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Coalition Coupon

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The ‘Coalition Coupon’, more normally just referred to as ‘the coupon’, was the name given to the letter sent to Parliamentary candidates at the 1918 general election who had been authorised as official representatives of the Coalition Government. The letters were all dated 20 November 1918 and were signed by prime minister David Lloyd George for the Coalition Liberals and Andrew Bonar Law, the leader of the Conservative Party. As result the 1918 general election has become known as 'the coupon election'.


The ‘Coupon’

The name ‘coupon’ was coined by Liberal leader, H H Asquith, disparagingly using the jargon of rationing which people were familiar with in the context of wartime shortages. [1]

Text of the letter

The letters all contained the same simple text:

‘Dear ......

We have much pleasure in recognizing you as the Coalition Candidate for (name of constituency). We have every hope that the Electors will return you as their Representative in Parliament to support the government in the great task which lies before it. Yours truly

D. Lloyd George

A. Bonar Law’

Some coalition candidates included the wording of the letter in their election addresses. [2]

Who received the Coupon?

Following confidential negotiations between Lloyd George’s Coalition Chief Whip, Freddie Guest and Bonar Law over the summer of 1918, it was agreed that that 150 Liberals were to be offered the support of the prime minister and the leader of the Conservative Party at the next general election. [3] The consensus is that the number of 150, apparently the number was Lloyd George’s own suggestion, was a generous allocation on the part of the Unionists, given their preponderance in the coalition. [4]

According to the figures recorded in Wilson’s book, The Downfall of the Liberal Party, 159 Liberal candidates received the ‘coupon’, a few of whom were Independent Liberals, supporters of H H Asquith. Of those Liberals receiving the ‘coupon’ 136 were elected, whereas only 29 who did not receive the ‘coupon’ were returned to Parliament. [5]

In addition to the Liberal and Conservative candidates who received the ‘coupon’ some letters were also sent to Labour supporters of the Coalition (although most were repudiated by the official Labour Party [6] and some to members of the patriotic, working class party the National Democratic Party.

Impact on Liberal candidates

As Margaret Cole’s memoir of the time makes clear, many competent and patriotic candidates who did not receive the ‘coupon’, including sitting Liberal and Labour MPs, found themselves categorised as somehow anti-war or pacifist as a result. [7] Sir Percy Harris, who had been MP for Harborough since 1916 recorded that once the ‘coupon’ had been allocated to his Conservative opponent it was interpreted as a personal reflection upon him by his constituents who assumed he must have done something wrong for the Liberal prime minister to be seen offering his open support to a rival. [8] The Asquithian, Independent Liberals were decimated in the Coupon election; only 28 were returned [9] and even Asquith lost the seat he had held in East Fife since the 1886 general election.

References

  1. ^ Trevor Wilson, The Downfall of the Liberal Party; Cornell University Press, 196 p139
  2. ^ Roy Douglas, History of the Liberal Party: 1895-1970; Sidgwick & Jackson, 1971 p121
  3. ^ K O Morgan, Lloyd George’s Stage Army: The Coalition Liberals, 1918-1922 in A J P Taylor (ed.) Lloyd George: Twelve Essays; Hamish Hamilton, 1971 p 227
  4. ^ K O Morgan in David Butler (ed.) Coalitions in British Politics; Macmillan, 1978 p38
  5. ^ Wilson, op cit p393
  6. ^ David Powell, British Politics, 1910-1935; Routledge, 2004 p80
  7. ^ Margaret Cole, Women of Today; Nelson & Sons, 1938 republished by Read Books, 2007 p126
  8. ^ P Harris, Forty Years In and Out of Parliament; Andrew Melrose 1949 p76
  9. ^ The Times, House of Commons 1919; Politico’s Publishing, 2004 p10