Oh What A Time... - #37 Prime Ministers (Part 2)
Episode Date: April 15, 2024This is Part 2! For Part 1, check the feed from yesterday! This week on the show we’re taking a trip to 10 Downing Street to analyse Prime Ministers from yonder. We’ll be taking a look at Lloyd G...eorge, Margaret Thatcher, Ramsey MacDonald and the full timers will this week get their bonus 4th part on Robert Walpole (who was not, I repeat NOT, the world’s tallest man). On that note, is it possible to look 22 years old when you’re nearly 9ft? And Elis’ mum would regularly walk two miles to school when she was 4 years old; do you know anyone who can beat that record? To touch on this or anything else, you can get in touch with the show via hello@ohwhatatime.com If you're impatient and want both parts in one lovely go next time plus a whole lot more(!), why not treat yourself and become an Oh What A Time: FULL TIMER? In exchange for your £4.99 per month to support the show, you'll get: - the 4th part of every episode and ad-free listening - episodes a week ahead of everyone else - a bonus episode every month - And first dibs on any live show tickets Subscriptions are available via AnotherSlice, Apple and Spotify. For all the links head to: ohwhatatime.com You can also follow us on: X (formerly Twitter) at @ohwhatatimepod And Instagram at @ohwhatatimepod Aaannnd if you like it, why not drop us a review in your podcast app of choice? Thank you to Dan Evans for the artwork (idrawforfood.co.uk). We'll see you next week! Chris, Elis and Tom x Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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Hello and welcome to part two.
Part one was yesterday. Do check it out on your feed.
But if not, if you've joined us this far, let's carry on. This is Prime Ministers.
So I'm going to talk to you about Ramsey MacDonald,
who is, it's quite an impressive claim to fame,
the poorest man ever to become Prime Minister.
How do they judge that? How do they know that? When I tell you about his background, you'll see why.
One of the three principal founders of the Labour Party
and also Labour's first ever Prime Minister.
Okay, so Ramsey Macdonald,
he didn't take the usual route to politics.
And I think it's fair to say, as we discussed earlier,
and as per your question there, Chris,
that most Prime Ministers do come from a place of privilege.
That is true of our country.
Really, when you think back,
most of them have come from
at least upper middle class background,
if not more kind of...
Brown was state educated. Major was state educated.
Tress was state educated.
And as was Thatcher.
But, you know, in the main, you remember the state educated ones.
Exactly. Absolutely.
But Macdonald, this just wasn't his background.
He was born in 1866 in the far north of Scotland in a small fishing village called Lossiemouth,
which is east of Inverness, to an unmarried maid servant.
And he ended his elementary education at the age of 12.
So you're getting the idea of the sort of background he has.
So it is very different.
But he continued at school for another six years,
working as something called a pupil teacher.
Now, do you know what a pupil teacher is?
Because this completely blew my mind when I looked into this.
Have you heard of this?
It's not someone in the class who's also the teacher.
Yeah, it's crazy.
So a pupil teacher, okay, was a training program
which was in wide use before the 20th century
as an apprentice system for teachers.
So with the emergence of mass education at the beginning of the 19th century,
it became clear, basically, that there weren't enough teachers so what they
did was when a pupil hit the age of 13 and was suitable they'd be plucked out and then they'd
serve their apprentice as a teacher for the rest of school so whilst also completing their education
now i want you to take a second to think about what secondary school would have been like ages 13 to 17 if you were also a teacher.
If I'd been one of the teachers at secondary school, it would have turned me into a fucking wanker.
Forever.
I would be such a wanker.
It would be like, it would run through me like a stick of
rock. Give us an example. So you're coming out
to the class, okay? You're 13
or 14. Settle down!
What I'd love to know is like,
are you going in the staff room?
That's a good point. Are your mates the teachers?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
You look like
smoked fags
in the staff room
alright sir
these kids are annoying
aren't they
yeah yeah
that's a good point
bears a signal
for me
and not for you
is that what you'd be like
do you think
you'd be using
your power
to give out
detention
are you that
are you that
13 year old teacher
you chewing gum boy
I think Ellis give you a counter argument to that detention, are you that 13-year-old teacher? You chewing gum boy.
