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Encyclopedia > Great Reform Act

The British Reform Act of 1832 (2 & 3 Will. 4, c.45; also referred to as as the Great Reform Act) introduced the first changes to electoral franchise legislation in almost one hundred and fifty years. It met strong opposition from the Tories, who had defeated earlier bills, and it required pressure on William IV and the resignation of Earl Grey's Whig government to pass.


The Act extended the franchise into the middle classes. Propertied male adults paying an annual rent of £10 or more (£2 in the rural counties) could vote. The vote was also extended to those with copyhold tenure of £10 or more and leaseholders or tenants-at-will paying £50 in rent. These changes increased the electorate from 435,000 to 652,000 (1 in 7 males) and gave greater political influence to urban centres in the north while leaving the rural areas under aristocratic control. The Act also abolished 56 rotten boroughs and removed one MP from boroughs with fewer than 4,000 inhabitants.


However, Parliament was still under the thrall of the gentry and there was still great disparity between the size of constituencies. Despite the hopes of Lord John Russell that further reform would never be necessary, popular pressure led to greater changes.

Contents

Reduced franchises

Disenfranchisements and Rotten Boroughs

The following English Boroughs were disfranchised by this Act:

Halved franchises

The following Boroughs were reduced from 2 MPs to 1:

Weymouth and Melcombe Regis in Dorset were reduced from 4 MPs to 2.


New enfranchisements

The following Boroughs were enfranchised:


Boroughs given 1 MP

Boroughs given 2 MPs

Other changes

The Isle of Wight, having had its three small boroughs disenfranchised, was given its first single MP for the whole area.


Yorkshire, which had 4 MPs, was given 2 MPs for each of the 3 Ridings, East, North and West Riding.


Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Cambridgeshire, Dorset, Herefordshire and Hertfordshire were now to have 3 MPs instead of 2.


County divisions

The following counties were divided into two districts, each with 2 MPs:

Scotland and Ireland

In Scotland, the counties each continued to elect 1 member each. Edinburgh and Glasgow now had 2 MPs; Aberdeen, Dundee, Greenock, Paisley and Perth 1 each. The remaining Burghs combined in districts to elect 18 MPs.


Ireland's representation remained unchanged.


See also

  • Reform Act of 1867
  • Reform Act of 1884
  • Redistribution of Seats Act 1885
  • Representation of the People Act 1918
  • Representation of the People Act 1928
  • Representation of the People Act 1948
  • Representation of the People Act 1969
  • Representation of the People Act 2000 (http://www.hmso.gov.uk/acts/acts2000/20000002.htm)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Reform Act 1832 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (2030 words)
Acts of Parliament of the Kingdom of England to 1640
Acts of Parliament of the Kingdom of Scotland
Acts of Parliament of the Kingdom of Ireland
Reform Acts. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05 (472 words)
The system was very irregular and greatly restricted the franchise; it failed to take into account the great shifts of population and the growth of new social classes that attended the Industrial Revolution.
Reform agitation, beginning to develop in the 1760s, was supported by William Pitt and others, but the emergency period of the French Revolution interrupted it.
The Reform Act of 1884, passed during the administration of William Gladstone, removed the distinction between county and borough franchises and, by the reduction of rural qualifications, added about 2,000,000 more men to the electorate.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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