons, but Guest himself frankly acknowledged that it was 'my experience with the army in France [that] had convinced me against my will of the necessity for the immediate adoption of compulsory military service'. 58Although some officers had initially expressed reservations about mixing 'pressed men' with the volunteers under their command, military opinion appeared to harden in favour of conscription during 1915-largely on the grounds that voluntary recruitment seemed no longer able to bring in the numbers of recruits needed for the largescale military operations that were now essential for the prosecution of the war. 59Guest was not alone in acknowledging this trend, and there was a conspicuous correlation within the parliamentary Liberal party between personal experience of military service and enthusiasm for conscription: 90 per cent of the Liberal MPs serving with the armed forces in January 1916 who voted on the second reading of the Military Service Bill supported the measure.
Three months after the passage of the Military Service Act, The Times reported that some fifty Service Members, from both of the main parties, had assembled for an informal meeting in the House of Commons to discuss the manpower question and express their frustration at perceived inadequacies in the implementation of conscription. 60In the face of mounting pressure, the Cabinet decided in May to introduce a second Military Service Bill, extending the application of compulsory service to married men.This bill also received substantial cross-party support 'SERVICE MEMBERS' DURING THE GREAT WAR from fighting MPs. 61In some respects, the Service Members were beginning to look rather like a coherent military 'bloc' in Parliament, a group whose shared military identity was capable of bridging the conventional divisions of party politics. 62he willingness of fighting MPs to participate so conspicuously in the campaign for compulsory service proved to be highly controversial.King's Regulations expressly prohibited officers from seeking to 'prejudice questions which are under the consideration of superior military authority by the publication, anonymous or otherwise, of [their] opinions'.The involvement of fighting MPs in the extraparliamentary agitation for military compulsion was particularly questionable, since serving officers were forbidden from taking part in 'any meetings, demonstrations, or processions, for party or political purposes ... wherever held, in uniform'. 63When H.J. Tennant had conceded in June 1915 that statements made by Service Members in the House of Commons might be protected by parliamentary 'privilege', he had specifically drawn a distinction 'between statements made outside the walls of Parliament, and those made inside'. 64Opponents of conscription accused Service Members of breaching military discipline and introducing 'contentious questions into the ranks of [the] Army in face of the enemy'. 65Fighting MPs who publicly advocated the introduction of compulsory service were not, however, subjected to any formal sanction by the military hierarchy for this breach of discipline.Indeed, the Army leadership seemed to approve strongly of their actions.Some commanders actively encouraged MPs serving under them to take leave from the front in order to join the political agitation for compulsory service.In 1916 Henry Page Croft was summoned before Lieutenant-General Sir Henry Wilson, who informed the MP in plain terms: 'I asked you to come here to tell you that I consider it to be your bounden duty to return to the House of Commons and do everything in your power to get these manpower measures passed'. 66Some months earlier Leo Amery had been reassigned by his military chief, General Charles Callwell, to the Balkan section at the War Office in London in order that Amery might better co-ordinate the parliamentary and press agitation in favour of conscription. 67 LEADING FROM THE FRONT 1916, when the government was coming under increasing pressure to extend the application of compulsory service to married men, General Rawlinson, the commander of the Fourth Army, wrote to tell Amery that 'I have already sent round to all my MPs to say they may have leave to go and vote for you in the House'. 68he perception that senior generals were attempting to influence Parliament's consideration of conscription by directing the votes of MPs serving under their command provoked outrage in many quarters-most especially among more orthodox-minded Liberals who were, in any case, unenthusiastic about the war.The Nation denounced the involvement of serving soldiers in the political campaign for compulsory service as frankly 'unconstitutional', and in June 1915 the Bradford MP Sir George Scott Robertson warned the government of 'a general feeling of uneasiness in the country that officers of the headquarters staff ... are acting as mouthpieces of the Field-Marshal commanding in France'. 