Editing Ben Tillett

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==Political career==
==Political career==
Tillett was a member of the [[Fabian Society]] and a founding member of the [[Independent Labour Party]], but subsequently joined the [[Social Democratic Federation]] instead. He also joined the [[Bristol Socialist Society]] in the 1880s, when he often travelled to that city. At the [[1892 United Kingdom general election]], he was sponsored by the [[Bradford Labour Union]] and [[Bradford Trades Council]] to stand in [[Bradford West (UK Parliament constituency)|Bradford West]]. He won 30.2% of the vote, but took third place and was not elected.<ref name="ashraf">{{cite book |last1=Ashraf |first1=Mary |title=Bradford Trades Council: 1872–1972 |date=1972 |publisher=Bradford Trades Council |location=Bradford}}</ref>
Tillett was a member of the [[Fabian Society]] and a founding member of the [[Independent Labour Party]], but subsequently joined the [[Social Democratic Federation]] instead. He also joined the [[Bristol Socialist Society]] in the 1880s, when he often travelled to that city. At the [[1892 United Kingdom general election]], he was sponsored by the [[Bradford Labour Union]] and [[Bradford Trades Council]] to stand in [[Bradford West (UK Parliament constituency)|Bradford West]]. He won 30.2% of the vote, but took third place and was not elected.<ref name="ashraf">{{cite book |last1=Ashraf |first1=Mary |title=Bradford Trades Council: 1872–1972 |date=1972 |publisher=Bradford Trades Council |location=Bradford}}</ref>


Tillett began a political career as an alderman on the [[London County Council]] from 1892 to 1898 and was a [[Labour Party (UK)|Labour Party]] Member of Parliament (MP) for [[Salford North (UK Parliament constituency)|Salford North]] from 1917 to 1924 and again from 1929 to 1931. Before his victory at the [[1917 Salford North by-election|Salford North by-election]] in 1917 as an independent candidate, he had stood unsuccessfully for Parliament at four general elections: [[Bradford West (UK Parliament constituency)|Bradford West]] in [[1892 United Kingdom general election|1892]] and [[1895 United Kingdom general election|1895]]; at [[Eccles (UK Parliament constituency)|Eccles]] in [[1906 United Kingdom general election|1906]]; and at [[Swansea (UK Parliament constituency)|Swansea]] in [[January 1910 United Kingdom general election|January 1910]].<ref name="craig1885-1918">{{cite book
Tillett began a political career as an alderman on the [[London County Council]] from 1892 to 1898 and was a [[Labour Party (UK)|Labour Party]] Member of Parliament (MP) for [[Salford North (UK Parliament constituency)|Salford North]] from 1917 to 1924 and again from 1929 to 1931. Before his victory at the [[1917 Salford North by-election|Salford North by-election]] in 1917 as an independent candidate, he had stood unsuccessfully for Parliament at four general elections: [[Bradford West (UK Parliament constituency)|Bradford West]] in [[1892 United Kingdom general election|1892]] and [[1895 United Kingdom general election|1895]]; at [[Eccles (UK Parliament constituency)|Eccles]] in [[1906 United Kingdom general election|1906]]; and at [[Swansea (UK Parliament constituency)|Swansea]] in [[January 1910 United Kingdom general election|January 1910]].<ref name="craig1885-1918">{{cite book
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}}</ref> He often disagreed with the liberal tendencies of the Labour Party, claiming in 1918 that 'If the Labour Party could select a King, he would be a feminist, a Temperance crank, a Nonconformist charlatan...an anti-sport, anti-jollity advocate, a teetotaller, as well as a general wet blanket.'<ref>{{Cite book|last=Pugh|first= Martin|title=Speak for Britain! : a new history of the Labour Party|date=2011|publisher=Vintage|isbn=978-0-09-952078-8|oclc=734100865}}</ref>
}}</ref> He often disagreed with the liberal tendencies of the Labour Party, claiming in 1918 that 'If the Labour Party could select a King, he would be a feminist, a Temperance crank, a Nonconformist charlatan...an anti-sport, anti-jollity advocate, a teetotaller, as well as a general wet blanket.'<ref>{{Cite book|last=Pugh|first= Martin|title=Speak for Britain! : a new history of the Labour Party|date=2011|publisher=Vintage|isbn=978-0-09-952078-8|oclc=734100865}}</ref>


