Parliamentary Reform - The Representation of the People Act 1867 Flashcards

1
Q

What was the pressure to pass the Act - Who died and what was the significance of this?

A

Anti-reform Liberal PM Palmerstone died – new leader Russell, with Gladstone, thought that working-class craftsmen (‘respectable working classes’) deserved the vote

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2
Q

What was the pressure to pass the Act - What happened to the govs around this time?

A

Russell had become PM in 1865 with Gladstone as his Chancellor - they attempted to pass a Lib reform bill that failed due to vehement opposition from the Tories and some Whigs - this led to the Lib gov resign and Lord Derby taking over as PM of a minority Con gov with Disraeli as his Chancellor

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3
Q

What was the pressure to pass the Act - Which groups were formed around this time?

A

In 1864, the Reform Union (middle class) was formed, and later the Reform League (working class) in 1865 – these pressured the Libs for reform

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4
Q

What was the pressure to pass the Act - How did the Cons view the Act?

A

The Cons saw the bill as a way to gain political advantage before the Libs could – Disraeli knew that passing a limited extension would win over Lib MPs and a substantial number of votes

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5
Q

What was the pressure to pass the Act - How did Disraeli further weaken the Libs?

A

To further weaken the Libs, Disraeli accepted amendments proposed by radical Libs but rejected ones from Gladstone – he also replaced the Lib proposal with qualifications to vote that were tougher but looked more generous

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6
Q

What was the pressure to pass the Act - What was the role of Lord Derby?

A

While Disraeli was Con leader in the Commons, Derby was Con leader in the Lords, and drummed up support for the bill in the Lords

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7
Q

What was the pressure to pass the Act - What were the economic conditions like at the time?

A

External pressure, such as a demonstration in Hyde Park which led to violence and vandalism, as well as protests in industrial towns, added to the pressure – this was made worse by a cotton famine as a result of the Independence War with America, leading to widespread unemployment, which only made public want for a reform bill stronger

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8
Q

What did the Act do - Boroughs

A

Extended the vote in boroughs to householders and lodgers who had been resident at least 12 months - increased the urban electorate to 1.2 million

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9
Q

What did the Act do - Counties

A

Historic 40 shilling franchise was retained - gave the vote to landowners of land worth £12 or more

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10
Q

What was the impact of the Act - Electorate figure changes

A

Electorate virtually doubled to 2 million

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11
Q

What was the impact of the Act - Urban areas (EG Birmingham and Blackburn)

A

Largest change was in urban areas – in Birmingham voter number rose from 15,500 to 42,000 – in Blackburn voting numbers rose from 1,800 to 9,700

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12
Q

What was the impact of the Act - Plural voting

A

Plural voting continued

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