69t would be wrong, however, to see the Service Members simply as political instruments in the hands of the high command.MPs in the armed forces did not always follow unquestioningly the political wishes of their commanders; nor was their attitude towards the military establishment invariably uncritical.By the summer of 1916 Britain's record in the war was certainly open to criticism.In July, two months after the British garrison under General Townshend at Kut-al-Amara had surrendered to the Turks and six months after the evacuation of British and ANZAC troops from the Gallipoli peninsula, Asquith announced the government's decision to appoint two special commissions of inquiry into the failure of the military campaigns in Mesopotamia and the Dardanelles. 70Service Members who gave evidence before these commissions did not shrink from criticising mismanagement or incompetence on the part of the responsible military authorities.Aubrey Herbert and George Lloyd gave scathing accounts of the shortcomings in transport, sanitation and medical provision that they had witnessed in Mesopotamia. 71Leslie Wilson, who had led a battalion of the Royal Naval Division at Gallipoli, went further and directly criticised the methods of his commanding officer, Lieutenant-General Aylmer Hunter-Weston, the commander of 8th Corps.Wilson accused Hunter-Weston of failing to make himself or 68.CAC, Amery Papers, AMEL 1/3/5, Rawlinson to Amery, 17 Apr.1916 his staff 'acquainted with the actual conditions which existed' in the trenches, and of ordering a series of disastrous and ill-planned frontal attacks, 'without adequate artillery preparation', in which the men had effectively been 'asked to face almost certain death with no good object in the end'. 72hese formal inquiries into the causes of publicly acknowledged military debacles did not represent the only opportunity available to Service Members to give voice to their opinions on the conduct and capabilities of their superior officers.Many MPs serving with the forces maintained close contact with political colleagues in Westminster and Whitehall, even while on active duty, and these men were in a uniquely privileged position to provide senior politicians at home with a first-hand perspective on the conduct of operations.During the early months of the war, for example, the Unionist MP John Baird sent frequent private reports on the military situation from his post at the British headquarters staff in France to Bonar Law in London. 73imilarly, through the summer of 1915, George Lloyd reported directly to the new Secretary of State for India, Austen Chamberlain, offering his views on the British progress at Gallipoli, 'such as it appears to the ordinary individual engaged in the campaign'. 74Military commanders were often aware of such correspondence, and some were willing to use MPs serving under them as an informal channel of communication with the political authorities at home. 75In June 1915 Arthur Lee sent a long and detailed letter to Chamberlain, reporting the views of various senior staff officers with whom Lee had been in 'confidential and constant touch', and who had been willing to 'unburden their minds to me with very little reserve and in many cases with the expressed desire that I should speak on their behalf '. 76 However, since MPs' letters were (theoretically) free from the scrutiny of the military censor, they also represented a means of bypassing the formal chain of command, and many MPs displayed a remarkable lack of deference to their military superiors in their letters and reports.Lee's letter to Chamberlain dwelt at some length upon the damage to Britain's military efforts being wrought by the poor personal relationship between Field Marshals French and Kitchener, and expressed considerable alarm 'SERVICE MEMBERS' DURING THE GREAT WAR of pressure from Service Members within the House of Commons.Wedgwood had urged in November 1915 that 'the House and the country should be assured that these men who conducted those Forces to disaster are no longer in a position of command', and was relentless in calling for 'the weeding out of the bad generals'. 82Maurice Hankey, the Secretary to the Committee of Imperial Defence, was convinced that Aubrey Herbert, similarly, was out 'to get some general's head on a charger'. 83he relationship between the Service Members and the military establishment was therefore a complex and potentially fraught one.Some fighting MPs-particularly those serving as staff officersseemed determined to protect both the personal reputations and the operational autonomy of senior commanders against any external criticism or interference.Freddie Guest was a violent critic of the 'reckless ignorance' which he believed to have characterised criticism of his chief, Field Marshal French, late in 1915. 