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Rotten and pocket boroughs

A rotten or pocket borough, also known as a nomination borough or proprietorial borough, was a parliamentary borough or constituency in England, Great Britain, or the United Kingdom before the Reform Act 1832, which had a very small electorate and could be used by a patron to gain unrepresentative influence within the unreformed House of Commons. The same terms were used for similar boroughs represented in the 18th-century Parliament of Ireland. The Reform Act 1832 abolished the majority of these rotten and pocket boroughs.

Old Sarum in Wiltshire, an uninhabited hill which until 1832 elected two Members of Parliament. Painting by John Constable, 1829

Background edit

A parliamentary borough was a town or former town that had been incorporated under a royal charter, giving it the right to send two elected burgesses as Members of Parliament (MPs) to the House of Commons. It was not unusual for the physical boundary of the settlement to change as the town developed or contracted over time, for example due to changes in its trade and industry, so that the boundaries of the parliamentary borough and of the physical settlement were no longer the same.

For centuries, constituencies electing members to the House of Commons did not change to reflect population shifts, and in some places the number of electors became so few that they could be bribed or otherwise influenced by a single wealthy patron. In the early 19th century, reformists scornfully called these boroughs "rotten boroughs" because they had so few inhabitants left, or "pocket boroughs", because their MPs were elected by the whim of the patron, thereby being "in his pocket"; the actual votes of the electors were a mere formality since all or most of them voted as the patron instructed them, with or without bribery. As voting was by show of hands at a single polling station at a single time, few would vote contrary to the declared wishes of the patron. Often only one candidate would be nominated (or two for a two-seat constituency) so that the election was uncontested, because other candidates saw it as futile to stand.

Thus an MP might be elected by only a few voters (although the number of constituents would usually be higher), while at the same time many new towns, which had grown due to increased trade and industry, were inadequately represented. For example, before 1832 the town of Manchester, which expanded rapidly during the Industrial Revolution from a small settlement into a large city, was merely part of the larger county constituency of Lancashire and did not elect its own MPs.

Many of these ancient boroughs elected two MPs. By the time of the 1831 general election, out of 406 elected members, 152 were chosen by fewer than 100 voters each, and 88 by fewer than fifty voters.[1]

By the early 19th century moves were made towards reform, with eventual success when the Reform Act 1832 abolished the rotten boroughs and redistributed representation in Parliament to new major population centres. The Ballot Act 1872 introduced the secret ballot, which greatly hindered patrons from controlling elections by preventing them from knowing how an elector had voted. At the same time, the practice of paying or entertaining voters ("treating") was outlawed, and election expenses fell dramatically.

Rotten boroughs edit

The term rotten borough came into use in the 18th century; it meant a parliamentary borough with a tiny electorate, so small that voters were susceptible to control in a variety of ways, as it had declined in population and importance since its early days. The word rotten had the connotation of corruption as well as long-term decline. In such boroughs most or all of the few electors could not vote as they pleased, due to the lack of a secret ballot and their dependency on the "owner" of the borough. Only rarely were the views or personal character of a candidate taken into consideration, except by the minority of voters who were not beholden to a particular interest.

Typically, rotten boroughs had gained their representation in Parliament when they were more flourishing centres, but the borough's boundaries had never been updated, or else they had become depopulated or even deserted over the centuries. Some had once been important places or had played a major role in England's history, but had fallen into insignificance as for example when industry moved away. For example, in the 12th century Old Sarum had been a busy cathedral city, reliant on the wealth expended by its own Sarum Cathedral within its city precincts, but it was abandoned when the cathedral was moved to create the present Salisbury Cathedral, built on a new site nearby ("New Sarum"). The new site immediately attracted merchants and workers who built up a new town around it. Despite this dramatic loss of population, the constituency of Old Sarum retained its right to elect two MPs, effectively putting the election of two MPs under control by a single landowning family.

Many such rotten boroughs were controlled by landowners and peers who might give the seats in Parliament to their like-minded friends or relations, or who went to Parliament themselves, if they were not already members of the House of Lords. They also commonly sold them for money or other favours; the peers who controlled such boroughs had a double influence in Parliament as they themselves held seats in the House of Lords. This patronage was based on property rights which could be inherited and passed on to heirs, or else sold, like any other form of property.

