Reginald McKenna

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13% levy on luxury imports in order to fund the war effort. At first this excluded commercial vehicles, which were needed for war transportation. The tax, which became known as the "McKenna Duties", was intended to be temporary but lasted for 41 years until it was finally axed in 1956. It was briefly waived between August 1924 and June 1925, and then extended on 1 May 1926 to cover commercial vehicles.

Fiscal relations and Lloyd George

The April 1916 budget saw further large rises in income and excess profit taxes, at a time when prices of basic food commodities were rising. Sales taxes were extended to rail tickets, mineral water, cider and perry, and entertainments. The government pledged that if they issued War Loan at the even higher interest (as they did with the 5% issue of 1917), holders of the 4.5% bonds might also convert to the new rate. His predecessor David Lloyd George criticised McKenna in his memoirs for increasing the interest rate from 3.5% on the 1914 War Loan at a time when investors had few alternatives and might even have had their capital "conscripted" by the government. Not only did the change ultimately increase the nation's interest payments by £100 million/year but it meant rates were higher throughout the economy during the post-war depression. [31] Compared with France, the British government relied more on short-term financing in the form of treasury bills and exchequer bonds during World War I; Treasury bills provided the bulk of British government funds in 1916. [32] McKenna fell out with Lord Cunliffe, Governor of the Bank of England. Furthermore, he tried to sequestrate the assets of the US Prudential Assurance Company to pay for American war materiel purchases.

An opponent of Lloyd George, [33] McKenna was critical of the Prime Minister's political approach, telling Conservative politician Arthur Balfour that "you disagree with us, but you can understand our principles. Lloyd George doesn't understand them and we can't make him". [34] But unlike McKenna, Lloyd George had no problem with relations with Cunliffe.

McKenna nevertheless saw the state as having an important role in society, a sentiment that he shared with Asquith. As noted by his biographer and nephew, Stephen McKenna,

Without trying to define the whole duty of Liberal man, Asquith and McKenna were at one in seeing that if certain services were not undertaken by the state, they would not be undertaken at all. Old age pensions were a case in point. They had not been dangled as an electioneering bait; Asquith made no appeal to sentiment or emotion when the Cabinet committee of investigation was set up, but from their first days together at the Treasury he and McKenna had agreed that, if the money could be found, this was a matter on which a beginning must be made forthwith. [35]

Conscription

The issue of enforced service in the armed forces was controversial in Britain. The Conservatives were almost entirely in favour, but the Liberals were split, with Asquithians largely opposed on libertarian grounds, whilst Lloyd George united with the Tories in what he declared to be a vital national interest. Sir John Simon, Liberal Home Secretary and an ally of McKenna, resigned over the conscription of bachelors in January 1916. As Chancellor of Exchequer McKenna objected to the conscription of married men in May 1916 on purely economic grounds, arguing that it would 'deplete' Britain's war industries. McKenna knew that for Asquith to remain in office he had to move towards conscription, whether he liked it or not; if he did not, the Tories would topple the government. [36]

At a decisive meeting on 4 December 1916 McKenna tried to persuade Asquith to sack Lloyd George to save the government. McKenna retired into opposition upon the fall of Asquith at the end of 1916.

Chairman of the Midland Bank

McKenna's seat of North Monmouthshire was abolished by boundary changes so at the 1918 general election he stood and was defeated for the new seat of Pontypool, covering much of the same area. He became a non-executive member of the board of the Midland Bank at the invitation of the chairman, Liberal MP Sir Edward Holden. Before Holden died in 1919, McKenna had sat in his office every day to observe the activities of a chairman. An elaborate coda was drafted to allow the bank's directors to determine whether he should resign his Pontypool seat where he was presently the Liberal candidate (his previous seat of North Monmouthshire had disappeared in boundary changes). But the situation did not arise as he was not elected in 1922. The new Prime Minister Bonar Law hoped to persuade him to come out of retirement and serve once again at the Exchequer in a Conservative Cabinet, but he refused, and remained in private life. [37] His refusal was partly because he wanted to promote an alliance between Bonar Law and Asquith, who was still official leader of the Liberal Party. [38] The following year Bonar Law's successor Stanley Baldwin repeated the request and McKenna was more agreeable, but again declined. [37]