I think, Ellis, to give you a counter-argument to that,
that I think your life would actually be in a living hell.
If you are a 13-year-old teacher, I think the bullies are going to... Any opportunity to pull your trousers down at the front of class
when you're giving a lesson, anything like that would happen.
Because they'd know really you don't have any power
because your mum still drops you off at school if we handed out detentions
could you hand out detentions well the detail wasn't was served up in the thing i read about
that but i do know you had to you had to teach a class from the age of 13 onwards wow and that is
what he did okay so what a pyrrhic victory detention would be after having had your bloody
trousers pulled down during the lesson
by the bigger boys.
Yeah, well, you won't be laughing when you're in detention
for an hour after school, eh?
Eh?
They'll bloody teach you.
Elle, you would give out detention to all the tough kids
and you'd have your little victory
and then it would get to five o'clock
and it would just be you and the tough kids and you're having to take detention and all the other big teachers
and the proper teachers have gone home it's a nightmare and they're licking their lips exactly
and you know that your trousers are due another yanking so guys even though i'm a teacher i'm
actually pretty cool huh what do you do in play times you don't want to hang out with the teachers
can i give you what i think it would be i think you get caught in a no man's land friendship yeah i think the teachers don't want to
hang without with you the school kids don't want to hang out with you you have to hang out at best
with the other apprentice teachers yeah your only chance so there's six other dorks god it's like
it's like being in a prison yard isn't it like who you who your alliances exactly don't don't
fraternize with the guards
you say earlier what does that mean to him being the poorest prime minister this is hopefully
giving you some idea to the life you had this he had came from a really tough background and
the only way he continued schooling was was in this way and following this as a young adult he
then moved to bristol and then london he initially did menial jobs before becoming a journalist. And it was during that time that he acquainted himself with left-wing ideas,
before in 1894, joining the newly founded Independent Labour Party, as it was known then.
And from there, he rose quickly.
By just 1900, he became the first secretary of the Labour Representation Committee, or the LRC,
which is basically the true predecessor to the Labour
Party that we have today. And in 1906, he was one of 29 LRC members to win election to the Commons,
which is the point when the LRC transformed into the Labour Party that we have today. So he's
one of three founding members, essentially, of the Labour Party. And after five years,
he then succeeded Keir Hardie as the parliamentary leader of the Labour Party and after five years he then succeeded Keir Hardie as the
parliamentary leader of the Labour Party now interestingly and this I thought this is kind
of really fascinating one of the main reasons that his rise was so quick at that time was because
of his presence he was tall he was handsome and he was charismatic and this was at a time when
that mattered more than ever do you want to guess why that really mattered at that point
in a way that it just hadn't really mattered before?
The dawn of printed pictures.
No, not quite.
Actually, but in that area, in that area.
Radio.
Once again, in that area, but not quite.
Television?
Or Pathé News?
Yes, exactly.
Really?
Cinema newsreels and party political bulletins
were being developed at this time.
So how you looked and how the general public saw you
really did start to matter.
It's kind of interesting how before that wouldn't have had such an impact,
but being this sort of handsome, screen-ready person
really kind of had an impact,
especially in terms of the cinema newsreels
I can tell you just one little story that happened
it's reminded me of politicians
being on telly
and looking right for the job
and how much that matters
when I lived in Cardiff
and I worked for BBC Wales
there was a political programme on there
and Roderick Morgan who was the first minister
when would that have been Ellis? when was Roder morgan the first he was the second one i would say mid 2000s early
to mid 2000s early to mid 2000s so he was coming down to film an interview on this live tv program
he was a certain age rodrey morgan and he managed to go to the wrong makeup room prior to the
broadcast.
Now,
people might not
know this,
but Doctor Who,
a lot of Doctor Who
is filmed in
Cardiff,
in Wales,
and he'd gone to
the Doctor Who
makeup room
and he fell asleep
in the chair
and when he woke up,
we didn't know
where he was.