84Similarly, Lieutenant Philip Sassoon, who served as secretary to French's successor Sir Douglas Haig, argued at a public meeting in Folkestone in January 1917 that, 'if we trusted our soldiers, if we trusted our generals, and above all our Commander-in-Chief, and gave him and them a free hand, untrammelled by pettifogging considerations of home politics, we could await the future with calm confidence'. 85During the following year, as sharp divisions over the strategic direction of the war emerged between Lloyd George (by now Prime Minister) and senior commanders such as Haig and Robertson, a number of Service Members chose to defend the generals against what they saw as political meddling in the conduct of the war. 86ther Service Members, however, were at pains to assert the supremacy of civilian political authority over the military establishment.In May 1918, when Asquith attempted to move a parliamentary vote of censure against Lloyd George after General Frederick Maurice had accused the Prime Minister of weakening the British army on the western front and subsequently misleading Parliament over the matter, Josiah Wedgwood (although no admirer of the government by this time) berated Asquith for 'backing up the "Red Tabs" [i.e.staff officers] against the civilians'. 87Many Service Members, indeed, appeared to regard it as their particular duty to champion the cause of parliamentary oversight and control over the armed forces.As Wedgwood subsequently claimed in his memoirs, 632 EHR, CXXX.544 (June 2015) LEADING FROM THE FRONT the 'fighting MP of 1914 had been almost instigated to take a larger view of his duties and functions.He was in the Army or Navy to see for the Administration and to report fearlessly to Parliament, as well as to take the normal risk of the soldier'.Wedgwood himself was in no doubt as to the effectiveness of scrutiny of this kind: 'The old days of the free hand for the fighting services vanished.Fighting was no longer a mystery reserved for high priests.Parliament was in it all, and knew too much for the survival of any mysteries or illusions'. 88o some observers, this talk of parliamentary interference in military operations evoked memories of the représentants en mission of the French Revolution in the 1790s. 89Wedgwood preferred another comparison, describing himself and his fellow Service Members as 'the British equivalent of the Soviet Commissars, using the Press, the platform, the House, and private appreciations-to the rage and despair of all Brasshattery'. 90hether Service Members were as effective in this role in practice as Wedgwood later claimed is open to question.The military establishment was certainly capable of ignoring parliamentary criticism.Wedgwood's own demands for the dismissal of generals Haking and Stuart-Wortley in November 1915 were thwarted by Haig, who assured Asquith that the disastrous reverses suffered by the 46th Division at Loos were the result of a lack of discipline and 'general ignorance of war conditions' among the Territorial soldiers in the division, rather than any failure on the part of senior commanders. 91The 'rage and despair'-or, at least, the irritation and indignation-that the activities of some Service Members provoked in the high command, however, were certainly evident.On one occasion, after offering his private views on the military situation to Bonar Law during a visit to London, Henry Page Croft was hauled before his divisional general and sternly rebuked for ignoring the military chain of command. 92In April 1918 the problem of Service Members apparently breaching military discipline by criticising the conduct of their superior officers was addressed by Lloyd George directly in the Commons: [This] was one of the first questions brought to my notice when I was Secretary of State for War in the late Administration.The Army Council called my attention to the fact that there were several Members of Parliament who were serving in the Army, and who were utilising knowledge which they got as officers in the Army in order to criticise Army administration in this House, and they said, 'This is extremely unfair to the Higher Command.It

II
The Service Members, then, occupied a unique and controversial position both in Parliament and in the armed forces.At times they could act as a bridge between the military and civilian-political elites, but their activities could also prove destabilising to both establishments.The significance of these men during the Great War, however, lay not only in the realm of civil-military relations.Their activities-indeed, their very existence-also raised profound questions about the nature of political authority and representative 'democracy' in Britain.