McKenna used his status as chairman of one of the big five British banks to argue that monetary policy could be used to achieve domestic macroeconomic objectives. At the Chamberlain-Bradbury committee he questioned whether a return to the gold standard was desirable. John Maynard Keynes was the only other witness to do so, although others proposed a delayed return. [39]

Possible return to government

Time Cover, 3 Mar 1924 TIMEMagazine3Mar1924.jpg
Time Cover, 3 Mar 1924

According to Lord Birkenhead, Lloyd George's Liberals were of poor intellect, with no great leaders to take the government onwards. McKenna was certainly a technocrat but did not want to be Prime Minister although he might conceivably have been offered the post. In reality, the Conservatives wanted one of their own. However, he wished to enter Parliament in July 1923 as MP for the City of London, and neither of the incumbent MPs would agree to vacate in order to make room. As a result, McKenna declined, as he had no wish to vacate the bank. McKenna continued to write economic reports for Whitehall and Westminster, but by August 1923, his political career had come to an end.

The lasting impression was one of the pin-striped merchant banker, a model of precision but not a clubbable leader of men; his absence from London society and Brooks's seemed to imply retirement. [40] However, his financial reputation was such as to prompt Stanley Baldwin to demand his return to government in the 1930s. As late as 1939, it was proposed that he should be brought back to replace Liberal National Chancellor Sir John Simon. McKenna was the last of the Asquithians to die, in 1943. [41]

Family

McKenna was married in 1908 to Pamela Jekyll (who died November 1943), younger daughter of Sir Herbert Jekyll (brother of landscape gardener Gertrude Jekyll) and his wife Dame Agnes Jekyll, née Graham. [1] They had two sons – Michael (died 1931) and David, who married Lady Cecilia Elizabeth Keppel (12 April 1910 – 16 June 2003), a daughter of Walter Keppel, 9th Earl of Albemarle in 1934. McKenna was a talented financier, and a champion bridge player in his free time. In royal company at Balmoral McKenna played golf. [42] [ incomplete short citation ]

Reginald McKenna died in London on 6 September 1943, and was buried at St Andrew's Church in Mells, Somerset. His wife died two months later, and is buried beside him. McKenna was a regular client of Sir Edwin Lutyens who designed the Midland Bank headquarters in Poultry, London, and several branches. Pamela McKenna was a high society hostess whose dinner parties charmed Asquith at their Lutyens-built townhouse, Mulberry House in Smith Square. Lutyens the unofficial imperial-government architect built several homes for McKenna, and the political classes, as well as his grave. [43] Lutyens was commissioned to build Mulberry House, 36 Smith Square in 1911, [44] followed by Park House in Mells Park, Somerset, built in 1925. [45] The owners of Mells Park were Sir John Horner and his wife Frances, née Graham, who was Agnes Jekyll's sister, [46] and they agreed to let the park to McKenna for a nominal rent, on the understanding that he would rebuild the house. [47] Lutyens built a final house for McKenna at Halnaker Park, in Halnaker, Sussex, [48] in 1938. [49] Lutyens designed the McKenna family tomb in St Andrew's Church, Mells, in 1932. [50]

His nephew Stephen McKenna was a popular novelist who published a biography of his uncle in 1948.

