a+
But this was not all.” In the middle of February they sent
a deputation to Sir Alfred Mond, the Minister of Health,
asking for a very exhaustive inquiry into the administration
of the Poplar Board. This Sir Alfred eagerly promised they
should have, ‘ within the next week or so.”
Accordingly, on March 13th, a month before the Guardians
Elections were due, Mr. H. I. Cooper, Clerk to the Bolton
Board of Guardians, was sent down to Poplar. He himself
says, in his report, that one of the first things he did was to
seek ““ two interviews with the Secretary of the Municipal
Alliance with the object of ascertaining whether the Alliance
had any evidence to put before me if I commenced a Public
Inquiry.” He sought no interview with the Board, nor with
any member of the Board. The men and women whose work
he had been sent to overhaul were asked no questions, given no
opportunity to explain what had been done, or to refute
charges made against them. Mr. Cooper ignored the Board of
Guardians, but sought inspiration from their political
opponents.
Rumours were spread through the Borough during the
election campaign that startling revelations would be made as
a result of the Inquiry, and every possible use was made of it
bs influence the votes of the electors against the Labour
arty.
The day after the poll, when it was known that the Alliance,
far from gaining the sweeping victory which they had
anticipated would follow the assistance given by Whitehall,
had suffered the greatest defeat in its history, when 21 Labour
members had been returned for 24 seats, Mr. Cooper wrote tc
the Alliance asking if they still desired the Inquiry to be in
public, and a chastened, despondent secretary replied, “ We
are of opinion that no real good would result from a Public
Inquiry.”
Political propaganda . . . that first and last . . . was
the purpose of the Cooper Inquiry. Whatever may have been
its result elsewhere, in Poplar itself, where the work of the
Guardians was known, it served only to strengthen the deter-
mination of the overwhelming majority of the people of Poplar
to remain loyal to the Labour Guardians who had striven to
help them in their need.
Much the same methods were adopted later in the year at the
November Elections for the Borough Council. The Coope:
Report was used in an attempt to discredit Labour administra
tion on the Council. But the good work which had been done
in the three previous years was well known to the people, and
the opposition could make little headway. The election
resulted in the return of 36 Labour Members for 42 seats, and
as the whole of the Aldermanic Bench was now Labour, the
Party was still in the same overwhelming strength and able
to continue its work unhindered for another three years.
‘RED - POPLAR