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THE WOMEN'S SUFFRAGE MOVEMENT AMONG TRADE UNIONISTS


BY EVA GORE-BOOTH


THE WOMEN'S SUFFRAGE MOVEMENT AMONG TRADE UNIONISTS

Lancashire and Cheshire Women Textile and other Workers Representation Committee.

July, 1904.

Fellow Workers.—During the last few years the need of political power for the defence of the workers has been felt by every section of the labour world. Among the men the growing sense of the importance of this question has resulted in the formation of the Labour Representation Committee with the object of gaining direct Parliamentary Representation for the already enfranchised working men. Meanwhile the position of the unenfranchised working women, who are by their voteless condition shut out from all political influence, is becoming daily more precarious. They cannot hope to hold their own in industrial matters, where their interests may clash with those of their enfranchised fellow- workers or employers.

The one all-absorbing and vital political question for labouring women is to force an entrance into the ranks of responsible citizens, in whose hands lie the solution of the problems which are at present convulsing the industrial world.

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