Herbert Henry Asquith

Herbert Henry Asquith, generally known as H.H. Asquith, was a Liberal politician, member of the Parliament, and prime minister of the United Kingdom.


History

Asquith was a London lawyer.

The Liberals were split by Gladstone's peoposals for Irish home rule. He called for snap elections in July 1886, and several MPs were deselected for their opposition. John Boyd Kinnear was one such deselected candidate, and Asquith received a last-minute nomination in his place. He narrowly won the seat and entered the Parliament.

The 1892 general election returned Gladstone to power and Asquith was immediately appointed to the cabinet. He remained a leading Liberal, and when the 1895 snap elections returned Gascoyne-Cecil to power, he emerged as a candidate for party leadership. He instead chose to focus on his private legal career.

He then served as chancellor under Campbell-Bannerman. When he resigned in April 1908, Asquith quickly succeeded him as PM.

His efforts toward reform bills were frustrated by the Lords, where the Unionist Liberal peers had by now effectively joined with the Conservatives. In late 1909, his omnibus budget was rejected by the Lords. He called snap elections for January 1910, seeking a refreshed mandate. The Liberals campaigned on reforming the upper house. Instead, he was reduced to a minority governent with supply and confidence from Irish nationalists and Labour.

The Lords finally relented on this budget, but the whole thing repeated less than a year later, over the first draft of the Parliament Act. This bill instituted multiple constitutional reforms, including:

The resulting December 1910 elections returned an essentially identical Parliament. Asquith now asked George to create new peers so as to eliminate the obstructionists' veto. George insisted that the Lords be given a further chance to reconsider after these plans were announced. The Conservatives now relented, and the bill passed in August 1911.

Asquith also established a salary for MPs in 1911.

When war broke out, Asquith led a united Liberal Party. His control rapidly disintegrated, as typified by the disastrous Gallipoli campaign. He then was forced to form a unity government with Law.


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