Ethel Snowden
Russia
| ← Previous revision | Revision as of 04:49, 22 April 2026 | ||
| Line 36: | Line 36: | ||
==Russia== |
==Russia== |
||
At the end of the war, Snowden was elected to the [[National Executive Committee of the Labour Party]] in its Women's Section. This position made her a very prominent figure within the left-wing movements and led to a great deal of foreign travel, including to [[Bern]] and [[Vienna]] (to try to re-establish the [[Socialist International]]), [[Palestine (region)|Palestine]], [[Democratic Republic of Georgia|Georgia]] and twice to the United States. Most notably, she was named to a joint |
At the end of the war, Snowden was elected to the [[National Executive Committee of the Labour Party]] in its Women's Section. This position made her a very prominent figure within the left-wing movements and led to a great deal of foreign travel, including to [[Bern]] and [[Vienna]] (to try to re-establish the [[Socialist International]]), [[Palestine (region)|Palestine]], [[Democratic Republic of Georgia|Georgia]] and twice to the United States. Most notably, she was named to a joint TUC–Labour Party delegation to Russia in early 1920 which was sent to be an impartial inquiry into the Bolshevik Revolution.{{sfnp|Cross|1966|p=168|ps=}} After her return she published a book, ''Through Bolshevik Russia'', which revealed her own findings. Although she liked [[Vladimir Lenin|Lenin]] ("the merry-eyed fanatic of the Kremlin"), her general reaction was profoundly critical. She upbraided a Bolshevik who told a public meeting that a British revolution would start in three months, insisting that "we want power, but we do not want a revolution", and observed that "Everyone I met in Russia outside the Communist Party goes in terror of his liberty or his life". She had told a reporter for the ''[[Evening Standard]]'' on her return that "I oppose Bolshevism because it is not Socialism, it is not democracy and it is not Christianity", and likened working conditions to [[slavery]].{{sfnp|Cross|1966|pp=169–70}} |
||
Snowden's denunciations of the Soviets made her unpopular with the left within the Labour movement and resulted in her being voted off the National Executive Committee in 1922.{{sfnp|Cross|1966|p=171|ps=}} Her prominence led to invitations to stand for Parliament. Snowden refused to stand in [[Plymouth Devonport (UK Parliament constituency)|Plymouth Devonport]] against [[Nancy Astor, Viscountess Astor|Lady Astor]] on grounds that Astor's service was invaluable.{{sfnp|Cross|1966|p=181|ps=}} She was selected at one point as Labour Party candidate for [[Leicester East (UK Parliament constituency)|Leicester East]], but gave up the candidature when a [[1922 Leicester East by-election|by-election]] was called there in Spring 1922 (the Labour candidate won)."Mrs Philip Snowden and Parliament", ''Manchester Guardian'', 24 October 1922, p. 8. |
Snowden's denunciations of the Soviets made her unpopular with the left within the Labour movement and resulted in her being voted off the National Executive Committee in 1922.{{sfnp|Cross|1966|p=171|ps=}} Her prominence led to invitations to stand for Parliament. Snowden refused to stand in [[Plymouth Devonport (UK Parliament constituency)|Plymouth Devonport]] against [[Nancy Astor, Viscountess Astor|Lady Astor]] on grounds that Astor's service was invaluable.{{sfnp|Cross|1966|p=181|ps=}} She was selected at one point as Labour Party candidate for [[Leicester East (UK Parliament constituency)|Leicester East]], but gave up the candidature when a [[1922 Leicester East by-election|by-election]] was called there in Spring 1922 (the Labour candidate won)."Mrs Philip Snowden and Parliament", ''Manchester Guardian'', 24 October 1922, p. 8. |
||