This is not true.
It is true.
Is this true?
People didn't know
where Roderick Morgan
was and when he
woke up,
he was halfway
towards being turned into a talking tree.
That is unbelievable.
That is one of the best stories I've ever heard.
How long have you been set on that?
That's incredible, isn't it?
That's an incredible story.
Yeah. And they had to sort of
very quickly
wipe it all off
and sort of get him
out in front of the camera
yeah
oh my god
I just stuck with it
for me I think
if anything's going to
warm you to the people
go out dressed as a half
talking tree
and go you'll never guess
what's just happened
because surely people
would like that
who could turn against that
it'd be such an endearing
thing to do never fall asleep in a makeup chair like that. Who could turn against that? It'd be such an endearing thing to do.
Never fall asleep in a makeup chair, like.
That's your first mistake.
Yeah, it's like falling asleep on a stag, isn't it?
It's amazing he didn't wake up with a bloody shaved eyebrow.
Yeah, a shaved eyebrow and a penis drawn onto his forehead.
Also, how have they got half a talking tree onto his head
without him waking up?
Well, he's a busy man
he was of a certain age so i mean you know you've got to steal sleep when you can
oh it's a quite a gamble not to check yep it is yeah yeah so mcdonald as i say handsome man
good on screen and very quickly rising up the ranks so much so that eventually in 1924
mcdonald became prime minister and although his first reign
only lasted nine months he then returned again between 1929 and 1931 and then for a final and
third time between 1931 and his retirement in 1935 and it was that final period of 1931 to 35
that proved to be his most controversial and left him
with to be honest quite an unwanted legacy so he came to power just as the depression was taking
hold and the effects of the wall street crash and huge industrial downturn was really starting to be
felt and that's something i've thought about the idea of coming into power after working for
something like that and then coming in at a point of absolute turmoil what that must feel like it reminds me a bit of like really boris with a pandemic this thing that
he'd desperately wanted and then suddenly you're just in this absolute shit storm what that feels
like well he had two didn't he he was britain's exit from the european union yes of course yeah
yes that's right oh Of course, of course.
It's like, you know,
Tony Blair,
when he'd imagined
being Prime Minister,
he hadn't imagined,
I'm assuming, 9-11
and war in Iraq
and war in Afghanistan.
Death of Princess Diana
within.
Death of Princess Diana
and, I mean,
all sorts of things.
Do you think you're thinking
as that's happening,
I'm really not enjoying
this anymore?
I just,
on some level,
you're quite keen
for it to be over.
I wonder to what extent you expect that.
Because I always think
when a new prime minister,
a new president, sorry,
is sworn in in America,
I always think,
I wonder what crises
they will have to deal with.
Yes, I always think this.
I was listening to a podcast
with Alistair Campbell on it.
And I think he said something like,
you know, when you're PM,
no one runs in with a sheet of paper, you know, hurries in and going, oh, I've got some really good news.
It's just crisis management.
It's crisis to crisis.
Some are big and some are small in the grand scheme of things.
Yes.
I was fascinated by Andrew Ronsley has written these really interesting books on sort of new Labour's time in government
like 97 to 2010
and when you read
the first one
which I think is called
Servants of the People
the crises are quite small
in comparison to
the second one
End of the Party
like things like
Blair being booed
by the WA
do you remember that?
That felt like a big thing
yeah yeah
slow hand clap
first item on the news
yep
couple of years later
wouldn't have even
scratched the side
well Blair's been booed
by the WI
it's sort of amazing
and like Robin Cook's
affair was a big deal
and yet a few years later
obviously when
when you think of things
like 9-11 especially
it's just a much bigger deal
yeah
where do you think
in the scale of
crisis management
does Mr Morgan
I'm afraid someone's made you up
as a talking tree
would sit
where do you think
on the scale of 1 to 10
if 9, 11 to 10
where's that sitting
well
Trump Bush
he was told
he was at a primary school
wasn't he
one of the most incredible things
you'll ever see
so he's watching
like a primary school play or production he's reading to a primary school, wasn't he? One of the most incredible things you'll ever see. So he's watching a primary school play or production.
