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===Deputy Labour Leader=== The [[1931 United Kingdom general election|general election held in October 1931]] proved disastrous for the Labour Party, which lost over 200 seats, returning only 52 MPs to Parliament. The vast majority of the party's senior figures, including the Leader [[Arthur Henderson]], lost their seats. Attlee, however, narrowly retained his Limehouse seat, with his majority being slashed from 7,288 to just 551. He was one of only three Labour MPs who had experience of government to retain their seats, along with [[George Lansbury]] and [[Stafford Cripps]]. Accordingly, Lansbury was elected Leader unopposed, with Attlee as his deputy.{{sfn|Beckett|1998|pp=104β105}} Most of the remaining Labour MPs after 1931 were elderly trade-union officials who could not contribute much to debates; Lansbury was in his 70s, and Stafford Cripps β another main figure of the Labour [[front-bench]] who had entered Parliament in January 1931 β lacked parliamentary experience. As one of the most capable and experienced of the remaining Labour MPs, Attlee therefore shouldered a lot of the burden of providing an opposition to the [[National Government (1931β1935)|National Government in the years 1931 to 1935]]; during this time he had to extend his knowledge of subjects which he had not studied in any depth before (such as finance and foreign affairs) in order to provide an effective opposition to the government.{{sfn|Beckett|1998|pp= 108β109}} Attlee effectively served as Labour's acting-leader for nine months from December 1933, after Lansbury fractured his thigh in an accident; this raised Attlee's public profile considerably. It was during this period, however, that personal financial problems almost forced Attlee to quit politics altogether. His wife had become ill, and at that time there was no separate salary for the [[Leader of the Opposition (UK)|Leader of the Opposition]]. On the verge of resigning from Parliament, he was persuaded to stay by Stafford Cripps, a wealthy socialist, who agreed to make a donation to party funds to pay him an additional salary until Lansbury could take over again.{{sfn|Beckett|1998|pp=112β113}} During 1932β33 Attlee flirted with, and then drew back from radicalism β influenced by Stafford Cripps, who was then on the radical wing of the party. He was briefly a member of the [[Socialist League (UK, 1932)|Socialist League]], which had been formed by former [[Independent Labour Party]] (ILP) members who opposed the ILP's disaffiliation from the main Labour Party in 1932. At one point he agreed with the proposition put forward by Cripps that gradual reform was inadequate and that a socialist government would have to pass an emergency powers act, allowing it to rule by decree to overcome any opposition by vested interests until it was safe to restore democracy. He admired [[Oliver Cromwell]]'s strong-armed rule and use of major generals to control England. After looking more closely at [[Hitler]], [[Mussolini]], [[Stalin]], and even his former colleague Oswald Mosley (leader of the new [[British Union of Fascists|blackshirt fascist movement]] in Britain), Attlee retreated from radicalism, distanced himself from the League, and argued instead that the Labour Party must adhere to constitutional methods and stand forthright for democracy and against [[totalitarianism]] either of the left or of the right. He always supported the [[Monarchy of the United Kingdom|crown]], and as Prime Minister was close to King [[George VI|George VI]].<ref>{{cite magazine |last= Attlee |first= Clement |date= 18 February 1952 |title= Tribute from Labor's Attlee to George and the monarchy |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=dFQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA30 |magazine= [[Life (magazine)|Life]] |volume= 32 |number= 7 |quote= It was my privilege for six years to serve King George as First Minister of the Crown and for five years during the war as Deputy Prime Minister. The longer I served him the greater was my respect and admiration for him. I can never forget his kindness and consideration to me. He had a great sense of duty, high courage, good judgment and warm human sympathy. He was in the fullest sense of the term a good man. |access-date= 9 November 2020 |archive-date= 24 February 2024 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20240224170040/https://books.google.com/books?id=dFQEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA30#v=onepage&q&f=false |url-status= live }}</ref>{{sfn|Bew|2017|pages= 23, 173β188, 208}}
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