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WHIG AND TORY , the names associated with two opposing See also: political parties in See also: England
.
The origin of " Whig " has been much controverted; it has been associated with the Scots for " whey," as implying a taunt against the " sour-milk " faces of the western Lowlanders; another theory is that it represented the initials of the Scots See also: Covenanters' motto, " We hope in See also: God "; another derives it from the Scots word " whiggam," used by peasants in driving their horses
.
It was, however, a See also: form of the Scots Gaelic See also: term used to describe cattle and See also: horse thieves, and transferred to the adherents of the Presbyterian cause in See also: Scot-See also: land
.
" Tory " is derived from the Irish See also: Tar a Ri, " Come, oh See also: king
!
" associated with the creed of the Irish native levies enlisted in the
See also: civil See also: wars on behalf of the loyalist cause; the outlaws who fought for See also: James in
See also: Ireland after the revolution were similarly nicknamed Rapparees or Tories
.
See also: Parliamentary parties, as such, came into existence in England as soon as parliament achieved or aimed at predominance in the See also: state
.
In 1641, shortly after the meeting of the Long Parliament, they were divided on the question of See also: church reform, passing, as soon as political questions were involved, into Cavaliers and Roundheads
.
After the expulsion of the Cavaliers in 1642 and 1643 the Houses were divided into a
See also: peace party and a war party, and these in 1643 took the shape of Presbyterians and See also: Independents
.
After the Restoration there was a country party and a See also: court party, and to these the names of Whig and Tory were applied in 1679, in the heat of the struggle which preceded the meeting of the first See also: short parliament of See also: Charles II
.
The words were nicknames given by the opponents of each party
.
To
See also: call a See also: man a Whig was to compare him with the Presbyterian rebels of the west of Scotland
.
To call a man a Tory was to compare him with the Papist outlaws of Ireland
.
In fact, at this See also: time the Whigs were maintainers of parliamentary power over the See also: crown and of toleration for Dissenters, the Tories maintainers of the hereditary indefeasible rights of the wearer of the crown and of the refusal of toleration to Dissenters
.
The relation between the parties was further qualified by the fact that the heir to the crown was a See also: Roman Catholic, whose claim to succeed was defended by the Tories and assailed by the Whigs
.
The persistency of the names of the two parties is mainly owing to their essential unmeaningness
.
As new questionsarose, the names of the old parties were retained, though the See also: objects of contention were no longer the same
.
The Revolution of 1688—89 made it impossible for the Tories to retain their old attitude of See also: attachment to the hereditary right of the occupant of the See also: throne, with the exception of the extreme wing of the party, which remained Jacobite
.
They still, however, continued, though accepting the Toleration See also: Act, to oppose the offering of further favours to Dissenters
.
In See also: Anne's reign, after the war with See also: France had gone on for some time, they supported a peace policy, whilst the Whigs advocated a continuance of the war
.
On the whole, during the last years of the 17th and the first years of the 18th century the Whigs may be regarded as the party of the See also: great landowners, and of the merchants and tradesmen, the Tories as the party of the smaller landowners and the country See also: clergy
.
The Whigs established, through their hold upon the boroughs under the influence of the great landowners, a See also: firm See also: government, which could keep in check, and at last practically set aside, the power of the crown
.
The Tories, distrusting the authority of the ministerial government, and fearing a new despotism based on parliamentary corruption, became, especially after Bolingbroke's return from exile, almost democratic in their views and in their demands for the See also: purification of the existing See also: system
.
With the accession of See also: George III
.
Toryism took a new form
.
The struggle about the Dissenters was now a thing of the past, and the king was accepted as a See also: leader in carrying on the attack against the power of the great Whig families
.
The attack was the easier because the Whig families had split into factions
.
For some time the dividing See also: line between Whigs and Tories was this: the Tories asserted that the king had a right to choose his ministers and control their policy, subject to the See also: necessity of securing a majority of the See also: House of See also: Commons, whilst the Whigs thought that the' choice should lie with leading members of parliament, and that the king should have no controlling power
.
The Whig view appears to resemble that subsequently adopted; but in the See also: middle of the 18th century the corruption which prevailed rendered the See also: analogy worthless, and the real conflict was between the corrupt influence of the crown and the influence of a clique of great landowners resting on their possession of electoral power through the rotten boroughs
.
In 1770 the king had his way and established See also: Lord See also: North at the See also: treasury as his nominee
.
The Whigs, deprived of power, improved their position by the loss of one great instrument of corruption; but they were weakened by the establishment of two distinct currents of opinion in their own ranks
.
The See also: main See also: body under Rocking-See also: ham was influenced by Burke to demand See also: practical reforms, but set its face against any popular changes in the constitution
.
The Whigs who followed See also: Chatham wished to place parliament on a more popular basis by the reform of the House of Commons
.
When in 1783 Chatham's son Pitt became See also: prime See also: minister, the Tory party took a new start
.
It retained the Tory principle of reliance on the crown, and joined to it Chatham's principle of reliance on the See also: people as opposed to the great Whig families
.
It also supported Pitt in practical reforms
.
All this was changed by the French Revolution
.
In opposition to the new democracy, the Tories coalesced with a section of the Whig families, the representatives of which entered theSee also: ministry in 1794
.
From this time till 1822, in spite of men like Pitt, and the See also: personal influence of Tory leaders who supported moderate reform, Toryism came to be popularly identified with a See also: desire to retain the existing state of things, however full of abuses it might be
.
When Canning and Peel entered the ministry in 1822, a gradual change took place, and a tendency to practical reform manifested itself
.
The refusal of Wellington to listen to any proposal for altering the constitution of the House of Commons threw power once more into the hands of the Whigs in 183o
.
Shortly afterwards the name Tory gave place to that of Conservative (q.v.), though it was cherished by those Conservatives who wished to assert their power of originating a definite policy, and who disliked to be branded with a purely negative appellation, and it was also retained as a term of opprobrium by the Liberals for those whom they regarded as old-fashioned opponents of
reform
.
The name of Whig was replaced by that of Liberal, being frequently, however, assigned to the less progressive portion of the party, the " moderate Liberals," or even to See also: half-and-half Conservatives, as a term more or less of reproach
.
It ceased to be a name accepted by any definite See also: English political section
.
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