FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   174   175   176   177   178   179   180   181   182   183   184   185   186   187   >>  
fforts made to defeat me were far greater on the second occasion than on the first. For one thing, the Tory Government was now struggling for existence, and success in any contest was of more importance to them. Then, too, all persons of Tory feelings were far more embittered against me individually than on the previous occasion; many who had at first been either favourable or indifferent, were vehemently opposed to my re-election. As I had shown in my political writings that I was aware of the weak points in democratic opinions, some Conservatives, it seems, had not been without hopes of finding me an opponent of democracy: as I was able to see the Conservative side of the question, they presumed that, like them, I could not see any other side. Yet if they had really read my writings, they would have known that after giving full weight to all that appeared to me well grounded in the arguments against democracy, I unhesitatingly decided in its favour, while recommending that it should be accompanied by such institutions as were consistent with its principle and calculated to ward off its inconveniences: one of the chief of these remedies being Proportional Representation, on which scarcely any of the Conservatives gave me any support. Some Tory expectations appear to have been founded on the approbation I had expressed of plural voting, under certain conditions: and it has been surmised that the suggestion of this sort made in one of the resolutions which Mr. Disraeli introduced into the House preparatory to his Reform Bill (a suggestion which meeting with no favour, he did not press), may have been occasioned by what I had written on the point: but if so, it was forgotten that I had made it an express condition that the privilege of a plurality of votes should be annexed to education, not to property, and even so, had approved of it only on the supposition of universal suffrage. How utterly inadmissible such plural voting would be under the suffrage given by the present Reform Act, is proved, to any who could otherwise doubt it, by the very small weight which the working classes are found to possess in elections, even under the law which gives no more votes to any one elector than to any other. While I thus was far more obnoxious to the Tory interest, and to many Conservative Liberals than I had formerly been, the course I pursued in Parliament had by no means been such as to make Liberals generally at all enthusiasti
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   174   175   176   177   178   179   180   181   182   183   184   185   186   187   >>  



Top keywords:

weight

 

Reform

 

Conservatives

 

suffrage

 
democracy
 

favour

 

writings

 
Conservative
 

Liberals

 
suggestion

voting

 
plural
 

occasion

 

written

 
occasioned
 

resolutions

 

Disraeli

 

surmised

 

conditions

 

introduced


expressed

 

meeting

 

preparatory

 
elector
 

elections

 

possess

 
working
 

classes

 

obnoxious

 

generally


enthusiasti

 

Parliament

 

pursued

 

interest

 
property
 

approved

 
approbation
 

supposition

 

education

 
annexed

express

 

condition

 
privilege
 

plurality

 
universal
 

proved

 
present
 
utterly
 

inadmissible

 
forgotten