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LOT 22701008300  |  Catalogue: Maps

Vote Unionist.

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By THE NATIONAL UNIONIST ASSOCIATION
A party divided Lithograph printed in blue, red and black, at neat line plus margins, folds flattened, a bit of offsetting at top, backed with poster canvas. The poster depicts David Lloyd George, leader of the Liberal Party, in 1924. He had previously been the Prime Minister of a Conservative-Liberal coalition during the war and kept much of that coalition with the Conservative party in order to win the 1918 election, which he did. The coalition had broken down by 1922, and Lloyd George had mended his fences with the other Liberal politician H.H. Asquith. In the 1924 election a reunited Liberal party ran against the Conservative party, led by Stanley Baldwin, which was advocating tariffs on imported goods. Free Trade had been a British policy for most of the Victorian and Edwardian area, especially within the Liberal party. This Conservative poster quotes David Lloyd George's opinions on protectionism and the dynamism of America, when interviewed by The Times newspaper and makes the point that the USA have high tariffs and lots of employment, whilst the UK has no tariffs and unemployment.
Published by: National Unionist Association, Palace Chambers, ND [but 1924.], 1924
Vendor: Daniel Crouch Rare Books LLP

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[ translate ]

By THE NATIONAL UNIONIST ASSOCIATION
A party divided Lithograph printed in blue, red and black, at neat line plus margins, folds flattened, a bit of offsetting at top, backed with poster canvas. The poster depicts David Lloyd George, leader of the Liberal Party, in 1924. He had previously been the Prime Minister of a Conservative-Liberal coalition during the war and kept much of that coalition with the Conservative party in order to win the 1918 election, which he did. The coalition had broken down by 1922, and Lloyd George had mended his fences with the other Liberal politician H.H. Asquith. In the 1924 election a reunited Liberal party ran against the Conservative party, led by Stanley Baldwin, which was advocating tariffs on imported goods. Free Trade had been a British policy for most of the Victorian and Edwardian area, especially within the Liberal party. This Conservative poster quotes David Lloyd George's opinions on protectionism and the dynamism of America, when interviewed by The Times newspaper and makes the point that the USA have high tariffs and lots of employment, whilst the UK has no tariffs and unemployment.
Published by: National Unionist Association, Palace Chambers, ND [but 1924.], 1924
Vendor: Daniel Crouch Rare Books LLP

[ translate ]
Estimate
Unlock
Location
UK, London
Auction House