Peelite











































Peelites
Leader Robert Peel
Founder Robert Peel
Founded 1846; 172 years ago (1846)
Dissolved 1859; 159 years ago (1859)
Split from Conservative Party
Merged into Liberal Party
Ideology
Free trade
Liberal conservatism
Political position Centre-right
Colours
     Blue      Green

  • Politics of United Kingdom

  • Political parties

  • Elections


The Peelites were a breakaway dissident political faction of the British Conservative Party from 1846 to 1859 who joined with the Whigs and Radicals to form the Liberal Party.


They were led by Robert Peel, Prime Minister and Conservative Party leader in 1846.



Overview


The Peelites were characterised by commitment to free trade and a managerial, almost technocratic, approach to government. Though they sought to maintain the principles of the Conservative Party, Peelites disagreed with the major wing of that party (the landed interest) on issues of trade, in particular the issue of whether agricultural prices should be artificially kept high by tariffs. The Peelites were often called the Liberal Conservatives in contrast to Protectionist Conservatives led by Benjamin Disraeli and Edward Smith-Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby.


Facing a serious famine in Ireland in 1845, the Peel sought to lower food prices by repealing the Corn Laws. He was able to carry the repeal vote in the House of Commons, but only at the price of splitting the Conservative Party, a split which led to the fall of Peel's government in June 1846 and its replacement by a Whig government led by John Russell, 1st Earl Russell.


The leading members of the Peelite faction that developed after the 1846 split of the Conservative Party were the following:



The Peelites numbered about a third of the old Conservative party following the 1847 general election. Their main political positions at that time were closer to the Protectionist Conservatives than to the Whigs and Radicals in parliament, except on the issue of free trade. The split had been so bitter on a personal level, with attacks on Peel by Protectionist Conservatives such as Lord George Bentinck and Benjamin Disraeli, that the Conservative Party was unable to reconcile the Peelites even after the Conservatives officially abandoned protection in 1852. The Peelites also had their own newspaper The Morning Chronicle to highlight their political position.


After Peel's death in 1850, the Peelite faction was led by Sir James Graham and Lord Aberdeen. In the 1852 general election, the number of Peelites was estimated at around 40. In that same year, George Hamilton-Gordon, 4th Earl of Aberdeen was invited by Queen Victoria to form a coalition government with the Whigs and the Radicals. This government fell in 1855 as a result of the unpopularity of its hesitant attitude during the Crimean War.[1]


After the fall of the Aberdeen government, the Peelite faction took most of the blame for their management of the war in the Crimea. The party further lost cohesion with some members including William Ewart Gladstone, James Graham, 1st Marquess of Montrose and Sidney Herbert, 1st Baron Herbert of Lea accepted cabinet posts in the new government led by Viscount Palmerston only to resign a few weeks later when the government agreed to hold a commission on the conduct of the recent war. Others stayed, including George Campbell, 8th Duke of Argyll and Stratford Canning, 1st Viscount Stratford de Redcliffe after which the Peelites with now no agreed overall leader appeared to be a band of independents rather than a political faction. In the 1857 general election, their numbers further decreased to around 26, or maybe less than 20 as identifying who was and who was not a Peelite became increasingly difficult).


The Peelites finally disappeared as a distinctive political faction when they agreed to combine with the Whigs, the Radicals and the Independent Irish Party Members of the United Kingdom Parliament to bring down the Conservative government of Edward Smith-Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby in 1859. The subsequent creation of Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston's ministry out of this combination was the birth of the British Liberal Party. Several leading Peelites (including Gladstone, Herbert, Cardwell, and Newcastle, but notably not Graham, who was one of the driving forces behind the coalition) accepted cabinet posts in this ministry, though some Peelites became independents or returned to the Conservatives.



See also





  • Contributions to liberal theory

  • Liberal democracy

  • Liberalism

  • Liberalism in the United Kingdom

  • Liberalism worldwide

  • List of liberal parties

  • Thatcherism




References




  1. ^ Conacher, J. B. (1968). The Aberdeen Coalition 1852-1855. A Study in Mid-Nineteneth-Century Party Politics. New York: Cambridge University Press. p. 492.


  • Jones, Wilbur Devereux; and Arvel B. Erickson (1972). The Peelites 1846-1857. Columbus, Ohio: Ohio State University.









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