Despite the small number of voters in each district listed below, for all or much of the time of their existence the boroughs had not just one MP, which would already have been disproportionate, but rather, had two MPs.

Examples of rotten boroughs
Borough County Houses Voters Notes
Old Sarum Wiltshire 003 07
Gatton Surrey 023 07
Newtown Isle of Wight 014 23
East Looe Cornwall 167 38
Dunwich Suffolk 044 32 Most of this formerly prosperous town had fallen into the sea
Plympton Erle Devon 182 40 One seat was controlled from the mid-17th century to 1832 by the Treby family of Plympton House
Bramber West Sussex 035 20
Callington Cornwall 225 42 Controlled by the Rolle family of Heanton Satchville and Stevenstone in Devon
Trim County Meath Parliament of Ireland

Before being awarded a peerage, Arthur Wellesley, later Duke of Wellington, served in the Irish House of Commons as a Member for the rotten borough of Trim. Robert Stewart, Viscount Castlereagh served as a Member for the rotten borough of Plympton Erle.

Pocket boroughs edit

Pocket boroughs were boroughs which could effectively be controlled by a single person who owned at least half of the "burgage tenements", the occupants of which had the right to vote in the borough's parliamentary elections. A wealthy patron therefore had merely to buy up these specially qualified houses and install in them his own tenants, selected for their willingness to do their landlord's bidding, or given such precarious forms of tenure that they dared not displease him. As there was no secret ballot until 1872, the landowner could evict electors who did not vote for the two men he wanted. A common expression referring to such a situation was that "Mr A had been elected on Lord B's interest".

There were also boroughs which were controlled not by a particular patron but rather by the Crown, specifically by the departments of state of the Treasury or Admiralty, and which thus returned the candidates nominated by the ministers in charge of those departments.[2]

Some rich individuals controlled several boroughs; for example, the Duke of Newcastle is said to have had seven boroughs "in his pocket". One of the representatives of a pocket borough was often the man who controlled it, and for this reason they were also referred to as proprietorial boroughs.[3]: 14 

Pocket boroughs were seen by their 19th-century owners as a valuable method of ensuring the representation of the landed interest in the House of Commons.[citation needed]

Significantly diminished by the Reform Act 1832, pocket boroughs were for all practical purposes abolished by the Reform Act of 1867. This considerably extended the borough franchise and established the principle that each parliamentary constituency should hold roughly the same number of electors. Boundary commissions were set up by subsequent Acts of Parliament to maintain this principle as population movements continued.[citation needed]

Reform edit

In the late 18th century, many political societies, such as the London Corresponding Society and the Society of the Friends of the People, called for parliamentary reform.[4] Specifically, they thought that the rotten borough system was unfair and they called for a more equal distribution of representatives that reflected the population of Britain.[5] However, legislation enacted by William Pitt the Younger caused these societies to disband by making it illegal for them to meet or publish information.[6]

In the 19th century, there were moves toward reform, which broadly meant ending the over-representation of boroughs with few electors. The culmination of the process of Catholic Emancipation in 1829 finally brought the reform issue to a head. The reform movement had a major success in the Reform Act 1832, which disfranchised the 56 boroughs listed below, most of them in the south and west of England. This redistributed representation in Parliament to new major population centres and places with significant industries, which tended to be farther north.

Contemporary defences edit

A substantial number of Tory constituencies were rotten and pocket boroughs, and their right to representation was defended by the successive Tory governments in office between 1807 and 1830. During this period they came under criticism from figures such as Thomas Paine and William Cobbett.[3]

It was argued in defence of such boroughs that they provided stability and were also a means for promising young politicians to enter Parliament, with William Pitt the Elder being cited as a key example.[3]: 22  Some MPs claimed that the boroughs should be retained, as Britain had enjoyed periods of prosperity while they were part of the constitution of Parliament.

