| Description | In her reply to Picton-Turberville, Elizabeth Taylor Cadbury writes that two of the Labour Party's candidates had refused to stand at the 1923 General Election because they did not wish to oppose her. Responding to Picton-Turbeville's comments about the Labour Party, Taylor Cadbury writes that the most 'powerful part' of the Labour Party in Kings Norton was the 'extreme left', offering a number of remarks about the political division in Kings Norton and the methods employed by the Labour Party in their 1923 campaign.
Writing about her own experience, Taylor Cadbury suggests that she had 'not taken really much part in local politics', adding that she had 'only agreed to stand just at the last moment'. She also refers to the 'tremendously enthusiastic meeting' which the Liberal Association had held at the beginning of the year, at which she had delivered an address. |