He's reading to a primary school.
They're reading to a primary school.
That was it.
And then someone comes over and whispers to him
that the Twin Towers have been attacked.
And he just carries on reading.
Yeah, absolutely.
Because you're not waking up expecting that, are you?
Do you think that kind of,
the advisor whispering in the ear
that happened on the set of the BBC Cardiff,
I'm afraid we've done him up like a talking pig.
The one thing we didn't want to happen.
Then Andrew Marr, whoever it is,
just sat there thinking.
Right.
Yeah.
What I would do if I was Roderick Morgan,
I'd go on And I'd immediately start
Talking about the environment
So it felt like
It was on purpose
Well that is good
I've come here today
Half dressed like a talking tree
Because frankly
I am sick of our green spaces
Yeah
Being over
And then when he yells out
Green faces more like
Because for me
That is the profound
Most pressing challenge
Of the 21st century
The environment
And I did not fall asleep
on this set of Doctor Who
yeah
and the other side of my face
is just me
as an old man
because I'd also like to talk to you
about issues relating
to the elderly
and people go
this is very good
and he turns his face
depending on what subject
he's talking about
like that guy in Batman
anyway let's get back to our friend.
Like that guy in Batman.
His name's Two-Face.
There's not that much of a stretch to figure out.
Like that guy with two faces on Batman.
I mean, the fact that I said that Iron Man was the best superhero.
Like that guy who's always telling jokes.
The guy who's always telling jokes in Batman.
I know nothing about this guy.
I know absolutely nothing about these things.
Okay.
Luckily, though, I know a lot about history.
I remember Christine Gwyther, who was the Agriculture Secretary
in what was then known as the Welsh Assembly,
under Roderick Morgan, who was the First Secretary.
Because she was Agriculture Secretary, some farmers,
he was at the Royal Welsh Agricultural Show or something,
to protest or to draw attention to the falling price of sheep or lamb.
They gave her a lamb.
What?
And said, there you go.
That's yours now.
Because it's only worth 50 pence or something.
What are you going to do about it?
Brilliant.
And she said, no, no, thanks.
It's yours.
I don't want it.
It's worthless to me.
And I remember she made a, it was on the news,
she made a very weak excuse saying something like,
well, I'm staying at a B&B and they've got a no pets policy.
Yeah.
Well, I don't want it.
That's really clever, to be fair.
But I remember thinking she just would not have planned for this.
Yeah.
When she woke up, she'd have been briefed
and she'd have read her papers and she'd have thought,
okay, well, I'm going to be asked about this, this and thised and she'd have read her papers and she'd have thought okay well I'm going to be asked about this this and this
and she'd have had her answers ready
that kind of stunt
it's so difficult
I guarantee you though in the run up to Easter she'd have kept it
if there were like
three days before Easter Sunday
yeah thanks for that
it sounds like you're making a pun but
it's like you can't respond to that on the hoof.
It's very difficult
to respond
properly
to those kind of stunts.
Or it might have been a calf.
She was given a lamb or a calf or something.
And it was just really embarrassing.
So, as I say, Macdonald
came into power just as oppression was
taking effect. And if that wasn't enough, as the say, Macdonald came into power just as the Depression was sort of taking effect.
And if that wasn't enough, as the leader of a minority government, it was really difficult for him to manoeuvre.
Basically, the whole thing was a nightmare and he couldn't really make change in the way that he hoped.
Some of his Labour colleagues felt the Depression kind of offered an opportunity to implement wider socialist reforms, while others, including his Chancellor, Philip Snowden, wanted caution and
need to balance the books. And basically, in the summer of 1931, this all came to a head,
and the cabinet essentially split. And with Macdonald seeing no way forward, he had to go to
the King, King George V, to offer his resignation. He thought, this is what I'm going to do. We've
reached an impasse. I can't progress. I'm just going to hand in my resignation. I'm going to
leave. So he goes to see the king. However, he was offered quite an
unexpected alternative at this point. And this is the crucial thing which marked his legacy.
He was offered, and he wasn't expecting this, to stay on as prime minister as the head of a
national government, which is a cabinet dominated by conservatives with only a few Labour members
in it. So he was given this stark choice which was really to resign and risk
the destruction of the Labour Party at the inevitable general election that would come
or to accept the King's offer knowing that it meant that he would be an outcast in the Labour
Party to which he devoted his whole life. So what do you think you'd go for in that situation?
Are you leaving so there's someone that represents your ideals still in government?
Or are you staying with the party and essentially letting it collapse around you?
What are you going for?
It's a really tricky thing.
I studied this for my A-levels.
Government of National Unity.
Yeah.
I mean, you're damned if you do and you're damned if you don't.
Yeah.
I mean, they sang songs about him for decades.
Exactly, yeah. if you don't. Yeah. I mean, they sang songs about him for decades. Exactly.
Yeah.
People here,
he still,
he was reviled for years
and years
and years
for presiding
over the government
of national unity.
But it was such
a tumultuous time.
Well, as you say,
that is the choice he made.
He followed King's advice.
He headed up
this new national government
and at the general election,
the Labour Party
was nearly wiped out, shrinking from, this is mad, 287 seats down to 52.
What a collapse that is.
And in his new role, sure enough, Macdonald was despised by former Labour colleagues.
And his former political opponents, who now surrounded him, also had no reason to trust him.
And it was just a disaster.
I really like the choice he made here.
This did make me laugh but fact that basically he was aware that he had no longer
had any control over the domestic agenda so instead just threw himself into loads of trips
to europe to deal with foreign affairs which 100 just feels like he's going okay i'm just getting
out of westminster any issue abroad it's mine but that is literally what did. He's constantly going on transatlantic flights and flights to Europe
to deal with anything abroad, just to get away from his colleagues.
I love foreign travel.
Yeah.
This is the thing from reading, like, political biographies.
Everyone loves to be in the foreign office.
That is the number one gig, isn't it?
Yeah.
Just going around, getting wined and dined.
I could do that. Yeah, I could do that yeah i could do that i'd
love to do that what you should be doing there is saying things like it's been far too long since
we've had a trade deal with you know barbados or whatever just have we got a trade deal with
magaluf i will need a minimum of fortnight there i'll need to be there for the fortnight Also Ibiza for the closing parties
That's when all the deals are done
I need to flex in
Like it's basically what he did
We need trading deals with Benidorm
Magaluf
Ayia Napa
Ibiza
Tom all these trade deals
Are a
A beer to me
Clubbing hotspot
What's our relationship with Vegas as well.
I'm quite keen to strike up a deal with Vegas.
But that is basically what he did.
He kept flying abroad.
He kept dealing with that.
But before long, the accusations just started to build
that he was too old, he was too frail, too forgetful.
You know, the press turned on him,
despite the fact he was only 60 as well i think
he's only only in his um in his late 60s rather he wasn't that old at all um and then eventually
in january 1935 king george v died he was one of his few remaining supporters and it was also
something that kind of shook mcdonald's so much that he caused so much self-reflection that within
six months after the king's death he also
resigned as prime minister and it's all quite sad really it's kind of horrible few years really of
stress and whatever you think of him i i kind of think what's interesting here is that basically
had mcdonald's not sacrificed his friends and his career and his life by taking up the king's offer
some suggest he'd kind of almost
be thought of a hero now in the labor movement almost as someone who fell on his on his own
sword at the most difficult moment that isn't the choice he made and instead by i suppose you could
say by trying to do the right thing as he saw it he was basically forever being painted as the worst
type of politician you mentioned these songs you the hatred, and it's just something that
stayed for years. People
loathe MacDonald, despite
how tricky this choice was.
I just need to, a little correction,
Welsh Agricultural Secretary Christian
Gwyther refused the gift of
two calves presented to
her as a protest
at low livestock prices when she
was visiting the Pembrokeshire show.