As already noted, Service Members who spoke in Parliament during the war often attempted to base their political authority on their status 'as soldiers'-that is, as experts (at least in the context of the House of Commons) on military questions.But there was also an important sense in which many fighting MPs claimed to be speaking 'on behalf of the soldiers'. 94In doing so, these men were not simply presenting themselves as spokesmen for the high command, but rather were posing as the political representatives of ordinary soldiers in the trenches.In this sense, even a perennial critic of the generals such as Wedgwood could declare himself to be 'absolutely convinced ... that there should be a free and frank expression in this House of the views of the Army in the field'. 95he argument that MPs might represent particular 'interests' in Parliament was certainly not without precedent-landowning MPs often spoke for the landed interest, for example, while the Labour Party had operated before 1914 effectively as a vehicle for trade-union interests.Yet the idea that Service Members might claim to speak 'for the soldiers' at Westminster was always likely to prove controversial.As Asquith pointedly reminded the Commons in September 1915, 'the Army as an Army has no representation in this House'; MPs sat in Parliament to represent the constituents who returned them, and British constitutional convention recognised no other mandate that they might claim. 96Unfortunately, the war had thrown the British system of representative politics into confusion.By 1914, some 84 per cent of 93.Hansard, Commons, 29 Apr.1918, vol.105, col.1325.The Prime Minister's decision to address this matter in Parliament may have reflected his frustrations with criticism from independent-minded Service Members.Yet, in the last resort, most fighting MPs could be relied upon to support his administration against the only credible alternative-a restoration of Asquith to the premiership.Of  LEADING FROM THE FRONT electors qualified for the parliamentary franchise as a consequence of having been householders of a separate dwelling place for a continuous period of twelve months. 97Electors in this category who volunteered to fight abroad during the war quickly forfeited their place on the electoral register, with the result, as Wedgwood observed, that there were soon millions of electors ... who are accidentally deprived of the franchise in this country, but who are none the less citizens of the country, and who ought to be able to influence the views of Members of Parliament in the only way in which they can do so.... Through their officers, or by such means as are open to them. 98e argument that these circumstances entitled Service Members to claim political authority as representatives of the views of soldiers in the trenches remained problematic, however, for a number of reasons.One was the continued purchase in British political culture of the Burkean idea that an MP was not simply a 'delegate' for the views of his electors, but rather was expected to act in Parliament according to his own conscience and judgment. 99More importantly, the precise relationship between the electorate and the army during the war remained obscure.After all, a great many of the soldiers fighting in the trenches had not qualified for the parliamentary franchise before 1914.This issue assumed considerable practical importance when the government, anxious to avoid a wartime general election, and particularly one conducted on the basis of an incomplete register, appointed a special conference, chaired by the Speaker of the House of Commons, to examine the question of electoral reform.
In this way, it has been argued that the experience of war prompted a profound renegotiation of the concept of political citizenship in Britain.This is often seen as a process of straightforward 'democratisation', marked by a rapid and dramatic widening of the franchise following the passage of the Representation of the People Act in 1918.In fact, the wartime redrawing of the boundaries of political citizenship was a complex process, shaped by a range of conflicting dynamics, both inclusive and exclusive.As Nicoletta Gullace has observed, from the early months of the conflict onwards, a vast array of official and unofficial recruiting propaganda lionised the soldiery while turning unenlisted men-increasingly seen as 'slackers'-into national pariahs.This created an atmosphere that not only served to justify the introduction of conscription in 1916, but also fuelled calls for reforms that would give soldiers greater political power.At the same time, the war provided women with opportunities to advance their own claims to citizenship, both by emphasising their practical contributions to the war effort-for example in munitions factories, on the land or through bodies such as the Women's Auxiliary Army Corps and the Voluntary Aid Detachments-and by invoking a powerful rhetoric of personal sacrifice rooted in the concept of 'patriotic motherhood'.More controversially, the failure or refusal of significant numbers of British men to fulfil their supposed obligation to the state by joining the armed forces (whether on the grounds of their age, medical condition or conscientious objection to military service) allowed 'patriotic' women to challenge established notions that citizenship was ineluctably tied to the male body.The consequence, Gullace argues, was that 'during the war, sacrifice, service, and British blood began to take precedence over sex, property, and legal majority, while patriotism replaced manhood as the fundamental qualification for the parliamentary vote'. 