This paper examines how history enlightens us that Churchill was excluded from office for a decade between 1929 and 1939
due to the fact that many
political party members distrusted him and how nevertheless, Winston Churchill
politically was just as effective (at that period in time) out of office as he would have been in it. It looks at how the 1930s generated many doubts over Churchill's political career and attempts to reveal why Churchill's political rivals buried him, why his enemies cut him off and why he was politically isolated out of money and power and was compelled to switch allegiances to other political parties for his own beneficial purposes. It also incorporates evidence that emphasises that it was Churchill's anxieties of attaining the British Empire at all costs (imperialism of India) and of initiating the belief that Hitler wasn't to be trusted, that British rearmament was necessary and that appeasement with the Germans was dishonourable.