"“Great Britain has recently experienced one of the greatest political revolutions she has ever known. The conservative party, with Mr. Balfour, one of the ablest of modern scholars, at its head, and with Mr. Joseph Chamberlain, a powerful orator and a forceful political leader, as its most conspicuous champion, had won a sweeping victory after the Boer war, and this victory, following a long lease of power, led the Conservatives to believe themselves invincible. They assumed, as parties made confident by success often do, that they are indispensable to the nation and paid but little attention to the warnings and threats of the Liberals. One mistake after another, however, alienated the voters and the special elections two years ago began to show a falling off in the Conservative strength, and when the general election was held last fall the Liberals rolled up a majority of something like two hundred in the House of Commons. A new ministry was formed from among the ablest men of the party — a ministry of radical and progressive men seldom equaled in moral purpose and intellectual strength.""
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Lawyers from IllinoisPoliticians from IllinoisUnited States presidential candidates, 1920United States presidential candidates, 1912United States presidential candidates, 1908
Original Language: English
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The Old World and its Ways By Bryan, William Jennings (1904), P.435: This excerpt from the aforementioned study is Bryan's reflection on the coming to power of the Liberal government, 1905–1915 in the United Kingdom following the UK General Election of 1904.
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/William_Jennings_Bryan
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William Jennings Bryan
William Jennings Bryan (19 March 1860 – 26 July 1925) was an American lawyer, statesman, and politician. He was a three-time Democratic Party nominee for President of the United States, and famously supported Tennessee's Butler Act against the teaching of evolution at the Scopes Trial of 1925.
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