100he idea of a connection between military service and political citizenship was endorsed enthusiastically by an overwhelming majority of wartime Service Members, although the precise nature of that relationship was not always clear.Was it, for example, a question of 'rewarding' patriotic activities at a time of national crisis, or simply a way of acknowledging the capacity for responsible citizenship supposedly demonstrated by military service?For example, Sir William Bull, the MP for Hammersmith who took a commission as Honorary Commandant of a battalion of the London Volunteer Regiment in January 1918, appeared to favour extending the franchise to soldiers who had enlisted voluntarily in the armed forces, but not to those who had been conscripted after January 1916. 101Captain Hugh O'Neill, the MP for Antrim, initially wanted to extend voting rights only to soldiers who had undertaken active service abroad, arguing that the next Parliament 'should be elected by the men who have made the greatest sacrifices' in wartime. 102Most Service Members, however, supported an amendment moved by Colonel Leslie Wilson calling for the extension of the franchise to all men who had served in the forces and were over the age of nineteen years, on the simple grounds that 'if the State considers a man of nineteen old enough to go out and fight for his country surely he is old enough to have a vote for his country'.This proposal, which was finally confirmed in the Representation of the People Bill at its Report Stage, went considerably further than some members of the Coalition government had intended in 1917. 103It also represented a striking innovation in British constitutional practice, since, by allowing men who had served in the armed forces to vote at 'SERVICE MEMBERS' DURING THE GREAT WAR correlation between 'service' and 'citizenship' by 1918 is misleading.In fact, the wartime process of 'democratisation' always contained new hierarchies of citizenship; these were contested fiercely during the war, and were reflected only imperfectly in the Representation of the People Act itself.
Controversial as such questions were, the definition of 'citizenship' was not the only issue at stake in the wartime debates about political representation.Just as they had in their support for a soldiers' franchise and their hostility towards conscientious objectors, Service Members who opposed women's suffrage claimed to be representing the views of ordinary members of the armed forces.Many expressed outrage that Parliament should attempt to make such a 'vast and enormous change' to the constitution 'without consulting the flower of our manhood, who ought to be the real rulers of this country'. 120Indeed, some fighting MPs presented women's suffrage as a positive (if vaguely-defined) threat to the interests of servicemen, and denounced the reform as a step which would 'place upon the register a mass of necessarily inexperienced voters liable to be swayed by the arguments of hysterical agitators and consequently liable to use the vote to the detriment of the interests of our soldiers and sailors'. 121hese attacks on the decision of Parliament to address questions such as women's suffrage without 'consulting' the nation's soldiers and sailors touched upon another important problem in British wartime politics, namely, the authority of the House of Commons itself.The idea that the armed forces represented a corporate interest whose views deserved special parliamentary consideration was a highly contentious one.Calls from Service Members for Parliament to introduce conscription because it was 'what the Army wants' had provoked controversy, but the increasing insistence of fighting MPs that the armed forces had a right to be consulted, not only on military matters but also on broader questions of political reform, was more worrying still. 122Many critics regarded this as a dangerous and incongruous intrusion by the military power into the political arena, and comparisons were drawn with the Cromwellian army's usurpation of political power during the seventeenth century. 