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The Liberal Unionist Party and the Irish Policy of Lord Salisbury's Government, 1886–18921

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2009

Extract

In the House of Commons on 23 May 1892, following a speech by Joseph Chamberlain in qualified support of Balfour's Irish Local Government Bill, Tim Healy assailed ‘our Birmingham Diogenes’ with considerable warmth for the manner in which such support was habitually rendered:

What happens is this. The Government bring in a Bill. Its proposals are attacked, and the Government gets into distress, and then of course ‘a friend in need is a friend indeed’. The Rt.hon.Gentleman the Member for West Birmingham gets up and makes a speech. I have heard him make a speech on the Coercion Bill of 1887 in almost identical terms, and also on the Parnell Commission Bill of 1888.

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Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1975

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References

2 Hansard, 4th series, vol. IV, cols. 1565–6.Google Scholar

3 i.e., Conservatives, 316 seats; Liberal Unionists, 78; Gladstonian Liberals, 191; Irish Nationalists, 85.

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6 Hansard, 3rd series, vol. CCCIX, cols. 9841000, 20 Sept. 1886.Google Scholar

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28 In its final form, the Act extended the range of summary jurisdiction to cover offences such as criminal conspiracy to withhold rent, boycotting, intimidation, rioting, unlawful assembly, resistance to eviction, and incitement – all of which could thus be heard by a Resident Magistrate instead of before a jury. The Lord Lieutenant in Council could proclaim the Act to be in force in any area, and declare any association dangerous, subjecting all its members to prosecution by special proclamation. The Act was to remain permanently in force, although individual proclamations might be revoked.

29 The Times, 2 and 3 May 1887.

30 This comprised Hartington, Bright, Chamberlain, Finlay, Heneage, James, Lymington, Pitt- Lewis, and Russell.

31 Hartington to Balfour, 20 May 1887. Balfour Papers, A.M. 49, 696, ff. 22–5.

32 The Liberal Unionist, No. 13 (22 June 1887).

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39 ibid.

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41 Balfour Papers, A.M. 49,769, ff. 1014.Google Scholar Harrington remained personally antipathetic to a revision of judicial rents; and told a Liberal Unionist dinner at Greenwich on 5 Aug. 1887, that ‘we believed and hoped that it would not be necessary in the current session, pending the introduction of a larger and wider measure, to adopt a principle so full of risk and danger and pregnant with possible inconvenience and difficulty in the way of passing a great Land Purchase scheme for Ireland.’ (The Times, 6 Aug. 1887).

42 The Times, 16 July, 1887. Goschen had replaced Churchill at the beginning of the year, following the latter's resignation.

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52 The Times, 17 Mar. 1888.

54 Hansard, 3rd series, vol. CCCXIII, col. 1881.Google Scholar The amendment was moved by Williams, J. Powell, 21 Mar. 1888.Google Scholar

55 The Times, 29 May 1888.

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6 1 Chamberlain to Mary Endicott, 10 July 1888. Garvin, , op. cit., 386.Google Scholar Chamberlain subsequently acted as a convenient scapegoat for Conservative embarrassment - see, e.g., Sir Clarke, Edward, The Story of My Life (1918), 274–5.Google Scholar

62 Hansard, 3rd series, vol. cccxxx, col. 1741, 19 Nov. 1888.Google Scholar

63 According to Edward Hamilton (Journal, 21 Mar. 1890, A.M. 48,652, f. 95) the measure was largely devised by Balfour, with the assistance of Jenkyns (draftsman), Welby (Treasury), the Irish Attorney General, and of Goschen's “extraordinary critical powers.”

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77 The Times, 8 Dec. 1886.