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liberal thought around which the party needed to coalesce. Trevor Wilson claims there was a choice for radicals and traditionalists in the party. They could withdraw from politics, they could defect to other parties or they could "allow distrust of Lloyd George to be outweighed by sympathy for the new thought and daring programme he was offering". In 1938 Dodds chaired the party's
Ownership for All Committee. Its resulting report reiterated the traditional Liberal position on the role of property ownership as the "bedrock of liberty". The report called for restoration of free trade, reforms of the rating system, and came out against state intervention in the economy except in the most extreme of circumstances. More positively it also promoted co-ownership in industry β a policy with which Dodds became increasingly associated. The report was endorsed by the 1938
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191:. At Rochdale in 1931, Dodds stood in support of the National Government but because of his views on free trade and opposition to tariffs the Conservatives decided to put up their own National candidate thus splitting the anti-Labour vote. Un-discouraged by his defeats, he continued to play a role in the
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which the party took up in the 1920s and 1930s in response to the depression and mass unemployment. However he was clever and tribal enough to recognise the electoral value of such policies and politically nimble enough to reconcile it with his own position by placing it in the several strands of
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in 1928. It did not seek to promote any particular
Liberal brand or establish any new path for the Liberalism but disseminate ideas which were distinctly liberal, reflecting the rich variety of the liberal tradition. In 1957 Dodds wrote in the opening chapter of the book
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and maintained links with the radical wing of the party. In 1953 he became chairman of the
Unservile State Group, which aimed to explore the attitudes and policies of British Liberalism for the first time since the publication of the
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that he looked forward to the
Liberals "re-establish themselves in their natural position as the acknowledged leaders of the Left...". He understood that political parties could not stand still writing in his 1947 book
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Dodds married
Frances Zita MacDonald, the daughter of a Congregationalist minister of religion, in 1918. They had two daughters. His wife died in 1971. Dodds was a committed Christian serving Highfield
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Dodds' Liberalism was in the classical liberal tradition, unsympathetic to excessive state intervention in the economy and it put him in broad opposition to the
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for sixty years, as editor from 1924 to 1959 and
Consulting Editor after that. During the First World War Dodds lived in London editing the
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that "on the
Continent, Liberal thought remained hobbled by the dogmas of laissez-faire, and the Liberal parties failed to go forward".
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who openly campaigned to build high the edifice of
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in 1948 and was later elected on a number of occasions as one of the party's vice-presidents along with such figures as
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and who drifted away from mainstream party thinking to the right, into influential think-tanks like the
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but was drawn instead to journalism, accepting the post of leader writer and literary assistant on the
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but was a cause of tension and dispute between the left and right of the party for years.
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of which he was president from 1932 to 1937 and to write about
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as his private secretary and tutor to Samuel's sons. He then went to
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British journalist, newspaper editor, Liberal politician and thinker
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by Donald Wade and
Desmond Banks, Elliott Dodds Trust, 1977, p.15
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Egan, M., "Elliott Dodds", in D. Brack & E. Randall, eds.,
75:(4 March 1889 β 20 February 1977) was a British journalist,
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as a deacon throughout his life and he loved to play golf.
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where he read history. While at Oxford Dodds was editor of
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and was narrowly defeated for the presidency of the
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462:The Unservile State: Essays in Liberty and Welfare
430:Brack & Randall (eds.) Politicoβs, 2007 p 93ff
264:The Unservile State: Essays in Liberty and Welfare
218:However Dodds was not one of those Liberals like
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250:between the 1930s and 1960s. Dodds welcomed the
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139:in 1914. He maintained his connection with the
688:Commanders of the Order of the British Empire
228:Alfred Suenson-Taylor, 1st Baron Grantchester
678:Liberal Party (UK) parliamentary candidates
398:The Downfall of the Liberal Party 1914β1935
411:Liberal Lion, Jo Grimond: A Political Life
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366:The Times, 17.3.33, 21.3.35 & 29.3.37
117:. After graduating he worked briefly for
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483:The Political Insight of Elliott Dodds
348:, Smith, Elder & Co, 1975, p.596.
683:Presidents of the Liberal Party (UK)
155:In 1920 Dodds wrote his first book,
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673:People educated at Mill Hill School
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445:The Dictionary of Liberal Thought
193:National League of Young Liberals
612:β Liberal Democrat History Group
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201:The Social Gospel of Liberalism
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91:Elliott Dodds was born in
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619:Party political offices
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305:Congregationalist Church
83:politician and thinker.
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298:Family and private life
284:Lady Megan Lloyd George
151:Politics and liberalism
36:is written like a story
599:(with E. Reiss) β 1966
547:Works by Elliott Dodds
583:"Liberty and Welfare"
346:The Cornhill Magazine
141:Huddersfield Examiner
136:Huddersfield Examiner
50:neutral point of view
597:The Logic of Liberty
571:Let's Try Liberalism
559:Liberalism in Action
292:Violet Bonham Carter
197:Liberalism in Action
87:Education and career
70:George Elliott Dodds
42:rewrite this article
591:The Unservile State
553:Is Liberalism Dead?
357:The Times, 19.19.31
258:Liberal Yellow Book
240:John Maynard Keynes
127:Calabar High School
105:New College, Oxford
610:Biography of Dodds
577:The Defence of Man
530:The Times, 22.2.77
269:The Defence of Man
157:Is Liberalism Dead
46:encyclopedic style
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642:Succeeded by
633:President of the
565:Ownership for All
471:Allen & Unwin
280:William Beveridge
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668:1977 deaths
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375:Mark Egan:
288:Dingle Foot
657:Categories
639:1948β1949
627:Isaac Foot
587:Watson, G.
467:Crows Nest
311:References
274:Dodds was
521:, 29.5.52
519:The Times
509:, 16.5.46
507:The Times
495:The Times
290:and Lady
203:in 1926.
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385:Politico
335:, 2007).
181:Rochdale
110:The Isis
93:Sydenham
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333:Methuen
179:and at
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123:Jamaica
81:Liberal
593:β 1957
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573:β 1944
567:β 1938
561:β 1922
555:β 1920
48:and a
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