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The Politics of Democracy: the English Reform Act of 1867

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 January 2014

Extract

The Reform Act of 1867 was one of the decisive events, perhaps the decisive event, in modern English history. It was this act that transformed England into a democracy and made democracy not only a respectable form of government (the United States was never quite respectable), but also, it was soon taken for granted, the only natural and proper form of government. To be sure, the act had to be supplemented by others, household suffrage in the boroughs, as provided by the Act of 1867, being several steps removed from universal suffrage. But once this first step was made, no one seriously doubted that the others would follow. The Act of 1867, perhaps more than that of 1832, deserves the title of the Great Reform Bill. For while 1832 had no necessary aftermath in 1867, 1867 did have a necessary aftermath in 1884, 1918, 1928 — the later acts that genuinely universalized the suffrage, not only for Britain but for all those countries that took Britain to be the model of a parliamentary government.

It is all the more bewildering, therefore, to inquire into the history of this act and to find it so meandering, purposeless, fortuitous, so full of what Herbert Butterfield has called “the most useless things in the world” — useless, that is, if one expects meaning or sense in history. John Morley, trying to make sense of an affair that struck him as “one of the most curious in our parliamentary history,” wistfully concluded: “When we have made full allowance for blunder, caprice, chance, folly, craft, still reason and the nature of things have a share.”

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © North American Conference of British Studies 1966

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References

1. Butterfield, Herbert, The Whig Interpretation of History (London, 1959), p. 15Google Scholar.

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3. ibid., II, 227.

4. Ibid.

5. Trevelyan, G. M., “The Great Days of Reform,” in The Making of English History, ed. Schuyler, R. L. and Ausubel, H. (New York, 1952), p. 494Google Scholar.

6. Trevelyan, G. M., British History in the Nineteenth Century (London, 1922), p. 347Google Scholar. (Recently reissued as a Pelican paperback, this book still has considerable influence.) See also Gillespie, Frances E., Labor and Politics in England, 1850-67 (Durham, N.C., 1927), p. 289Google Scholar: “The Act of 1867 was the culmination of a development that had been continuous since the agitation for the first reform bill. It was the inevitable result of policies forced upon all classes in the state by the facts of the social and political world.”

7. The chief dissenters from the “Whig interpretation of history” are: Herrick, Francis H., “The Reform Bill of 1867 and the British Party System,” Pacific Hist. Rev., III (1934), 216–33CrossRefGoogle Scholar, and The Second Reform Movement in Britain,” J.H.I., IX (1948), 174–92Google Scholar; Park, Joseph H., The English Reform Bill of 1867 (New York, 1920)Google Scholar; Dickinson, G. Lowes, The Development of Parliament during the Nineteenth Century (London, 1895)Google Scholar; and Briggs, Asa, Victorian People (London, 1954)Google Scholar, and The Age of Improvement (London, 1959)Google Scholar. These writers, of course, differ among themselves and from the present analysis. The most notable departure from the Whig interpretation, unfortunately appearing too late to be utilized in this essay, is Beer, Samuel H.'s British Politics in the Collectivist Age (New York, 1966)Google Scholar. Without implicating Professor Beer in my own interpretation of 1867, I should like to express my gratification at finding myself in general accord with what I regard as one of the most distinguished works of recent years.

The neo-Marxist interpretation has more in common with the Whig interpretation than might be thought, both being deterministic in the same sense (although in the one case the ruling classes are presumed to have responded to the “social facts” and “needs of the new era” with a “wise alacrity,” and in the other to have responded to those facts and needs reluctantly and belatedly, as a result of working-class pressure and the threat of violence). The most explicit neo-Marxist analysis is Harrison, Royden's “The Tenth April of Spencer Walpole: the Problem of Revolution in Relation to Reform, 1865-67,” in Before the Socialists (London, 1965)Google Scholar. Harrison maintains that in 1867 the working class “had attained precisely that level of development at which it was safe to concede its enfranchisement and dangerous to withhold it,” that “a Reform Act had become essential,” that “the Tory Statesmen were bowing to a process which it was beyond their power to control.” ibid., pp. 133, 135.

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12. Fortnightly Review, IV (1866), 274;Google ScholarBagehot, , English Constitution, p. 144Google Scholar.

13. The conventional thesis about the influence of the Civil War is documented in Pelling, Henry, America and the British Left (New York, 1957), pp. 729Google Scholar. But what he succeeds in showing is that both proponents and opponents of reform invoked America to support their prior prejudices and positions — not that they were influenced by America to change their prejudices and positions. Another foreign influence to which Asa Briggs gives much prominence — the visit of Garibaldi to London in April 1864 — is similarly inconclusive. Briggs, , Age of Improvement, pp. 495–96Google Scholar.

