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III. A Great Electioneer and his Motives: The Fourth Duke of Newcastle1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 December 2010

John Golby
Affiliation:
Department of Adult Education, University of Southampton

Extract

Despite intensive research into the history of parliamentary electioneering, especially in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, several questions, particularly concerning the electioneer himself, remain partly unanswered. Although the extent of patronage in various constituencies and the actual electioneering techniques used have been closely studied it has been more difficult to answer such questions as why certain men participated in electioneering and why they were prepared to spend so much money on it. There has been a tendency to describe these men, and to estimate their motives, in a rather stereotyped and oversimplified way. It has been the characteristic of these stereotyped generalizations to account for the activities of the electioneer in terms of purely material motives: he ‘electioneered’, it is suggested, because he was trying to promote the interests of a certain political group; or because he wanted political office; or because he wanted a peerage; or because he wanted to ensure a handsome share of patronage or income for himself and his dependants. No doubt some electioneers were swayed, even exclusively, by motives of this kind. But such motivation sounds suspicious in its brutal simplicity; if we had more individual studies of this type of politician, we might find that many of the famous electioneers were prompted just as strongly by motives of a less directly material kind, which reflected their personal characters, their personal problems in life, and even their personal idealism.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1965

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References

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15 He did this against the advice of his brother-in-law, Lord Combermere. See Newcastle MSS. NeC 8564, Combermere to Newcastle, 22 July 1844.

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31 His stepfather, Sir Charles Gregan Craufurd (M.P. for East Retford 1806-12). His brother-in-law Sir Stapleton Cotton, later Lord Combermere (M.P. for Newark 1806-14). Two cousins, Captain W. H. Clinton (M.P. for Boroughbridge 1806-18, and Newark 1818-29) and Henry Fynes, later known as Clinton (M.P. for Aldborough 1806-26).

33 H. of L.J. 10 May 1830, p. 352.

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46 Soon after it was known that Wellington would introduce a Roman Catholic Relief Bill, Greville wrote, ‘Grant [M.P. for Aldborough 1826-30] was in a great fright, for the D. of Newcastle brings him in, and he will probably insist upon his voting against the bill or going out’ (see Greville Memoirs, ed. Strachey, L. and Fulford, R., I, 251)Google Scholar. In the following month Grant voted against the readings of the government's measure, but whether he did so because he was afraid of losing his seat is doubtful. Grant had always opposed concessions to Roman Catholics.

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