The Lee Affair

John A. Lee

The Lee Affair was an event that transpired in the late 1930s in New Zealand revolving around Labour Party MP John A. Lee's repeated vocal critiquing of his party's leadership.

Background

In-between the 1931 and 1935 elections a division of opinion began to manifest in the Labour Party caucus as to whether loans or credit should be the primary method of funding economic recovery and end the effects of the Great Depression. As a result, financial affairs were beginning to dominate party policy and general Labour concerns. This led to the development inside caucus of a monetary reform group, mainly from the more militant socialist wing of the party under the leadership of John A. Lee.[1]

Throughout the 1930s many Labour MPs had communicated clumsily on the concept of credit leading to confusion as to the party’s exact position. This left Labour in a difficult position when eventually elected.

Guarded criticism

Lee became something of a Young Turk in the Labour ranks. He seemed impatient with the party leadership which he believed to belong to an older generation. During the selection of his Cabinet, in both 1935 and in 1938, Prime Minister Michael Joseph Savage had ignored Lee's personal appeals for insertion. Eventually Savage compromised making Lee an Under-Secretary.[1]

After finally winning the Treasury benches, the initial sense of camaraderie and intra-party democracy which had given such vivacity to Labour, steadily declined as a result of the burdens of office. The senior leadership seemed somewhat inclined to simply disregard caucus decisions that they disliked leaving some MPs feeling begrudged. Credit theory was one such topic where this was prevalent. It was not always the case and in some instances Cabinet accepted public credit measures for projects into after being pushed into it by a caucus majority. Lee and his socialistic allies, were also greatly influenced by social credit theory. They believed that the government needed to immediately take control of New Zealand's financial system. The fiscally conservative Finance Minister, Walter Nash opposed this, and blocked Lee's proposals to nationalise the Bank of New Zealand.[1]

Such antagonism between Lee's followers and Nash's highlighted a larger division. The older members enjoyed support of the trade unions. Hence, they were able to drive the party vehicle as they pleased. By contrast, the pro-Lee dissidents were mostly individual members who supported Labour out of their own intellectual morals and principles rather than out of possessing a working-class background.

The episode became more and more public over time. That it should have developed in the way it did was largely the result of Lee's own personality. While he was generally conceded to have great intellectual and oratorical gifts, it was widely considered that excessive vanity and obstreperousness clouded his judgement.[1]

Rebellion

A cartoon showing Lee thrown out the window of the 1940 Labour Party Conference.

When Savage relented, to the extent of increasing by one the number of cabinet ministries, he selected David Wilson (and not Lee) as the extra minister. To Lee's fury his fellow dissidents nominated Gervan McMillan rather than himself for the position, Wilson winning 19 votes to 15.[2] In 1939 the infamous “Lee Letter” appeared. It contained many attacks on the financial orthodoxy and over-cautiousness of Walter Nash. It received wide publicity and led many in the public to question Labour’s unanimity. Lee professed to have written it under the supposition that it would be seen only by Labour members, not the populace.

The Labour National Executive called Lee to appear before it, and gave him warnings about the consequences to himself of such behaviour. However, Lee continued his attacks on the leadership, more and more publicly. It was to be an article bitterly accusing the cancer-stricken Savage of being "mentally as well as physically ill"[2] that proved to be Lee’s downfall.[1] Party and public alike were aghast that someone would write so critically of a prime minister who was widely known to be desperately sick. Without any preliminary notice, his expulsion from the Labour Party was moved at the 1940 annual conference. Following a rancorous deliberation by members, the motion was carried by a vote of 546 to 344.[3] Lee's final conduct made it near impossible for many of his sympathisers to defend him, even if he retained a certain following among some supporters who continued to agree with his criticisms of cabinet autocracy.

Outcomes

The consequences of the Lee affair were unfortunate for the Labour Party. His dismissal reduced the enthusiasm of the party's members, with many active branch workers either resigning or returning to mere membership. In some areas whole branches were reported to have disappeared altogether. This coincided with the establishment of Lee’s new breakaway party the Democratic Labour Party founded in April 1940 just after Lee’s expulsion. The party attracted many of the more radical and disenchanted Labour members, but more importantly only one of Lee’s sympathisers in Parliament joined him, Bill Barnard.[4]

The Democratic Labour Party contested the 1943 election though it performed poorly with both Lee and Barnard losing their seats. With no parliamentary presence the party vanished into the political oblivion.[1] Gaining 4.3% of the vote, the Democratic Labour Party did fulfil its one expectation of splitting the Labour vote. This allowed the opposition National Party to gain 9 seats, though Labour still remained in office.

Notes

References

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/11/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.