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IV. The Origins of the Birmingham Caucus
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
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In 1868 the Birmingham Liberal Association won the first of a series of dazzling victories in parliamentary and municipal elections. Contemporaries immediately recognized the presence of a new phenomenon in English politics: disciplined control of a mass electorate by a tightly organized party apparatus. At first glance the Liberal machine seemed un-English, and the Tories gleefully imported an American epithet to describe it. The traditional interpretation of the caucus, as set forth by Ostrogorski, followed contemporary opinion in emphasizing the novelty of the institution. In his view, ‘the organization of the electoral masses’ by the Liberal Association represented a sharp break with the past. He traced its origin to the minority clause of the Reform Act of 1867, which gave each Birmingham elector two votes to divide among the candidates for three seats, thus challenging the Liberals to develop an organization capable of circumventing the Act. After their success in the ‘vote as you are told’ election of 1868, the Liberal politicians, according to Ostrogorski, continued to use the caucus as a contrivance for manipulating an electorate that otherwise might have exercised independent judgment. This interpretation remains of considerable value, particularly in its treatment of the oligarchic implications of modern democracy. Nevertheless, Ostrogorski’s analysis tends to be misleading and one-sided. The Liberal politicians, like the priests in Voltaire’s account of the history of religion, are depicted as consciously constructing an institution ex nihilo to meet their own needs and purposes. Ostrogorski attributes too much to calculation and too little to the historical process that created the materials out of which the caucus was built and the foundations on which it rested.
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References
1 Ostrogorski, M., Democracy and the Organization of Political Parties (New York, 1902), I, 113–14, 161–7Google Scholar. For a similar interpretation see owell, A. L., The Government of England (New York, 1920), 1, 482–5Google Scholar; Keir, D. L., The Constitutional History of Modern Britain (1953), 468–70Google Scholar. Herrick, F. H. noted the shortcomings of Ostrogorski’s analysis in ‘The Origins of the National Liberal Federation’ (J[ournal of] M[odem] H[istory], XVII, 1945). For an excellent account of the operation of the caucus and a critique of earlier interpretations see A. Briggs, History of Birmingham (1952), n, ch. VI.Google Scholar
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23 B.J., 20 Aug. 1842.
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46 ibid. 26 June 1852, 18 Sept. 1847. Muntz and Scholefield were returned.
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49 B.J., 18 March 1848.
50 Middle–class Radicals and advanced Liberals characteristically lost no time in backing their speeches with action. On 3 May, they formed a Reform League, with Muntz as President and Weston and Scholefield, among others, as vice–presidents. The League's objectives were ‘Household Suffrage, Vote by Ballot, [Equal] Electoral Districts, and Triennial Parliaments’. It announced that ‘these Reforms will be best effected by uniting the Middle and Working Classes; and it views with great satisfaction the spontaneous desire universally evinced by the intelligent men of all classes to unite cordially in promoting Parliamentary Reform’. John Mason said that the Chartists would not compromise on the principle of manhood suffrage, although they would not stand in the way of efforts to give effect to the resolution (A Report of the First Meeting of the Reform League, Held in the Town Hall, Birmingham, May 3rd, 1848 (Birmingham, 1848)). In November appeared the first and last issue of The Reform League Circular.Google Scholar
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54 ibid. 1 Sept. 1849.
55 ibid. 17 Jan. 1852. Wright had entered a firm of button manufacturers in 1838 as a junior clerk. He became a partner in 1851.
56 ibid. 28 Feb. 1852.
57 ibid. 26 June 1852.
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70 Edwards, op. cit. 122. Although religion was often the decisive factor in determining the political affiliation of a member of the middle class, it does not appear to have been nearly so important for the working class. One of the most articulate working-class Liberals, for example, was Frederick Hine, a pillar of St Martin's Workingmen's Association. Like most artisans, whether Anglican or Nonconformist, Hine was convinced that ‘ the policy of the Liberal party is broad, generous and just’.
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90 ibid. 9 Jan. 1858, Supplement.
91 Radford, described as a ‘clerk’ in 1873, was a coal merchant in 1876.
92 ibid. 6 Feb. 1858, Supplement. Raffles operated a ‘botanic dispensary’.
93 Langford, op. cit. 11, 21.
94 B.J., 30 Oct. 1858.
95 ibid. 13, 20 Nov. 1858; Langford, op. cit. 11, 25.
96 B.J., 5 Feb. 1859.
97 ibid. 12 March 1859, Supplement.
98 ibid. 16 Apr. 1859.
99 ibid. 4 June 1859, Supplement.
100 B.J., 7 Jan 1860.
101 ibid. 5 May 1860.
102 Langford, op. cit. 11, 43.
103 B.J., 2, 9 March, 4, 11 May, 8 June 1861.
104 ibid. 30 March 1861.
105 ibid. 18 Feb., 4 March 1865.
106 ibid. 25 Nov. 1865.
107 ibid. 24 Feb., 24 March, 12, 26 May, 4, 18, 25 Aug., 8, 15, 22 Sept. 1866.
108 ibid. 14 July 1866, Supplement.
109 ibid. 1 Sept. 1866; Birmingham Post, 23 Apr. 1867.
110 B.J., 18 Aug. 1866.
111 Birmingham Biography, I, part 2, 149 (Scrap book, Birmingham Reference Library).
112 Birmingham Post, 11 July 1867.
113 ibid. 15, 18 July 1867.
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