The 1784 General Election Flashcards

1
Q

What was Britain’s debt in 1783?

A

£240 million

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2
Q

What was the interest being added to Britain’s debt per year in 1783?

A

£8 million

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3
Q

Who was PM from 1770-1782? Why did his government collapse?

A
  • Lord North, Tory
  • loss of 13 American colonies in American war of Independence
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4
Q

What were the successive governments after Lord North?

A
  • Rockingham: March to July 1782
  • Shelburne: 1782-1783
  • both Whig
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5
Q

What was wrong with the successive Whig governments?

A

both failed to secure a majority

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6
Q

What government was formed in 1783? How did George III react?

A
  • coalition government between Lord North & Charles James Fox (whig)
  • wanted to get rid of Fox asap
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7
Q

Why did the King dislike Charles James Fox?

A
  • he was unpredictable and outspoken and criticised the monarch’s powers
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8
Q

Why did George III have trouble choosing the right candidate for PM?

A
  • two major factions: Rockingham Whigs and Shelburne Whigs
  • Rockingham: critical of the monarch’s power
  • Shelburne: did not have enough support
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9
Q

Who did George III chose to be PM? When?

A
  • 24 Year Old ‘William Pitt the Younger’
  • 1783
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10
Q

How did Pitt view himself?

A
  • an ‘individual whig’ but his policies aligned with the later tory party
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11
Q

Why was Pitt a suitable candidate? (10)

A
  • aptitude for politics
  • matriculated into Cambridge at 13
  • son of former PM - legacy
    - good at speaking
  • made a large impact in debates
  • stickler for independence
    - loyal to the king
    - ambitious for power
    - experience: worked as a barrister
    - apart of aristocratic whig family: Grenvilles
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12
Q

Why was Pitt’s administration called a ‘mince pie’

A
  • no one believed it would survive beyond christmas
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13
Q

Why was Pitt’s ambition for power good?

A
  • he was able to withstand hostile opposition
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14
Q

How did MPs react to Pitt being appointed as PM in 1783?

A
  • shocked
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15
Q

Why was Pitt’s administration considered a mince pie?

A
  • he had no following/ a large opposition
  • his cabinet was made up of members of the HoL as no one in the commons wanted to support him = isolated in the commons
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16
Q

Why was Pitt’s administration not necessarily a mince pie?

A
  • king used his royal prerogative to dismiss parliament in 1784 and call for a general election when support for Fox was dwindling
  • gave Pitt a large election fund
  • King used peerage to appoint Lord’s who would support Pitt; patronage
  • Pitt drew his support from the Whigs who supported his father and the moderate tories who relied on the king’s wishes
17
Q

Was Pitt’s administration a mince pie?

A
  • only at the beginning
  • he ended up being PM for 17 years
18
Q

What was the result of the 1784 General Election?

A
  • Pitt won a clear majority of 280 seats