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23. It is deceptive to say, as Harrison does: “The Government's measure not only split its own supporters, but divided the League. Beesly, out of regard for Bright, supported the Bill, others followed Ernest Jones in his bitter denunciations of it.” Harrison, , Before the Socialists, p. 82Google Scholar. From this statement one might deduce that the split in the government ranks came from the fact that the bill was insufficiently radical — whereas there was hot a single defection on this account; or that the League was more or less evenly “divided” between those supporting and those opposing the bill — whereas the supporters were in the overwhelming majority and represented the official position of the League.

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27. The Reform League itself had had its origin, in 1864, in a similar episode involving the right of assembly. The initial move for its formation came immediately after the police had broken up a meeting protesting against the curtailment of Garibaldi's visit. And from the first the right of assembly was one of its principal demands.

28. The desperation of historians intent upon finding evidence of popular revolutionary sentiment may be seen in Harrison's attempt to make a major cause out of a still more minor incident: the meeting at Hyde Park on May 6, 1867. The whole of his essay is focussed on this one episode, which, as the title suggests, is held to be analogous to April 10, 1848, when the Chartist petition was presented to Parliament, and which, like that earlier date, is held to epitomize the threat of revolution. But just as one may doubt that April 10 was “one of the most famous days in the history of the nineteenth century,” so one may doubt the importance of May 6. The Government's “surrender of 6 May,” it is said, “served as harbinger and analogue” to its “surrender on Reform.” But its “surrender” on 6 May was nothing more momentous than a tactful retreat from an injudicious position; having earlier prohibited the meeting, it then tacitly permitted it — and made its change of mind known at least two days before the meeting was held. And the “surrender” on reform which supposedly followed the “surrender” of 6 May had in fact been decided upon by the Government long before. Lacking even the trampled flower beds and broken railings of the preceding July 22, May 6, 1867, has still less claim to demonstrating the importance of “mass agitation” in the passage of the Reform Act. Harrison, , Before the Socialists, pp. 78, 106, 101Google Scholar.

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55. Monypenny, and Buckle, , Disraeli, II, 279.Google Scholar

56. Cox, , Whig and Tory Administration, pp. 5051Google Scholar.

57. 3 Hansard 99: 951 (June 20, 1848)Google Scholar.

58. Cox, , Whig and Tory Administration, p. 57Google Scholar. Cox mistakenly used the figure of £6 instead of £7 in describing the Liberal bill — a telling slip. (See below p. 118.)

59. 3 Hansard 188: 1605 (July 15, 1867)Google Scholar.

60. Earl of Malmesbury, Memoirs of an Ex-Minister (London, 1884), II, 369Google Scholar.

61. 3 Hansard 188: 1603 (July 15, 1867)Google Scholar.

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63. Ostrogorski, M., Democracy and the Organization of Political Parties, ed. Lipset, S. M. (New York, 1964), I, 124Google Scholar, quoting the Times, Apr. 18, 1883.

64. 3 Hansard 182: 40 (Mar. 12, 1866)Google Scholar; ibid. 182: 1137 (Apr. 12, 1866).

65. Monypenny, and Buckle, , Disraeli, II, 289.Google Scholar

66. Morley, , Gladstone, II, 226, 223.Google Scholar

67. Malmesbury, Memoirs, II, 371Google Scholar.

68. Monypenny, and Buckle, , Disraeli, I, 1580.Google Scholar

69. See above, p. 109.

70. 3 Hansard 182: 53 (Mar. 12, 1866)Google Scholar.

71. Jones, Wilbur D., Lord Derby and Victorian Conservatism (Athens, Ga., 1956), p. 285Google Scholar.

72. Briggs, , Age of Improvement, p. 511Google Scholar. See also Harrison, , Before the Socialists, p. 115Google Scholar: “An examination of the papers of Tory Cabinet ministers reveals that Gladstone's opponents were in dire need of information and were really un-certain about the make-up of the class with which they had to deal.”

73. See above, p. 97.

74. See quotation below, n. 77.

75. E.g., Tholfsen, Trygve R., “The Transition to Democracy in Victorian England,” International Review of Social History, VI (1961), 226–48CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Here the Reform Act appears as a demonstration of the “Liberal Victorian faith” — a “belief in progress through rational reform” and the “liberal confidence in class harmony” — the faith that, after 1867, kept the working class loyal to the Liberal Party and that inspired the philosophy of Lib-Labism. Nowhere, in this account of the “Liberal” faith, is there any mention of the fact that the act was passed by the Conservatives rather than by the Liberals.

