The Lost Prime Minister
By (Author) Prof David Nicholls
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hambledon Continuum
1st July 1995
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Biography: historical, political and military
European history
Centrist democratic ideologies
941.081092
Hardback
320
300g
Sir Charles Dilke's claim to a leading place in the pantheon of Victorian radicalism, with Cobden, Bright and Chamberlain, has been overshadowed by the sensational divorce case in 1886 that ruined his career. Yet his political abilities were great and his career a most remarkable one. He was regarded by many of his contemporaries as a likely successor to Gladstone and a probable future Prime Minister. It can be argued that his political eclipse was a crucial contributing factor to the Liberal Party's failure to provide a viable alternative to the rise of the Labour Party.
"Highly competent and highly readable." --Roy Jenkins