BBC History Magazine

Bonfire of the duties

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its necessity in the late 1820s to avoid potential rebellion in Ireland. This was regarded as a U-turn on a central tenet of Toryism that saw him drummed out as the MP for Oxford University by its High Tory voters. A door at his old college, Christ Church, still has the slogan ‘No Peel’ hammered into it in nails.

If he could abandon such a fundamenta­l belief, what else might he surrender? Their suspicion was enhanced when Peel proposed a £30,000 government grant to rebuild the Catholic seminary at Maynooth in 1845. He saw it as a way of appeasing Irish Catholics; Tory backbenche­rs believed it was endorsing heresy. James Graham wrote that Peel and supporters such as himself were “scouted as traitors”.

In the first Tory budget in 1842, Peel embarked on a wholesale revision of the complex import tariff system, reducing duties on 750 items out of 1,200, while reintroduc­ing income tax to offset the shortfall. Three years later, he cut tariffs on a further 430 imports, including cotton, glass, timber and sugar. Everyone knew that the outstandin­g remaining tariff was corn.

The government was coming under increasing pressure from the working-class Chartist movement, demanding political reforms, but more importantl­y from the Anti-Corn Law League, founded among northern manufactur­ers with the single, focussed aim of repeal. The league was well-funded and increasing­ly sophistica­ted in its campaignin­g. It employed profession­al staff in Manchester, staged well-attended meetings and sent out thousands of letters a day. It also published newspapers and articles – the Economist magazine was founded in 1843 to promote the cause – and already had two MPs, Richard Cobden and John Bright, harrying the government. Intellectu­ally convinced, Peel was finding it increasing­ly difficult to counter their arguments.

In the summer of 1845, a natural disaster gave Peel the excuse to do what he had already privately decided. The potato crop was rotting in a wet summer. This affected the harvest across Britain, but the consequenc­es were especially dire in Ireland, where potatoes were the staple diet. Peel, who had been a minister in Dublin many years earlier, knew how devastatin­g a famine would be. He took urgent, though largely ineffectua­l, action: the government surreptiti­ously bought up maize in the United States. Nicknamed ‘Peel’s brimstone’ by the Irish, it rotted crossing the Atlantic, could not be unloaded where the need was greatest, and the recipients were unused to cooking it.

Meanwhile, Peel seized the excuse to argue for repealing the Corn Laws, albeit cautiously and gradually. “Rotten potatoes have done it all,” growled the elderly Duke of Wellington, the Tories’ leader in the Lords. “They put Peel in his damned fright.”

Neverthele­ss, the old soldier believed in loyalty and would remain by the prime minister’s side. “A good government for the country is more important than the Corn Laws or any other considerat­ion,” he said.

In December 1845, Lord John Russell, leader of the Whigs, tightened the pressure on Peel by announcing his conversion to repeal. With his cabinet divided, Peel resigned but was back a fortnight later when Russell was unable to form a government from among his squabbling colleagues. Queen Victoria, her former dislike of Peel dissipated under the influence of Prince Albert, breathed a sigh of relief. He was, she noted in her journal, “the only person fitted to govern the country”. She, too, would back him through the crisis.

The profession­al bowler

Peel lost two cabinet ministers, and underestim­ated Tory backbench opposition, because his opponents in the party had found an unlikely champion in Benjamin Disraeli: flamboyant, impecuniou­s and an outsider due to his Jewish heritage. Although a Christian, Disraeli was described as “a Jew d’esprit” by a witty Tory, and by another as “a profession­al bowler we take round with us” – a reference to the aristocrat-sponsored cricket teams then staffed by paid players. But Disraeli, who had been denied ministeria­l office by Peel, seized the chance to excoriate his party leader repeatedly during the debates over the coming months as the repeal bill wended its way through the Commons.

The debate – held mostly late at night in the candlelit Lords chamber, because the Commons was still being rebuilt following the fire of 1834 – became rowdy, as many MPs returned from dining. Peel diligently laid out the economic case for repeal, ponderousl­y reciting statistics showing its benefits, and would then have to listen to Disraeli standing behind him, wittily and remorseles­sly underminin­g his case. Disraeli did so in highly personal terms, cheered on by his colleagues: Peel was the thief of other men’s intellect, without an original idea of his own (that must have stung). He was like a coachman in directing the affairs of state: “no more a great statesman than the man who gets up behind the carriage is a great whip”.

The backbench laughter grew more raucous as Disraeli’s attacks gave them confidence. Peel, used to being heard respectful­ly, grew rattled and close to tears. “I have abandoned no duty and betrayed no trust,” he insisted during the second reading debate. “I have listened to the attacks on me with sorrow but not with anger… Really, these interrupti­ons are very unpleasant.”

Tories sneered at the use of the famine as a reason for repeal: it was an exaggerati­on; the Irish were lazy and improviden­t. Peel responded with real anger: “Are you to hesitate in averting famine because it possibly may not come? Good God… how much diarrhoea and bloody flux and dysentery (must) a people bear before it becomes necessary for you to provide them with food?”

Attacks on Peel became increasing­ly overwrough­t. Lord George Bentinck, Disraeli’s ally, effectivel­y accused Peel of killing his relative, the former prime minister George Canning, 20 years earlier by refusing to serve in his cabinet – Peel had to be talked out of challengin­g him to a duel for that.

On a sweltering night in June, there was a final outburst from the backbenche­r Eliot Yorke, the MP for Cambridges­hire, demanding that the bill be called the Foreign Lands Improvemen­t Bill, because it “would displace the labour of our hardworkin­g countrymen in order to give employment to foreign serfs”.

These interventi­ons may have been incredibly painful to Peel but they never seriously threatened repeal, which passed the Commons with Whig support and went through the Lords swiftly under Wellington’s surveillan­ce. However, two-thirds of Tories opposed the bill. In all, 86 per cent of Tory county MPs and 80 per cent of county office holders voted against.

Peel’s moment of triumph was short-lived. A few hours later, the rebels combined with the Whigs to vote down an Irish coercion bill designed to strengthen security – which all would normally have supported – purely to bring down the government. Peel resigned.

About 90 Peelites formed an independen­t bloc: most would eventually join what became the Liberal Party. Within four years, Peel was dead – and by then, too, Disraeli had convinced the Tories that the Corn Laws were a lost cause.

Stephen Bates is a former senior correspond­ent with The Guardian. His books include Two Nations: Britain in 1846 (Head of Zeus, 2015)

Tories argued that the fuss around the potato famine was an exaggerati­on… the Irish were lazy and improviden­t

 ??  ?? Dowlais Ironworks shown in an
RCKPVKPI 6CTKʘU KV YCU argued, stymied industrial Britain’s capacity to exploit global markets
Dowlais Ironworks shown in an RCKPVKPI 6CTKʘU KV YCU argued, stymied industrial Britain’s capacity to exploit global markets
 ??  ?? A print published by the vigorous and well-funded National Anti-Corn Law League, c1840s
A print published by the vigorous and well-funded National Anti-Corn Law League, c1840s
 ??  ?? Dough boys
In this Punch cartoon from 1846, Robert Peel is a baker and the Duke of Wellington carries a placard advertisin­g cheap bread. The duke played a key, if unenthusia­stic, role in repealing the Corn Laws
Dough boys In this Punch cartoon from 1846, Robert Peel is a baker and the Duke of Wellington carries a placard advertisin­g cheap bread. The duke played a key, if unenthusia­stic, role in repealing the Corn Laws

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