Publications

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Cregier, D. M. "McKenna, Reginald". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/34744.(Subscription, Wikipedia Library access or UK public library membership required.)
  2. McKenna (1948)
  3. Jenkins (1998) , pp. 158–206
  4. "McKenna, Reginald (MKN882R)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  5. "R C Lehmann "The Complete Oarsman"". Archived from the original on 30 September 2011. Retrieved 16 March 2010.
  6. on 17 November 1900, in conversation with Thomas Wemyss Reid, in McKinstry, L. (2005) Rosebery, page 425.
  7. Foden, Frank (1970). Philip Magnus: Victorian Educational Pioneer. Vallentine Mitchell. p. 217. ISBN   0853030448.
  8. Carr, Wilfred; Hartnett, Anthony (1996). ""Secondary Education for All"". Education and the Struggle for Democracy: The Politics of Educational Ideas. Buckingham: Open University Press. pp. 96–97. ISBN   0335195210.
  9. Reynolds, E. E.; Brasher, N. H. (1966). "Liberals in Power". Britain in the Twentieth Century 1900-1964. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 32.
  10. Hobhouse (1977) , pp. 75–77
  11. 1 2 Owen (2014), p. 127.
  12. Owen (2014), p. 98.
  13. 1 2 Owen (2014), p. 121.
  14. Owen (2014), pp. 115, 121.
  15. Jenkins (1998), pp. 151–158.
  16. Tanner, Duncan (2002). "Ideas and politics, 1906-1914". Political Change and the Labour Party 1900-1918 (First paperback ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p.  60. ISBN   0521530539.
  17. Hobhouse (1977) , p. 113
  18. Hobhouse (1977) , p. 116
  19. Hobhouse (1977) , p. 117
  20. Hobhouse (1977) , pp. 133–134
  21. Hobhouse (1977) , pp. 152–153
  22. Hobhouse (1977) , pp. 159–160
  23. Cabinet Discussions, 1 August 1914
  24. Owen (2014) , p. 205
  25. Hobhouse (1977) , pp. 179–181
  26. Hobhouse (1977) , p. 204
  27. Hobhouse (1977) , p. 226
  28. Hobhouse (1977) , pp. 238–239
  29. Jenkins (1998) , p. 197
  30. 1 2 Jenkins (1998) , p. 199
  31. Lloyd George, David (1938). War Memoirs Volume I. London: Odhams Press. pp.  73–4.
  32. Horn (2002) , p. 82
  33. Douglas, Roy (2005). "Politics in Chaos". Liberals: A History of the Liberal and Liberal Democrat Parties. Hambledon Continuum. p. 197. ISBN   1852853530.
  34. Sykes, Alan (2014). "Welfare, Finance and Freedom". The Rise and Fall of British Liberalism: 1776-1988. Routledge. p. 156. ISBN   978-0582060579.
  35. McKenna 1948, p. 46.
  36. Jenkins (1998) , pp. 102–103
  37. 1 2 Jenkins (1998) , pp. 203–204
  38. Jenkins (1964) , p. 495
  39. Skidelsky, Robert (15 February 1998). "The First 100 Years: A policy that crippled: The Gold Standard debate". robertskidelsky.com. Retrieved 30 September 2019.
  40. Jenkins (1998) , pp. 205–206
  41. Jenkins (1998) , p. 389
  42. Haig, Diaries, p.285-6
  43. Jenkins (1998) , pp. 192–193
  44. Brown (1996) , p. 133
  45. Historic England. "Mells Park (1001150)". National Heritage List for England . Retrieved 4 November 2014.
  46. Brown (1996) , pp. 108–109
  47. Brown (1996) , pp. 218–219
  48. Brown (1996) , p. 226
  49. Historic England. "Halnaker Park (1026406)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 4 November 2014.
  50. Historic England. "Chest tomb of McKenna family (1345270)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 4 November 2014.

Bibliography

Reginald McKenna
Reginald McKenna photo.jpg
Chancellor of the Exchequer
In office
27 May 1915 10 December 1916
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for North Monmouthshire
18951918
Constituency abolished
Political offices
Preceded by Financial Secretary to the Treasury
1905–1907
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the Board of Education
1907–1908
Succeeded by
Preceded by First Lord of the Admiralty
1908–1911
Succeeded by
Preceded by Home Secretary
1911–1915
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chancellor of the Exchequer
1915–1916
Succeeded by
Awards and achievements
Preceded by Cover of Time Magazine
3 March 1924
Succeeded by