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=== Russian delegation === [[File:Batallón-muerte-rusia--insiderussianrev00dorrrich.png|thumb|left|[[Maria Bochkareva]] and Pankhurst with women of the [[Women's Battalion of Death]], 1917]] Pankhurst visited North America in 1916 together with the former Secretary of State for Serbia, [[Čedomilj Mijatović]], whose nation had been at the centre of fighting at the start of the war. They toured the United States and Canada, raising money and urging the [[Federal government of the United States|US government]] to support Britain and its Canadian and other allies. Two years later, after the US entered the war, Pankhurst returned to the United States, encouraging suffragettes there – who had not suspended their militancy – to support the war effort by sidelining activities related to the vote. She also spoke about her fears of communist insurgency, which she considered a grave threat to Russian democracy.<ref>Bartley, pp. 202–206; Purvis 2002, pp. 284–286.</ref> By June 1917 the [[Russian Revolution (1917)|Russian Revolution]] had strengthened the [[Bolshevik]]s, who urged an end to the war. Pankhurst's translated autobiography had been read widely in Russia, and she saw an opportunity to put pressure on the [[Russians|Russian people]]. She hoped to convince them not to accept Germany's conditions for peace, which she saw as a potential defeat for Britain and Russia. UK Prime Minister [[David Lloyd George]] agreed to sponsor her trip to Russia, which she took in June. She told one crowd: "I came to Petrograd with a prayer from the English nation to the Russian nation, that you may continue the war on which depends the face of civilisation and freedom."<ref>Quoted in Purvis 2002, p. 295.</ref> Press response was divided between left and right wings; the former depicted her as a tool of capitalism, while the latter praised her devout patriotism.<ref>Purvis 2002, pp. 292–295; Bartley, pp. 200–201.</ref> In August she met with [[Alexander Kerensky]], the Russian Prime Minister. Although she had been active with the socialist-leaning ILP in years past, Pankhurst had begun to see leftist politics as disagreeable, an attitude which intensified while she was in Russia. The meeting was uncomfortable for both parties; he felt that she was unable to appreciate the [[class struggle|class-based conflict]] driving Russian policy at the time. He concluded by telling her that English women had nothing to teach women in Russia. She later told the ''New York Times'' that Kerensky was the "biggest fraud of modern times" and that his government could "destroy civilisation."<ref>Quoted in Bartley, p. 201; Purvis 2002, pp. 297–299.</ref>
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