involved to themselves. They will judge the present Government, as
Governments should be judged, not by its words, but by its deeds—by
its achievements, its actions and its omissions.
THE RECORD OF THE CONSERVATIVE GOVERNMENT
The Labour Party accepts that criterion. When once again it
assumes office, it not only will be willing, but will desire, that the nation
should judge st by its works. But, if it demands to be tried by its
record itself, it demands no less that the same just measure should be
applied to its opponents. It is not Socialism which to-day is in the
dock, but the policy of parties to whom Socialism is anathema. With one
short interval of eight months, Conservatives, or Conservatives and
Liberals in coalition—for, though they are sparring to-day, they are old
allies—have governed Great Britain since the day when they hailed,
with outward enthusiasm and inward terror, the dawn of the new era of
social justice which, as both of them so often and so eloquently
explained, the return of peace was to usher in. How have these masters
of state-craft used the power entrusted them by the confidence of their
fellow-countrymen in the traditional wisdom of the governing classes?
What sort of world have they created as an alternative to the Socialist
Commonwealth? The answer to that question, the Labour Party
submits, is not in doubt.
The Betrayal of the Unemployed
For four years more than a million workers have been deprived,
through no fault of their own, of the opportunity of adding their quota
to the nation’s output of wealth. The Government has refused either
to take steps to check the occurrence of unemployment, or to make
adequate provision for those who are its victims. In the teeth of expert
spinion, it has declined to make their maintenance a national
responsibility. On the contrary, it has by two different Statutes
‘mposed more restrictive conditions. While making a present of over
£40,000,000 to the payers of income-tax and super-tax, it has established
lower scales of unemployment benefit for large numbers of insured
workers, and has driven thousands of them, including the soldiers who
ren years ago were the saviours of the nation, to the degradation of
-elief at the hands of an overburdened Poor Law.
The Betrayal of Organised Labour
The wage-earner’s bulwark against oppression is his Trade Union.
The Government has used its majority in an endeavour to hamstring the
ndustrial strength of Trade Unionism, and, while itself financed by the
cheques of the rich, has not been ashamed to cripple the political
activities paid for by the coppers of the poor.
The Betrayal of Industry
The coal industry, on which a population of some four million
persons depends, and with whose economic prosperity the life of the
whole community is inextricably intertwined, has relapsed into a