Tillett courted controversy with some of his supporters in the labour movement through his outspoken support of Britain's involvement in the [[World War I|First World War]], an issue which split the Labour Party. In article in the 3 July 1915 issue of ''[[The Illustrated London News]]'', the pro-war writer [[G. K. Chesterton]] offered his explanation:
Tillett courted controversy with some of his supporters in the labour movement through his outspoken support of Britain's involvement in the First World War, an issue which split the Labour Party. In article in the 3 July 1915 issue of ''[[The Illustrated London News]]'', the pro-war writer [[G. K. Chesterton]] offered his explanation:


:It is the moderate Socialists who are Pacifists; the fighting Socialists are patriots. Mr. Ben Tillett would have been regarded by Mr. [[Ramsay MacDonald]] as a mere firebrand; but it is precisely because Mr. Tillet was ready to go on fighting Capitalism that he is ready to go on fighting Krupp. It is precisely because Mr. Macdonald was weak in his opposition to domestic tyrants, that he is weak in his opposition to foreign ones. The wobblers who wanted a one-sided arbitration to end the strikes would to-day accept a one-sided arbitration to end the battles. But the men who wanted strikes want nothing but shells. That great artist, Mr. [[Will Dyson]], laid aside the lethal pencil with which he had caricatured the sweaters and the middlemen, and sharpened a yet deadlier one to draw all the devils in Prussia.
:It is the moderate Socialists who are Pacifists; the fighting Socialists are patriots. Mr. Ben Tillett would have been regarded by Mr. [[Ramsay MacDonald]] as a mere firebrand; but it is precisely because Mr. Tillet was ready to go on fighting Capitalism that he is ready to go on fighting Krupp. It is precisely because Mr. Macdonald was weak in his opposition to domestic tyrants, that he is weak in his opposition to foreign ones. The wobblers who wanted a one-sided arbitration to end the strikes would to-day accept a one-sided arbitration to end the battles. But the men who wanted strikes want nothing but shells. That great artist, Mr. [[Will Dyson]], laid aside the lethal pencil with which he had caricatured the sweaters and the middlemen, and sharpened a yet deadlier one to draw all the devils in Prussia.
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In 1891, Tillett formulated what the historian Satnam Virdee has described as a "proto-fascist discourse" in a series of letters to the ''[[London Evening News]]''.<ref> Satnam Virdee (2017) Socialist antisemitism and its discontents in England, 1884–98, ''Patterns of Prejudice'', 51: 3–4, 356–373 [368]</ref> Tillett argued that Jewish workers should be removed from Britain and that British politicians were in thrall to Jewish financial power: 'Our leading statesmen do not care to offend the great banking houses or money kings.... For heavens' sake, give us back our own countrymen and take from us your motley multitude.'<ref>Satnam Virdee (2017) Socialist antisemitism and its discontents in England, 1884–98, ''Patterns of Prejudice'', 51: 3–4, 356–373 [368]</ref>
In 1891, Tillett formulated what the historian Satnam Virdee has described as a "proto-fascist discourse" in a series of letters to the ''[[London Evening News]]''.<ref> Satnam Virdee (2017) Socialist antisemitism and its discontents in England, 1884–98, ''Patterns of Prejudice'', 51: 3–4, 356–373 [368]</ref> Tillett argued that Jewish workers should be removed from Britain and that British politicians were in thrall to Jewish financial power: 'Our leading statesmen do not care to offend the great banking houses or money kings.... For heavens' sake, give us back our own countrymen and take from us your motley multitude.'<ref>Satnam Virdee (2017) Socialist antisemitism and its discontents in England, 1884–98, ''Patterns of Prejudice'', 51: 3–4, 356–373 [368]</ref>



==Personal life and death==
==Personal life and death==
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