Cragoe, Matthew (2008) The Great Reform Act and the modernization of British politics: the impact of Conservative Associations, 1835–1841. Journal of British Studies, 47 (03). pp. 581-603. ISSN 0021-9371
Full content URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/587723
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Item Type: | Article |
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Item Status: | Live Archive |
Abstract
When did nationally based party alignments become significant at the grassroots of British politics? The issue has divided historians. For some, the dramatic rise in contested elections following the Great Reform Act, and the unprecedented partisanship of the enlarged electorate, suggest a real modernization of British politics in the 1830s. John Philips, for example, has argued that the measure “helped orient popular politics more consistently around national issues,” and Frank O’Gorman and Philip Salmon have both pointed to the way in which the system of annual voter registration introduced in 1832 worked toward a similar end: not only did local parties develop new machinery to deal with registration, but their annual canvass of those eligible for the franchise, in Salmon’s words, “brought the agency of party into every elector’s home and … the politics of Westminster much closer to the electorate.” “By bringing individual voters face to face with political realities on a regular basis,” he goes on, this process generated the partisanship measured by Philips. Taken together, such evidence suggests that the Reform Act had a profound impact, tying the localities into an increasingly national political debate.
Keywords: | Conservative Associations, Great Reform Act |
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Subjects: | L Social studies > L200 Politics V Historical and Philosophical studies > V144 Modern History 1800-1899 V Historical and Philosophical studies > V210 British History |
Divisions: | College of Arts |
ID Code: | 14164 |
Deposited On: | 29 May 2014 12:50 |
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