Distinguished historian Henry Winkler examines the changing and
often contradictory views that characterized the British Labour
party's approach to foreign policy from the end of World War I
through the 1920s. He documents the progression from Labour's
general indifference toward international issues before World War
I, to its almost total rejection of the prevailing international
order after the war, to its eventual grudging acceptance of the
need to work for international cooperation through existing
institutions. In the early 1920s, the Labour party began to abandon
its earlier positions of pacifism and class struggle in favor of a
more pragmatic approach to foreign affairs as party leaders
recognized the possibility that they might one day come to power.
Central to the shift in policy were such leaders as J. R. Clynes,
Norman Angell, Arthur Henderson, Hugh Dalton, Philip Noel-Baker,
and Will Arnold-Forster, who rejected traditional policies and who
supported the League of Nations and, more tentatively, collective
security. According to Winkler, these positions might have offered
a viable alternative to the ruling Conservative party agenda had
they not been undermined by the disintegration of the entire
European order in the 1930s.
Originally published 1994.
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