[1] Its president was John Clifford[2] and prominent members included Lloyd George and Keir Hardie.
[3] Against the background of political campaigning for the khaki election of 1900, Stop-The-War distributed millions of posters, cartoons and broadsheets, handing out leaflets to commuters on trains.
The Committee united various Nonconformists who held different views in relation to socialism.
However, the high moral tone of its pronouncements failed to achieve support from the working class, and provoked stronger antagonism than the more rational approach of the South African Conciliation Committee.
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