The Whigs supported the idea of both parliamentary and social
reform. When they came to power in late 1830, they put parliamentary reform at
the centre of their political agenda and it dominated debate until the Reform
Act was passed in 1832. In addition to parliamentary reform, there was reform of
the local vestries in 1831 and municipal government in 1835.
Reform of parliament in 1832 and of towns and cities, three
years later and important developments in dealing with the poor, factory
conditions and education marked the Whig governments as ‘reforming’
administrations and the 1830s as ‘the decade of reform’. The measures they
introduced began a process of reform that was not completed until the 1870s.
1830 November |
Wellington speaks against the need for parliamentary reform (2 November);
government defeated on a vote (15 November); Wellington resigned the following
day. Whig administration formed under Earl Grey.
|
1831 March
|
First Reform Bill introduced into House of Commons; passes Second Reading but
only by one vote (302 to 302).
|
April
|
Government defeated on an amendment objecting to the reduction in the number
of MPs for England and Wales at the Committee Stage. Parliament
dissolved.
|
June
|
Whigs returned after General Election: the MPs split into 370 pro-reformers,
235 anti-reformers and 53 undecided. Second Reform Bill introduced into
Parliament 24 June.
|
July
|
Second Reading carried 367 to 231.
|
September
|
Third Reading carried by 345 to 236 (22 September).
|
October
|
House of Lords reject the Bill by 41 votes (199 to 158) (8 October);
widespread rioting in Nottingham and Derby (8-10 October) and Bristol (29-31
October) as a result of the rejection of the Bill.
|
December
|
Third Reform Bill introduced into Commons (12 December) and passes its Second
Reading in the Commons before Christmas.
|
1832 January
|
William IV agrees to the creation of peers in order to ensure Reform Acts can
be passed.
|
March
|
Reform Bill passes Third Reading in the Commons by 355 to 239 votes (22
March).
|
April
|
Reform Bill passes Second Reading in the Lords by nine votes (13
April).
|
May
|
Government defeat on Lord Lyndhurst’s motion led to the resignation of
ministers. ‘Days of May’ (9-15 May) when Wellington asked to form an
administration but is unable to do so. The King is compelled to recall Grey and
confirm that peers will be created to ensure the passage of the
Bill.
|
June
|
Reform Bill passes Third Reading in the Lords (106 to 22) and receives Royal
Assent (4 and 7 June)
|
July
|
Scottish Reform Act passed.
|
August
|
Irish Reform Act passed.
|
December
|
General Election under the new franchise: Whigs 483 MPs, Tories
175.
|
The death of George IV and the accession of William IV in early
1830 had two important consequences. There had to be a General Election within
six months of the death of the monarch. This meant that Wellington had to fight
an election at least two years earlier than he expected with his party still
deeply divided over the passage of Catholic Emancipation. George IV’s
long-standing veto on the Whig leader was removed as William IV was prepared for
Earl Grey to become Prime Minister.
When Wellington conceded Catholic Emancipation in 1829, he made
himself very unpopular with his party and with the British people. His problems
were made worse by the outbreak of revolution in France in July 1830[1] and the ‘Swing’ riots in August, both of which raised
the threat of widespread public disorder in Britain. Despite his unpopularity,
Wellington did well in the election and the Tories gained 21 seats.
Parliamentary reform had been an important issue in some constituencies but
concerns about economic conditions, the continuation of the Corn Laws and the
effects of Catholic Emancipation and of the ending of slavery in the British
Empire were also evident.
It was clear when Parliament reassembled in October 1830 that
the question of parliamentary reform could not be ignored but Wellington ruled
this out in a speech he gave on 2 November. This led to the fall of his
administration when he was defeated on a crucial vote of the Civil List (monies
paid to the monarchy) on 15 November. Both the Huskisson Tories and some
ultra-Tories were prepared to vote against their party because of his attitude
to further reform. Wellington no longer had the confidence of the House of
Commons and resigned the following day. The Whigs formed a government making the
introduction of parliamentary reform inevitable. The Whigs long-standing
commitment to reform led to 18 months of frenetic activity inside and outside
Parliament that culminated in the passage of the Reform Acts in mid-1832.
The Reform Act 1832
1. Disfranchising clauses
-
56 rotten or nomination boroughs returning 111 MPs lost their representation.
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30 boroughs with less than 4,000 inhabitants lost one MP each.
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Weymouth and Melcombe Regis gave up 2 of their 4 members.
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143 seats were made available for redistribution.
2. Enfranchising clauses
-
65 seats were awarded to the counties.
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44 seats distributed to 22 large towns including Manchester, Leeds, Birmingham and Sheffield and to new London metropolitan districts.
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21 smaller towns were given one MP each.
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Scotland given 8 extra seats.
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Ireland gains 5 extra seats.
3. The franchise
- In the boroughs, the franchise was given to all householders paying a yearly rent of £10 and, subject to a one year residence qualification, £10 lodgers (if sharing a house and the landlord not in residence).
- In the counties, the franchise was given to 40s freeholders[2]; £10 copyholders[3] and long-lease holders and £50 short-lease holders or tenants-at-will.[4] Borough freeholders could also vote in the counties where they held land if their freehold was between 40s and £10 or if it was over £10 and occupied by a tenant.
