British parties' position on conscription, summer of 1939 - is this true?

raharris1973

Well-known member
I was reading a bit about Churchill's and other Axis and Allied leaders' visions for the postwar world, during and before WWII, and I got this quote by historian Gerhard Weinberg about Churchill: "With considerable understanding of the military needs of the British Empire as it moved to oppose Germany, he both voted for conscription at a time in the summer of 1939 when all the Labour and Liberal Party members in Parliament voted against it,"

So I am reading this as a statement that, as of summer 1939, after the British political consensus that appeasement was a dud, and the adoption of a political consensus that Hitler had to be stopped, and Chamberlain's springtime guarantee to Poland, and his Conservative governments' endorsement of peacetime conscription for the first time in Britain's history, quite a transformation from the median Conservative Party position, and Chamberlain's, a year earlier before Munich, the Labour and Liberal MPs, who I think had been more critical of appeasement and instances like Munich all along, still voted to a man *against* conscription, and thus against preparing to back up their preferred policies of guarantees and collective security with force?

Did Weinberg get this accurately, or did he make an error?
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Top