![]() ![]() It was commonly assumed across the Continent that authoritarian government represented the future. It was written in a period in which, all over Europe, liberal parliamentarianism was giving way to fascism on the one hand or Bolshevism on the other. All kinds of traditions, social and political, had been superseded as a result of the First World War. Written by a journalist, it was a lively and readily comprehensible read. The explanation for its success is not hard to find. Remarkably, the book was still being reissued as late as the 1970s. ![]() He claimed that during the last years before the First World War, British parliamentary institutions and traditions were systematically undermined and the Liberal Party, though in power, was on its way to collapse in the face of the challenges posed by, among other things, the rise of a militant labour movement, the women’s suffrage campaign and burgeoning civil war between unionists and nationalists in Ireland. ![]() ![]() In 1935, when Mussolini was dropping chemical bombs on Abyssinia and Stanley Baldwin was winning a second general election for the National Government, George Dangerfield published The Strange Death of Liberal England. ![]()
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