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should be given support, along with any candidates endorsed by the TUC Parliamentary
Committee. Maddison was a vocal part of the minority who opposed this relationship. He argued that group members should be free to support any Liberal candidates who faced Labour Party opposition, pointing out on class grounds that the proposal, in this instance, would force the group to back a middle-class candidate endorsed by the Labour Party over a working-class candidate endorsed by his Liberal Association. Even though he was returned at Burnley in 1906, Maddison was on the look out to switch constituencies for the 1910 election. Liberal Chief Whip Jack Pease was keen to find a Liberal to run against the Labour Party's Ramsay MacDonald at Leicester and Maddison's candidacy was approved by Prime Minister Asquith. However, Maddison chose to defend his seat at Burnley. He lost this seat in
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130:. Maddison was not a man of independent financial means and was seeking to represent working class constituencies which were not in a position to bank roll a candidate at election time. From 1897 onwards, he was reliant upon the Liberal Party Chief to arrange for the payment of his election expenses.
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in 1907 described him as a
Radical, in favour of Old Age Pensions, Taxation of Land Values and Reform of the House of Lords. In June 1908 the Lib-Lab trade union group of MPs debated their relationship with the Labour Party at future elections. It was proposed that sitting members of both groups
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in 1886. In 1887, he became the first working class member of Hull
Corporation. He took a post in the Labour Department of the Board of Trade, and became a labour journalist.
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http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-47375
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Currents of
Radicalism: Popular Radicalism, Organised Labour, and Party Politics in Britain
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Members of the
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212:(1 December 2007). Maddison, Fred, (1856β12 March 1937).
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The
History of the City of Sheffield: Volume I: Politics
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candidate for
Parliament on several occasions, first in
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Maddison at the Oxford
Dictionary of National Biography
122:. A major factor in his defeat was his support for the
67:, Maddison studied at Adelaide Street Wesleyan School,
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He never returned to
Parliament, despite standing at
47:JP (17 August 1856 β 12 March 1937) was a British
515:Liberal Party (UK) MPs for English constituencies
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236:Who's Who of British MPs: Volume II, 1886β1918
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316:contributions in Parliament by Fred Maddison
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246:Eugenio F. Biagini and Alastair J. Reid,
530:Typographical Association-sponsored MPs
525:Presidents of the Trades Union Congress
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339:President of the Trades Union Congress
216:. Ed. Retrieved 19 April 2019, from
85:President of the Trades Union Congress
83:and soon rose in prominence, becoming
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480:Trade unionists from Lincolnshire
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379:Parliament of the United Kingdom
187:International Arbitration League
19:For the English footballer, see
21:Frederick Maddison (footballer)
16:British politician (1856β1937)
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286:Dod's Parliamentary Companion
143:Dod's Parliamentary Companion
214:Who's Who & Who Was Who
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45:Frederick Maddison
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449:Succeeded by
412:Succeeded by
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361:President of the
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500:UK MPs 1895β1900
452:Gerald Arbuthnot
425:William Mitchell
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189:. He was a
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197:References
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155:Darlington
59:Background
110:(MP) for
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63:Born in
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75:Career
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124:Boers
114:at a
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102:and
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133:In
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