123ot all observers, however, saw the Service Members as harbingers of a military challenge to the political authority of Parliament.Indeed, this controversy needs to be understood within the context of a broader 'crisis' of political authority in Britain during the war.As John Horne has observed, the Great War both revealed and heightened one of the fundamental paradoxes in the emergence of the modern state: bureaucratisation and technology vastly extended the state's capacity 640 EHR, CXXX.544 (June 2015) LEADING FROM THE FRONT for surveillance and repression, but mass involvement in the political process simultaneously made 'legitimacy', the consent of the ruled, an increasingly vital condition of the state's effective operation. 124xceptional wartime legislation-including the subjection of millions of men to military discipline-enhanced the coercive powers of the state; yet the waging of total war in an industrial age also required an unprecedented level of commitment and active participation on the part of ordinary citizens.Sustaining this popular commitment became increasingly difficult as the war continued, and Brock Millman has argued that the British government increasingly fell back on the ruthless suppression of domestic dissent during the second half of the war, even resorting to collaboration with freelance right-wing 'patriot gangs' in a counter-revolutionary conspiracy against pacifist and socialist elements. 125owever, it can be argued that consent remained at least as important as coercion in the British state's management of the home front.By the summer of 1917, following the February Revolution in Russia, reports of mutinies in the French army and a wave of strikes at home, the political authorities in Britain had become convinced that new efforts were needed in order to stave off a collapse in civilian morale.A crossparty parliamentary organisation, the National War Aims Committee (NWAC), was established, with the task of 'remobilising' Britain for the continued prosecution of the war. 126The NWAC organized an extensive campaign of propaganda, exploiting the resonance of a variety of forms of popular patriotism, including appeals to spirituality, sacrifice, civic duty, local and regional affiliations-and even a form of 'supra-national' patriotism which presented the western allies as engaged in a collective defence of 'civilisation' and 'democracy'. 127Within this latter context, the NWAC consistently sought to present Britain as primus inter pares by espousing a form of 'proprietorial patriotism' that emphasised the nation's long heritage of liberty and 'democratic' institutions, and placed particular weight on the contemporary significance of Parliament as 'the great centre of civic liberty'. 128nfortunately, the reputation and authority of the Westminster Parliament seemed less secure by 1917 than had been the case in living memory.Disillusionment with the political status quo in Britain was reflected in the votes cast for a series of radical right-wing candidates in by-elections during the second half of the war, and in the emergence 'SERVICE MEMBERS' DURING THE GREAT WAR of such groups as the British Empire Union and the Vigilantes, who expressed opposition to what they regarded as the corruption and weakness of the political establishment.By May 1918 Horatio Bottomley, the demagogic editor of John Bull, was predicting 'the impending collapse of parliamentary government', and Adrian Gregory has suggested that the final year of the war witnessed the emergence of something resembling 'an embryonic mass-fascist movement', which only failed to coalesce because of the rapidity with which the final military victory arrived. 129o a certain extent, this disenchantment with parliamentary government represented just one manifestation of a more general 'war weariness', and a frustration at the apparent inability of Britain's political and military leaders to bring the war to a successful conclusion.But there were also more particular reasons for the wartime decline in Parliament's political standing.Part of the problem lay in the way in which the war appeared to deprive the House of Commons of one of its most important functions: providing effective scrutiny of the ministerial executive.As The Times observed in an editorial in August 1915, following the outbreak of hostilities the government had been 'entrusted by common consent with autocratic powers.Parliament could do little, and attempted little, but to confirm its actions.… Gigantic Votes of Credit had only to be named to be passed by acclamation'. 130The weakness of the Commons was exacerbated by the formation of the coalition government in May 1915, which (at least in the short term) effectively removed the prospect of ministers being held to account by an organised parliamentary opposition.At the same time, the government's reluctance to risk a general election in wartime severely undermined Parliament's authority as the 'representative' organ of the state: by the end of the war the House of Commons had not refreshed its electoral mandate for almost eight years.
