Winston Churchill is hit by a car and dies in December 1931.
How does this change the lead up to the war and the war itself?
How does this alter the Reich’s chances of victory?
Three questions for you:
1) does the 'arms and the covenant' equivalent movement for rearmament in the late 1930's do better, worse, or the same as the original timeline version, which had Winston supporting it but then he put his foot in his mouth and got distracted by the abdication crisis?
2) depending on the answer to 1) do Britain and France feel strong enough, soon enough, to guarantee Poland's security, post-Czechoslovakia, or do they advise the Poles to cut a deal with Germany?
3) if and when war starts, what effect does not having a coalition government in place as the war proceeds, with regard to communist agitation and strike action in the UK? (Winston formed a coalition government, despite the huge Conservative majority of the time, which got the Labour party on board and presumably helped with industrial relations; I'm not sure any mainstream Conservative grandee would (or indeed even if they wanted to, could) form a coalition.)