What a ballick to be given two calves.
I love that it's two as well.
I really hope the first one was handed
and she's like, what?
No, I don't really want...
And then at that point, the second one was handed.
You need a little bit of a surprise rather than two at once.
Don't worry, you've got a second calf, a boneless calf.
Because calves were selling for as little as a
quid so these farmers were saying well we may as well just give them away oh wow incredibly awkward
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if you or someone you know has concerns about gambling visit connects ontario.ca Right, let's talk about Lloyd George.
Now, on the 26th of March, 1945, only a few weeks before the end of the Second World War,
David Lloyd George, a man, of course, who led Britain to victory in the First World War,
died at home in North Wales, 82 years of age.
He'd been living with cancer.
A remarkable story in the history of British politics. yn Cymru, 82 mlynedd oed, roedd yn byw gyda cancer. Stori anhygoel yn y hanes
gwleidyddiaeth Brif. Felly, roedd yn nabod yn y gymuned Cymreigian Cymru o Manchester yn 1863,
gyda'r teulu yn ystod y cyfnod, a symud yn ôl i Gymru. Felly, yn gyntaf i Pembrokeshire, a yna,
wedi marw ei fater, felly, fe wnaethon nhw symud i'r fath o Llanes Tymdwy,
a oedd yn lle oedd ei mam wedi tyfu, ac roedd yn Cynharfon, hefyd, y which would have been where his mother had grown up. And it was in Carnarvon, also the Carnarvon area,
that he came into the influence of his uncle, Richard,
who was a staunch liberal and a non-conformist pastor,
which is quite a big thing because Welsh non-conformism,
that was the sort of the church of common people in Wales at the time.
Right.
And the thing with Welsh non-conformists, they hated the Church of England.
Okay.
Which was the sort of the established state church because it had different laws, different customs.
And obviously the sermons were in English rather than Welsh as well.
And it was called the Church of England, which was obviously quite a turn off.
So his uncle was a shoemaker, but encouraged Lloyd George in the world of letters and oratory and law.
So through his uncle Richard he learned these
skills and it had a massive bearing on his public persona as a politician so you know there was a
big difference in theology between the church in England and non-conformist Methodist churches in
Wales so it was it basically turned him into a little bit of a rebel so he qualified as a solicitor
in 1884 and he threw himself into liberal politics, worked on the 1885 general election campaign.
And then he became an alderman on the Carnarvonshire County Council in 1889.
And then he was made the prospective parliamentary candidate that year for the Liberal Party in Carnarvon Burroughs.
So he fought his first by-election in 1890 and he emerged victorious.
So he's still a by-election in 1890, and he emerged victorious, right?
So he's still a young man at this point.
He won with a majority of just 18 votes.
Wow.
So up the count, Ellis Nanny was the Conservative candidate,
was a very, very prominent landowner in the area,
was due to be declared the winner, and it was noticed, get this,
the sum of Lloyd George's votes had been put in the wrong pile.
Right.
So they're like, hang on a second.
And by coincidence, the packet of votes that were for Lloyd George
were just enough to have him come out on top, right?
So he held the Clare von Burra seat then until 1945.
But you say by coincidence, so are there some doubters whether that was...
Yeah.
Well, in the research, there's ellipses. So make of that what you will.
Okay, right, yes.
Now, as a Member of Parliament, he was active in Welsh Affairs.
He pursued the causes that were beloved of the Liberal Party at the time.
So it's home rule, friolans, disestablishment of the church in Wales,
and the creation of individual institutions for Welsh education as well.
