of the world—reservations which are incompatible with the Covenant of
the League of Nations.
While spending large sums on armaments, it demanded, through
the British Delegation to Geneva, a reduction in the budget of the
League of Nations, though the League is the principal bulwark which
stands between the world and the horrors of another war.
The Betrayal of International Labour
In the teeth of the wishes, not only of the Trade Union Movement,
but of the more far-sighted employers, the Conservative Govern-
ment has declined to ratify the international convention for a
18-hour week, adopted as long ago as 1919 by the International
Labour Conference at Washington. Not only so, but, ignoring
the agreement reached in 1924, when a Labour Government
was in office, between the Labour Ministers of Great Britain,
France, Germany and Belgium, it has actually initiated a
movement for the revision of the convention, which, if successful,
would make the international establishment of the 48-hour week
incapable of attainment. It has done so in spite of the fact that the
agreement was signed by the British representatives, that the
international Labour Office has pressed for its adoption, and that Great
Britain, with her world-wide economic interests, has most te gain by
the establishment, through international action, of equitable standards
of life and work, and most to lose by the continuance of unregulated
international competition. The inevitable result of the Government's
action is that other industrial nations have declined to enforce
ternational standards of hours, and that goods manufactured abroad
ander sweated conditions continue to invade British markets.
[s it any wonder that the Conservative Government should be re-
garded as the principal bulwark of reaction in Europe, and that foreign
observers should remark that, though Great Britain won the war, she is
losing the peace?
LIBERAL PRACTICE AND LIBERAL PROGRAMMES
The Conservative Government does not stand alone as the architect
Wf confusion.
It was a Coalition of Liberals and Conservatives, with a Liberal
Prime Minister at its head, which made the disastrous Treaties of
Peace and which must bear the blame for the economic ruin created
by them.
It was a Coalition of Liberals and Conservatives which betrayed
the Miners in 1919, and two years later plunged the Coal Industry in
chaos by a hasty and ill-considered measure of decontrol; which first
summoned the National Industrial Conference, and then, at a whisper
of capitalist disapproval, rejected its findings; which, under the
premiership of Mr. Lloyd George, destroyed the machinery of Land
Valuation—the boasted achievement of his own Budget of 1909; which
advertised a programme of social reconstruction till returned to power.