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Tamworth Manifesto

 
British History: Tamworth manifesto

Tamworth manifesto, 1835. Peel's manifesto to his constituents is often regarded as the foundation document of modern Conservatism. The Tory Party, badly beaten at the election of 1832, faced another general election and could hardly campaign on repealing the Great Reform Act, depriving Birmingham, Leeds, and Sheffield of their new representation, and restoring Gatton and Old Sarum. Peel, leading a minority government, explained that he now considered the Reform Act ‘a final and irrevocable settlement’ and that his general policy would be ‘the firm maintenance of established rights, the correction of proved abuses and the redress of real grievances’. This left open who was to decide what was proof, what the word ‘real’ signified, and what would happen if the reform of abuses threatened established rights. Peel conceded that his statement was ‘necessarily vague’. The manifesto has been seen as the foundation for a policy of prudent adjustment or as a recipe for continual surrender.

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The Tamworth Manifesto was a political manifesto issued by Sir Robert Peel in 1834 in Tamworth, which is widely credited by historians as having laid down the principles upon which the modern British Conservative Party is based.

In November 1834, King William IV removed the Whig Prime Minister Lord Melbourne and asked the Duke of Wellington to form a ministry. Wellington was reluctant and recommended that the King choose Peel.

Perhaps due to Wellington's endorsement, Peel intended from the start, as the historian S.J Lee tells, "to fully convince the country and electorate that there was a substantial difference between his brand of conservatism and that of his predecessor and 'old tory' Wellington."

With that in mind, on 18 December, the Tamworth Manifesto was published by the press and read around the country. Like many other manifestos in nineteenth-century British politics, it was formally an address to the electors of the leader's own constituency, but reproduced widely. Ironically, Tamworth had no contest in 1834 as Peel was the only candidate and he was elected unopposed.

Salomon's Aims dictated in the Tamworth Manifesto

The main aim of the manifesto was to appeal to the electorate in the new Parliament.

  • Peel accepted that the Reform Act 1832 was "a final and irrevocable settlement of a great constitutional question".
  • He promised that the Conservatives would undertake a "careful review of institutions, civil and ecclesiastical".
  • Where there was a case for change, he promised "the correction of proved abuses and the redress of real grievances".
  • Peel offered to look at the question of church reform in order to preserve the "true interests of the Established religion".
  • Peel's basic message, therefore, was that the Conservatives "would reform to survive" (with reference to Norman Gash's biography of Peel).
  • However, he opposed what he saw as unnecessary change, fearing "a perpetual vortex of agitation"

See also

The Tamworth Manifesto at Wikisource.


 
 

 

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British History. A Dictionary of British History. Copyright © 2001, 2004 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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