Eva and Esther founded the Barmaids’ Political Defence League to advocate for women who simply wanted to keep their source of income.
Winston Churchill was Member of Parliament for Northwest Manchester, and had recently been appointed to a Cabinet position. The law at the time required him to resign and then campaign for re-election to that same MP seat. This by-election was considered a formality, as usually the sitting MP was re-elected without issue. But Eva, Esther, and the Barmaids’ League backed Churchill’s opponent in loud and dramatic fashion—aided by wild Constance.
Sonja recounted the exciting events in In Defence of Barmaids. Eva “organized a striking coach, drawn by four white horses, to be driven around Manchester with Markievicz at the whip. When the coach stopped, Gore-Booth and Markievicz took to the roof of the carriage and made rousing speeches. Markievicz was heckled by a man in the crowd with the inevitable male query, ‘Can you cook a dinner?’ ‘Certainly,’ she replied, cracking her whip. ‘Can you drive a coach-and-four?”
Winston Churchill was defeated by 529 votes. Months later, the Barmaids’ League won their larger campaign as well and the ban was struck down.
In 1914, as the tensions grew that would lead to World War I, Eva, a devoted pacifist, sought to foster unity as others took up arms. She and Esther joined 101 other suffragists in signing the Open Christmas Letter, a missive penned by Emily Hobhouse and addressed “To the Women of Germany and Austria.” It was published December 1914 in Jus Suffragii, the International Women Suffrage Alliance journal. The letter read, in part, “…while technically at enmity in obedience to our rulers, we own allegiance to that higher law which bids us live at peace with all men.” (The letter received a published response in Spring 1915 and was part of a large letter-writing campaign between suffragists throughout Europe during the war.)
“I question whether ever war has ever been fought for a good cause, though the soldiers who fought it may have been deluded into thinking so,” Eva wrote in an untitled, undated manuscript. “One sometimes thinks that the whole art of party politics is to dress shop windows with beautiful motives and noble aims so as to take in the public and keep them quiet while they are carrying out wholesale robberies and murders in the safe seclusion of Government Offices and Departments. ... The only safety for the public is to insist that methods should be as noble as motives.”
As 1916 dawned and the war entered its second year, Prime Minister H.H. Asquith announced a draft: All unlisted men between 18 and 41 would be conscripted into military service. Eva penned articles to be published in the Manchester Guardian, giving the argument for objection. “Objectors whose claims were accepted would be excused from active service, either unconditionally, or on a conditional basis, in which case they would be expected to perform other services of ‘national importance,’” Andrew wrote. “Many so-called ‘absolutists,’ however, refused to serve in any capacity—a refusal that put them at risk of long and arduous prison terms, or even a death sentence.”
Despite her poor health, Eva traveled to attend the hearings of the conscientious objectors to lend support and report the proceedings. She wrote of the “great cleavage of thought” between “People who believe that humanity exists for the sake of states and governments [and] ...People that believe that government and state exist for the sake of humanity.” Of that former group, she wrote: