In our latest Blog post, Dr Nick Mansfield looks at the profound and far reaching aspects of the Representation of the People Act, 1918, outside that of women’s right to vote.
- Tags 1884, 1914, 1916, 1918, Absent Voters, Admiralty Weekly Orders, Aled Eurig, Alison Ronan, anti-war movement, Armed Forces, armistice, Army, Asquith, Austria, Beveridge Report, Bolshevik, Boundary Commission, cambridgeshire, cambridgeshire pension committee, christabel pankhurst, Citizens, citizenship, city of london, Clause IV, coalition, conscientious objectors, conscription, Conservative, Constituencies, cotton, David Lloyd George, David Swift, demobilisation, democracy, Demonstrations, discharged, education, elections, electoral, emily pankhurst, Europe, females, forces, franhcise, general election, Germany, Government, graduates, Hostilities, householders, Imperial War Museum, Ireland, Labour Party, Lawyer, Liverpool, lodgers, male suffrage, mobilisation, MPs, munitions factories, NCOs, NDLP, Nick Mansfield, north west england, officers, Over 21, Over 30, Parliament, parliamentary reform act, patriotic, People's History Museum Manchester, political parties, politicians, politics, Ramsay Macdonald, representation of the peoples act 1918, Riots, Russia, sailors, Second World War, Servicewomen, Sir Hugh Fraser, soldiers, Strikes, suffrage, textiles, Trade Union, volunteer, Voters, voting, Wales, Wall Street Crash, war effort, Women's Army Auxilary Coprs, Women's Royal Naval Service, Women's War Interest Committee, womens suffrage, Working class, wounded soldiers