In this context, it was possible to regard the parliamentary activities of Service Members in a far more favourable light.As The Times was quick to point out, effective criticism of ministerial shortcomings remained essential during the war, yet Parliament's ability to fulfil this function had been undermined precisely by 'the absence [at the Front] of the very men who could advise it best'.Rather than threatening the independence of the House of Commons, political interventions by soldier-MPs could be presented as essential to the proper functioning of Parliament in wartime, and the patriotic press responded enthusiastically on the occasions when 'the sudden appearance of one of these bronzed and bearded warriors has transformed an academic debate and brought it back to reality'.Indeed, by the end of 1916, influential civilian figures, including the former Liberal Chief Whip Lord Murray of Elibank, were 642 EHR, CXXX.544 (June 2015) LEADING FROM THE FRONT calling for a general recall of Service Members to Parliament in order to ensure that the House of Commons was able to discharge its vital duties effectively. 131he activities of Service Members also proved important in wartime debates about Parliament's authority as a 'representative' institution.Claims by individual Service Members to possess a political mandate from the troops at the front were undoubtedly controversial.But the idea that the House of Commons should contain no representation of the views of serving soldiers raised problems of its own.Not least among these was the possibility that service personnel who felt excluded from the parliamentary process might turn to alternative modes of political action.Following the revolution in Russia, the British government came to view with increasing concern the activities of such domestic groups as the National Federation of Discharged and Demobilized Sailors and Soldiers, which agitated for better welfare provision for veterans and against the forcible re-enlistment of men previously discharged from the armed forces.Even groups on the radical right of the political spectrum, such as the British Workers League, which claimed to represent the interests of 'patriots' and soldiers, and engaged in the violent disruption of pacifist and socialist meetings, came to be viewed as a threat to political stability and national unity. 132Super-patriots such as Rowland Hunt might appear to welcome the prospect of frustrated soldiers 'taking power themselves', but for more mainstream politicians of both left and right the potential consequences of widespread alienation from parliamentary politics among members of the armed forces provided reason enough to ensure that soldiers had a voice inside the House of Commons.
There was also a broader question of political principle.The Victorian norm of seeking effectively to exclude the military from the political arena had been defensible as long as the army had remained a small professional force, largely removed from civilian society.It became more difficult to justify in the context of a war in which the British army, for the first time, could reasonably be described as a true 'citizen force': between 1914 and 1918 some 5,700,000 men-more than 22 per cent of the adult male population-passed through the ranks of the armed forces, and many observers argued that a truly 'representative' Parliament must allow some expression of their views. 133By 1917, even an unimpeachable Liberal such as Arthur Ponsonby could be found arguing that the 'full participation [of soldiers] in the formation and direction' of Parliament was now 'an absolute essential'. 134This was not simply a matter of directing the war effort effectively.The Times had argued in August 1915 that 'it would be grotesque that the House of Commons should decide such a question as National Service without the assistance of its citizen soldiers, who represent the best element in our manhood, [and] know the needs and wishes of the Army at first hand'.Significantly, however, the newspaper also argued that the ability of Service Members to speak 'on behalf ' of the vast numbers of men serving in the trenches was no less vital in Parliament's consideration of broader questions of national policy.Matters such as taxation, for example, or the feasibility of free trade, 'are not primarily military questions, but they are fundamental questions of national security which cannot be settled satisfactorily by an unrepresentative House of Commons'. 135Similarly, the work of post-war social reconstruction could only be approached by 'a fully representative Parliament', and in this the contribution of the fighting MPs, who alone 'are in touch with that large and select part of the nation which now constitutes the Army', was vital. 136It was no coincidence that calls for a general recall of Service Members to Westminster increased as politicians began to turn their minds to the problems that Britain would face after the hoped-for military victory.