76. E.g., Lichtheim, George, Marxism (New York, 1961), pp. 98, 102Google Scholar: “1867 was also the year in which the second Reform Bill gave the vote to the upper layer of the British working class” (my italics); “It was the Tories under Disraeli's skilled leadership who reaped most of the benefits in 1867, when the skilled workers got the vote” (my italics). A more interesting compound of error, inconsistency, and grudging admission may be found in Checkland, S. G., The Rise of Industrial Society in England (London, 1964), p. 369Google Scholar: “Disraeli's Reform Act extended the vote to cover the £10 householders, lodgers paying £10 rent in the towns, and to £12 householders in the counties. Not all were satisfied with what had been gained, but it was a notable advance over 1832. The artisan in the towns was now virtually enfranchised.”

77. Bryce, James, Studies in Contemporary Biography (New York, 1903), p. 14.Google Scholar

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82. Southgate, Donald, The Passing of the Whigs (London, 1962), pp. 318, 320Google Scholar. One may continue to document this attitude indefinitely — e.g., the references to a “Conservative surrender,” as if the Conservatives had reluctantly yielded to Liberal demands. Pelling, , America and the British Left, p. 9Google Scholar; Harrison, , Before the Socialists, p. 106Google Scholar.

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87. In his British History, Trevelyan attached great significance to Blight's lesser cabinet position while failing to mention Lowe's far more important one; and in his biography of Bright, Lowe's position is referred to only in a footnote. See also Christie, O. F., The Transition from Aristocracy (London, 1927), p. 160Google Scholar: “It had become almost impossible to say such things [the venality of the working class …] and survive politically. Lowe was afterwards obliged to look for a seat in a new academic constituency.” Again there is no mention of the fact that he survived so well as to become Chancellor of the Exchequer.

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89. 3 Hansard 182: 2100 (Apr. 26, 1866)Google Scholar.

90. Brodrick, George C., “The Utilitarian Argument against Reform as Stated by Mr. Lowe,” in Essays on Reform (London, 1867), p. 2Google Scholar.

91. Leslie Stephen, “On the Choice of Representatives by Popular Constituencies,” ibid., p. 88.

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93. ibid. 182: 2093 (Apr. 26, 1866).

94. ibid. 182: 2088.

95. ibid. 182: 2103.

96. Ibid. 183: 1650 (May 31, 1866).

97. ibid. 188: 1540 (July 15, 1867).

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99. Trevelyan, , Bright, p. 405Google Scholar. Other contemporaries agreed. In 1870 Bagehot wrote that “in the present cabinet, unless consistent rumor speaks false, his voice has more usually been a Conservative voice than the contrary.” Mr. Bright's Retirement,” Bagehot's Historical Essays, ed. John-Stevas, Norman St. (Garden City, N.Y., 1965), p. 227Google Scholar. A few years later Bagehot found “few more typical Conservatives in the House of Commons than Mr. Bright.” “The Conservative Vein in Mr. Bright,” ibid., p. 229.

100. 3 Hansard 182: 213-14, 224 (Mar. 13, 1866)Google Scholar.

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102. ibid., p. 300.

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104. ibid., p. 160.

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107. Trevelyan, , Bright, p. 375Google Scholar.

108. ibid., p. 373.

109. 3 Hansard 186: 636–37 (Mar. 26, 1867)Google Scholar.

110. ibid. 186: 637.

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115. 3 Hansard 188: 1603-04, 1609–10 (July 15, 1867)Google Scholar.

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117. There is another, and to a certain extent contradictory, thesis that finds significance in the fact that the Conservatives sponsored the Act of 1867 enfranchising the urban working class and the Liberals the Act of 1884 enfranchising the agricultural laborers — each giving away, so to speak, what belonged to the other. But this does not take account of the tendency of the agricultural laborers to vote with their Conservative landlords rather than against them. The facility of constructing such plausible but contradictory theses casts suspicion upon them all.

118. The appendices and index to Southgate, Passing of the Whigs, come closest to a Namierite analysis. But the information is too superficial and fragmentary and too unrelated to questions of public policy to be of much assistance in the present inquiry.

119. See above, p. 120.

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121. Times, May 23, 1867.

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145. See above, p. 122.

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