I think he wanted home rule in Wales. Certainly he did at one point because he was a part of cumbria v which was a sort of it was like
a sort of proto-nationalist movement in this sort of in the at the end of the 1800s but he was he's
always rising up the greasy polar politics okay so the liberals returned to office uh with a
massive majority in 1906 after a long period of conservative dominance and it gave him his first
taste of cabinet office so he was president of the board of trade and then from 1908 became
chancellor of the exchequer now this is where he started to do some really significant things so he
emerged as a kind of people's tribunes he introduced old age pensions which hadn't existed before he
advocated for welfare reforms things like national national insurance, which hadn't existed before. He created a system of wealth redistribution, which added taxes for the rich to pay for welfare
and for a national rearmament scheme. So then by 1915, once we're into the First World War,
he was made Minister for Munitions and then Secretary of State for War. And then he became
Prime Minister in 1916. And he was there until You know, he had a lot of left-wing achievements
when you look at things like national insurance and pensions.
I don't think he...
I think people forget that that was stuff that he introduced, right?
So on the surface, he's a successful politician,
so he's able to command loyalty.
He pursued causes that sort of appealed directly
to the chapels of his youth.
But behind the scenes, he was, how can I put it, a shagger.
Really?
Yeah, big time.
I didn't know that about Lloyd George.
Oh, big time, right?
So he maintained a long affair with his secretary, Francis Stevenson,
effectively living with two wives.
Whoa.
So when Margaret Lloyd George's wife died in 1941,
he married Francis to legitimise something
that had previously been hidden and secret.
Yeah.
And even though he was having this affair with Stevenson,
which was generally loving, it was torrid at times.
Like, he produced several pregnancies,
at least three of which Lloyd George compelled to be aborted,
which was an illegal act at the time.
Wow.
Lest they become public knowledge and then have his career ruined.
Wow.
So he had hands wandering all over the place.
He had numerous affairs, sort of like affairs on his affair.
He had one-night stands, including with the wives and partners
of fellow MPs, or those he met whilst on campaign.
Yeah.
And Stevenson, the person he was having an affair with,
Frances Stevenson, she was engaged in an affair with an army officer who worked alongside her in the MP's office,
a man called Thomas Tweed.
So it's an absolute, in terms of personal relationships, a complete hornet's nest, right?
Yeah.
And he's got that thing that Einstein has where he's really kind of grown out the moustache,
but kind of looped it so that the length kind of comes back around, like he's got extra length in there.
And with mad white hair as well.
Yeah.
Which presumably was popular.
I don't know if women liked that then more than they would now.
Evidently.
Clearly.
Either power or that moustache was an aphrodisiac, right?
But he was very recognisably modern, right?
So in 1918, he was the subject of a biopic, probably the first
made of any British politician, The Life Story
of David Lloyd George.
And it was widely trailed in the press
before its anticipated release,
but it was never shown in his lifetime.
Because it was mired in scandal, right? And the filmmakers
were eventually paid £20,000,
which is
£940,000
in today's money. Wow. for the only print of the film.
So there's an awful lot of scandal.
So because he was so keen, he didn't want it to be released?
Yeah.
So even though he's the person who's regarded
as having won the First World War for Britain
and he's introduced things like pensions and national insurance,
there's so much scandal going on in the background.
Yeah. What I find interesting there is it sort of it speaks to sometimes you meet
these people who are concerned with the optics of being seen as someone who cares about people
and you do see it in the media a lot as well to perfectly honest there's a lot about how you're
viewed and like how empathetic you are to the plight of people.
But actually, in your interpersonal relationships, you don't have much care.
An absolute casserole, yeah.
Yeah.
Do you know what?
It's very true, to be honest, of television.
That is definitely something I've encountered.
Just say my name, Tom.
Spit it out.
And then you'll make us delete this bit.
But you know what I mean?
There is a disconnect between this kind of broader idea
of what you stand for and how you actually treat people around you.
Now, get this right.
So in 1918, he's still in office as PM. He founded a media company, United Newspapers, which bought two national publications, the Daily Chronicle and Lloyd's Weekly. And to raise the money, the purchase cost £1.6 million or 75 million quid in today's money.
household peerages and other titles according to a scheme of his own invention.
So it was £10,000 for a knighthood, £30,000 for a baronetcy,
and then £50,000 for a peerage with greater amounts for higher titles.
So it was during his time in office that Britain had established a new order of merit.