The Service Members themselves were more than happy to invoke their military credentials during the short campaign which preceded the general election in December 1918.Even those MPs whose wartime service had been of a largely administrative nature made liberal use of their military rank and uniform in election propaganda. 137In doing so they were equating martial or 'masculine' virtues with a measure of fitness for office. 138But they were also deliberately presenting themselves both as 'Trustees for the Silent' (i.e. the war dead) and as guardians of the rights of returning servicemen.What the ordinary members of the armed forces made of such tactics is not easy to discern; 644 EHR, CXXX.544 (June 2015) LEADING FROM THE FRONT the low turnout by service personnel in the 'Khaki' election suggests a significant level of apathy-or at least disengagement from the parliamentary process-among soldiers awaiting demobilisation.Yet the wider electorate responded positively towards those MPs claiming to represent the interests of men coming home from the trenches.Of 176 wartime Service Members who sought re-election in 1918, 152 were returned, most of them with the benefit of the 'coupon' awarded to supporters of the Lloyd George coalition. 139The addition of a cohort of newly-elected MPs brought the number of military veterans in the post-war House of Commons to more than 250. 140ather than threatening the independence and authority of a 'civilian' Parliament, therefore, the presence of military officers in the House of Commons was widely regarded as essential to the preservation of a competent, functioning and truly 'representative' political institution.Indeed, ex-servicemen retained a significant and conspicuous presence in the House of Commons throughout the inter-war period, even as elite concerns about the 'brutalising' effects of the war fostered new concerns about veteran involvement in public politics. 141e debate about parliamentary authority epitomised the paradoxes that surrounded the activities of the Service Members during the Great War.The unprecedented demands of waging total war rendered this an unusually fraught period in British civil-military relations.Despite the animosity that developed during the second half of the war between Lloyd George and some of his most senior generals, however, there was never any serious prospect of Robertson, Haig or any other military figure establishing himself as a British Hindenburg or Ludendorff. 142In this sense the British claim to be fighting a war for civilian and constitutional standards of government against the 'militarism' represented by the German empire was not without merit.Yet, the presence of the Service Members in the House of Commons revealed just how far the British political class was itself from being a truly 'civilian' entity.The willingness of fighting MPs from across the political spectrum to co-operate in advancing what appeared to be a 'military' agenda at Westminster-most controversially in their demands for the introduction of conscription-alarmed critics who
19. J.C. Wedgwood, Testament to Democracy (London, 1942), p. 39.At least twenty MPs were offered commissions in the forces administered by Churchill during the early months of the war: A.C.T. Beck, I.H.Benn, H.J. Craig, N.C.Craig, J.A. Dawes, E.E.Fiennes, M.A. de Forest, G.A. France, R.V. Harcourt, F.L. Harris, G.W.A. Howard, O.S. Locker-Lampson, F.W.S. McLaren, W. Mitchell-Thomson, L.G. Chiozza Money, H. Smith, W. Dudley Ward, J.C. Wedgwood, A.F. Whyte, and L.O.Wilson.Another MP, Rupert Guinness, had already been appointed to command the London Division of the RNVR in 1903, and was promoted to captain in 1915.20.Hansard, Commons, 11 Mar.1915, vol.70, cols.29, 1581.Seely had previously served in the South African War, but his military experience before 1914 had been confined to the Yeomanry rather than the regular army.
54. Oxford, Nuffield College Library, Mottistone Papers, Box 3, fos.6-10, Guest to Seely, 26 Aug. 1915.55.See, for example, Courtauld Institute, Arthur Lee Papers, Box 4, 'The Need of National Service', address by Colonel Arthur Lee, MP, at Fareham, 17 Aug.1915; 626 EHR, CXXX.544 (June 2015) In April 61.Hansard, Commons, 4 May 1916, vol.82, cols.263-8.Fifty-seven Service Members returned to Westminster to support the new measure.Lees Smith was the only fighting MP to vote against the bill on its second reading.62.A conspicuous exception in this regard was the small group of Irish Nationalist MPs who volunteered for military service during the war.When the government introduced a bill in April 1918 intended to extend the application of compulsory service to Ireland, it was supported by a large number of Unionist and Liberal Service Members, but fiercely resisted by the five Nationalist fighting MPs present in the Commons: J. Esmonde, S. Gwynn, A. Lynch, W. Redmond, and D. Sheehan.