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Changing Party Fortunes, 1918-31 - Flashcards/Q+As

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Document with 41 questions and answers for Changing Party Fortunes, 1918-31 in the Edexcel A-Level History textbook, 'Democracies in change: Britain and the USA in the twentieth century'. Can be transferred over to Quizlet or Knowt for use as flashcards or printed off as revision resources.

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Available practice questions

Flashcards 41 Flashcards
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Some examples from this set of practice questions

1.

What party declined in popularity to allow for Labour success?

Answer: A: The Liberals

2.

Who was in office from 1918 to 1922?

Answer: A: Liberal-Conservative Coalition - David Lloyd George

3.

What were the 6 main reasons for the decline of the Liberal Party between 1910 and 1929?

Answer: A: 1 - inter-party conflict between Lloyd George and Lord Asquith 2 - Representation of the People Act (1918) 3 - Scandal within the Liberal Party 4 - Funding Issues 5 - FPTP System 6 - Success of the Labour and Conservative Party

4.

Why did the Liberals have to take \'illiberal\' measures?

Answer: A: Pressure of WW1 - Avoiding defeat

5.

Between David Lloyd George and Asquith, who was for \'illiberal\' measures?

Answer: A: David Lloyd George

6.

Why did the Liberal Party split?

Answer: A: David Lloyd George supported illiberal measures, whereas Asquith did not - failed to reunite in time for the 1918 election.

7.

What was the Maurice Debate?

Answer: A: 1918 - cemented hate between DLG and Asquith - Asquith led attack on DLG for lying about the numbers of British troops on the W front.

8.

Why did the Liberals struggle after the war?

Answer: A: Were not united - on two sides - harder to run successful political party machine.

9.

Who did the RotP Act (1918) give the vote to?

Answer: A: - Men over 21 with no restrictions on property owing status - Some women

10.

How did the RotP Act (1918) affect the electorate?

Answer: A: - trebled in size - women now made up 43% - 7.7 million to 21.4 million

Changing Party Fortunes, 1918-31 - UK Transformed

What party declined in popularity to allow for Labour success?
A: The Liberals

Who was in office from 1918 to 1922?
A: Liberal-Conservative Coalition - David Lloyd George

What were the 6 main reasons for the decline of the Liberal Party between 1910 and
1929?
A: 1 - inter-party conflict between Lloyd George and Lord Asquith
2 - Representation of the People Act (1918)
3 - Scandal within the Liberal Party
4 - Funding Issues
5 - FPTP System
6 - Success of the Labour and Conservative Party

Why did the Liberals have to take 'illiberal' measures?
A: Pressure of WW1 - Avoiding defeat

Between David Lloyd George and Asquith, who was for 'illiberal' measures?
A: David Lloyd George

Why did the Liberal Party split?
A: David Lloyd George supported illiberal measures, whereas Asquith did not - failed to
reunite in time for the 1918 election.

What was the Maurice Debate?
A: 1918 - cemented hate between DLG and Asquith - Asquith led attack on DLG for
lying about the numbers of British troops on the W front.

Why did the Liberals struggle after the war?
A: Were not united - on two sides - harder to run successful political party machine.

Who did the RotP Act (1918) give the vote to?
A: - Men over 21 with no restrictions on property owing status - Some women

How did the RotP Act (1918) affect the electorate?
A: - trebled in size - women now made up 43% - 7.7 million to 21.4 million

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