So you had the MB, the OB, CB, and then the KBE and the DBE.
Yeah.
So that obviously became tainted.
So these honours weren't mentioned when the Cash for Honours scandal broke in 1922 but they were certainly
added to the mix.
So even though he hadn't invented Cash for Honours
that practice had been going on for
decades because it basically
provided an under the table route for the
nouveau riche to acquire the status
of a title. Even Gladstone amazingly
sold titles in the
early 1890s. But Lloyd George made it really brazenly formal. So he told the House of Commons,
as to the question of bargain and sale, I agree with everything that has been said about that.
If it ever existed, it was a discreditable system. It ought never to have existed. If it does exist,
it ought to be terminated. And if there
were any doubt on that point, every step should be taken to deal with it. So the thing with Lloyd
George, is he a hero or is he a villain? We're still grateful for some of the things he brought
in. But, you know, one historian summed him up as a devious and unscrupulous man who aroused every
feeling except trust. Wow. But in in his heyday he was extraordinarily popular
with the electorate yeah hundreds of babies born around 1908 to 1911 were given his name either
lloyd george or the full david lloyd george i was at school with a david lloyd george
really yeah because the thing is no welshman's held, or no Welsh person's held the office of Prime Minister again.
So certainly in Wales, he's still really well known.
I can guarantee you there are no babies being born now
who've been called Rishi Sunak.
Boring.
Liz Truss.
Liz Truss.
Can you imagine?
Little Liz Truss at the end of the bed.
Little Liz, baby Liz Truss.
Come meet baby Liz.
Yeah, Elizabeth's a nice name
is that after the Queen
it isn't actually
you know what I was
thinking about there
very briefly
a little daydream
if knighthood
was still 10 grand
the idea of us
Ellis and me and you
doing a little Kickstarter
and getting Chris knighted
for his birthday
so that's good value
Sir Skull
Sir Christopher Skull
of East Ham
What a treat that would be
How would you react Chris?
It's your birthday and we go Chris
Little surprise, you're now a knight
How are you feeling about that?
Where's my sword? Where's my shield?
Exactly
It's just the idea of being Prime Minister
and being so brazen
about selling peerages
and things
just to make some money
so you can buy
a couple of newspapers
I love that
that last honours list
on your way out
even though I think
it's scandalous
but there is something
quite British about
right
you know
like your last day at work
you're going to skive
yeah yeah yeah
like last day at work
all my mates are getting peerages.
And I don't care what you think.
It's always friends in high places who are given those peerages.
I wanted to be the excellent prime minister, say, you know,
Billy, who I went to primary school with.
Just like literally just meats.
The funny thing with Lloyd George,
I'm currently reading the Roy Hattersley biography of Lloyd George. So he's the founding father of the welfare state. And, you know, he was a great peacetime leader. He was an authentic radical. So at the first old age pension, sick pay, unemployment benefit, that all came in under him. He was the architect of those things. He was a tireless champion of the poor,
but also like a restless philanderer.
Yeah.
And he was basically addicted to living dangerously, which is such a complex character to put in high office, isn't it?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
And a shagger.
You couldn't get away with that now, could you?
How many of the musical greats that we listen to
who've produced wonderful works of art
have also been horrendous to their partners and their friends?
Yeah.
And being addicted to living dangerously.
Yeah, exactly.
There's clearly a sort of something which attracts...
Power, isn't it?
Yeah, I suppose that is what it is.
Whatever's in your character about wanting power
is also...
Yeah.
Seeks power in other ways, I guess.
Exactly.
Well said, Sir Chris.
Well said.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Have I earned the knighthood?
Sir Chris.
It's not for me to decide.
Sir Chris Skull of Wanstead.
The flag is just a skull, isn't it?
That's the emblem of it.
It's ready-made.
All we now need is 10 grand.
No, it would be the West Ham badge.
It would be the IMs, wouldn't it?
Hey, they're not mutually exclusive.
We can have the skull and the hammers.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Perfect. Get it done.
And there we have it.
That's the end of part two.
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