- Registration of electors for each constituency on an electoral roll revised annually.
- Those with ‘ancient rights’[5] retained their vote until their death.
- No secret ballot.
The Reform Act redefined who had the right to vote in both
counties and boroughs. The electorate of England and Wales increased by 78 per
cent between 1831 and 1833 rising from 366,250 to 652,777 but this still
represented only five per cent of the population of England and Wales in the
1831 census. Parliamentary seats were redistributed, especially in England,
provided MPs for areas of growing population and economic influence. 56 rotten
boroughs lost both their MPs and 40 smaller boroughs lost one MP. These seats
were then given (or redistributed) to places previously without their own MPs.
While the Acts removed the most obvious defects of the unreformed system, they
did not remove all the inequalities of representation: they did introduce
democracy nor did not give the middle-classes control of the political system.
As Earl Grey,[6] the Whig Prime Minister, observed that the Reform
Acts were essentially ‘aristocratic measures’, which aimed at preserving the
power of the landowner by aligning them with the propertied middle-classes.
Their achievement lay in establishing a political climate in
which questions about reforming the constitution and discussion of new political
ideas were acceptable and no longer considered revolutionary. Radical
working-class opinion was disappointed by the attitude of the Whigs to their
demands but they had not united in their attitude to reform between 1830 and
1832. Some radicals were prepared to accept limited household suffrage and to
work with middle-class reformers; others led by Henry Hunt demanded manhood
suffrage and were unwilling to collaborate. Either way, working-class
aspirations were not met by the Reform Act and it was subsequently seen as the
‘great betrayal’.
Was 1832 an expression of change or continuity? Although
contemporaries thought that the Reform Acts were middle-class measures, the
reality was somewhat different. The urban middle-class were happy to elect MPs
from the landed interest. The composition of the 1833 Parliament was not very
different from the unreformed one. Between 70 and 80 per cent of MPs were still
from the landed interest and no more than a hundred were from the professional
and industrial middle-classes, a number comparable with elections before 1832.
Municipal reform
In July 1833, a Royal Commission was set up to consider the
question of municipal reform. Its report, published in 1835, formed the basis of
the Municipal Corporations Act that extended the principles of the 1832 Reform
Act. Many towns were unincorporated. They had no charter giving them independent
rights and under the control of the local magistrates and paid the county
rate.[7] Corporate towns, so called because they were run by
an elected corporation had charters, many of them dating to the Middle Ages. The
distribution of incorporated and unincorporated towns was an accident of history
rather than a consequence of size or importance. Many of the rapidly growing
cities, like Birmingham, Manchester and Sheffield, were without corporations.
Reform was necessary to take account of changes in population and the move from
a rural-agrarian economy to and urban-industrial one.
There were pressing arguments for reform. Law and order was a
growing problem for both national and local government. Many feared that large
towns were increasingly ungovernable because of their undisciplined populations.
The unreformed corporations tended to be largely Tory and Anglican which, was
unacceptable to the emerging industrial urban elites with their Whig and
Nonconformist sympathies. They believed that reform would allow for a degree of
equity between the economic interests in towns. The corporations were generally
self-electing. For radicals, this meant that urban elites could maintain
themselves in power and exclude others (especially the middle-classes).
Municipal reform was seen as a necessary part of parliamentary reform.
The Royal Commission criticised the inefficiency and corruption
of the existing corporations. The government accepted the its proposals and the
bill quickly passed the Commons. However, it met substantial Tory opposition in
the Lords. Its passage was eased when the Whigs compromised on some of the
contentious issues: aldermen were retained and made up a quarter of a council,
councillors were to have substantial property qualifications and in boroughs
with over 6,000 inhabitants the town was to be divided into wards. The bill
became law in September 1835. Twenty-two new boroughs were incorporated within
twenty years, including Manchester and Birmingham in 1838.
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178 corporations were abolished and replaced by elected councils.
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A uniform household franchise was established by which all occupiers with a three-year residence qualification could vote for the first council and after that annually for one third of the council.
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Each council elected its own mayor and aldermen.
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All debates would be open and accounts publicly audited.
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Corporations could take over the duties of local improvement commissions. Few councils took advantage of this permissive clause.
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Corporations could levy rates.
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Councils must form watch committees and could establish borough police forces.
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The Act laid down procedures by which a town could petition for incorporation.
[1] The July Revolution in France resulted in the
removal of the last Bourbon king, Charles X and his replacement by the more
liberal Louis Philippe.
[2] Freeholders owned their own land.
[3] Copyholders were tenants who had a lease for 20 to 25
years giving them considerable security of tenure.
[4] Tenants-at-will had short-term leases and were
consequently more easily ‘influenced’ by their landlords to vote the way they
wanted with the threat of eviction of tenants did not.
[5] ‘Ancient rights’ applied to those who had the right to
vote under the pre-1832 system.
[6] Charles Grey, 2nd Earl Grey (1764-1845) held office in
1806-1807 but had to wait until 1830 until he became Prime Minister, a position
he held until 1834.
[7] Local government taxes were raised for either specific
purposes (like building a local bridge) or to cover general spending. The county
rate was a general tax.
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