Because British colonists in the West Indies and British North America, and those in the Indian subcontinent, had no representation of their own at Westminster, representatives of these groups often claimed that rotten boroughs provided opportunities for virtual representation in Parliament for colonial interest groups.[7]

The Tory politician Spencer Perceval asked the nation to look at the system as a whole, saying that if pocket boroughs were disenfranchised, the whole system was liable to collapse.[8]

Later usage edit

The magazine Private Eye has a column entitled "Rotten Boroughs", which lists stories of municipal wrongdoing.[9] In this instance, "boroughs" refers to local government districts rather than parliamentary constituencies.

In his book The Age of Consent (2003), George Monbiot compared small island states with one vote in the United Nations General Assembly to "rotten boroughs".

The term "rotten borough" is sometimes used to disparage electorates used to gain political leverage. In Hong Kong and Macau, functional constituencies (with small voter bases attached to special interests) are often referred to as "rotten boroughs" by long-time columnist Jake van der Kamp. In New Zealand, the term has been used to refer to electorates which, by dint of an agreement for a larger party, have been won by a minor party, enabling that party to gain more seats under the country's proportional representation system.[10] The Spectator has described the London Borough of Tower Hamlets as a "rotten borough",[11] and in 2015 The Independent reported that Tower Hamlets was to be the subject of an investigation into electoral fraud.[12]

The Electoral Reform Society produced a list of "Rotten Boroughs" for the 2019 United Kingdom local elections, with Fenland District Council at the top.[13]

The Corporation of the City of London has been referred to as the UK's Last Rotten Borough[14] due to the fact that only four of its 25 electoral wards hold elections where voting by residents decides the result. The other wards are decided on votes cast by business leaders, not residents, making this the only local government authority in the UK that now lacks a popular franchise.

In popular culture edit

Literature edit

  • In the satirical novel Melincourt, or Sir Oran Haut-Ton (1817) by Thomas Love Peacock, an orang-utan named Sir Oran Haut-Ton is elected to parliament by the "ancient and honourable borough of Onevote". The election of Sir Oran forms part of the hero's plan to persuade civilisation to share his belief that orang-utans are a race of human beings who merely lack the power of speech. "The borough of Onevote stood in the middle of a heath, and consisted of a solitary farm, of which the land was so poor and intractable, that it would not have been worth the while of any human being to cultivate it, had not the Duke of Rottenburgh found it very well worth his while to pay his tenant for living there, to keep the honourable borough in existence." The single voter of the borough, Mr Christopher Corporate, elects two MPs, each of whom "can only be considered as the representative of half of him".
  • In the parliamentary novels of Anthony Trollope rotten boroughs are a recurring theme. John Grey, Phineas Finn, and Lord Silverbridge are all elected by rotten boroughs.
  • In Chapter 7 of the novel Vanity Fair (published 1847–1848), author William Makepeace Thackeray introduces the fictitious borough of "Queen's Crawley", so named in honour of a stopover in the small Hampshire town of Crawley by Queen Elizabeth I, who, delighted by the quality of the local beer, instantly raised the small town of Crawley into a borough, giving it two members in Parliament. At the time of the story, set in the early 19th century, the place had lost population, so that it was "come down to that condition of borough which used to be denominated rotten". Queen's Crawley re-appears in Thackeray's The Virginians (published in 1857–1859).
  • In Charles Dickens' novel Our Mutual Friend (1864–1865), a borough called "Pocket-Breaches" elects Mr. Veneering as its MP.
  • The novel Rotten Borough was a controversial story published by Oliver Anderson under the pen name Julian Pine in 1937, republished in 1989.
  • In Diana Wynne Jones' 2003 book The Merlin Conspiracy, Old Sarum features as a character, with one line being "I'm a rotten borough, I am."
  • In the Aubrey–Maturin series of sea-faring tales, the pocket borough of Milport (also known as Milford) is initially held by General Aubrey, the father of protagonist Jack Aubrey. In the twelfth novel in the series, The Letter of Marque (1988), Jack's father dies and the seat is offered to Jack himself by his cousin Edward Norton, the "owner" of the borough. The borough has just seventeen electors, all of whom are tenants of Mr Norton.
  • In the 1969 first novel of George MacDonald Fraser's The Flashman Papers series, the eponymous antihero, Harry Flashman, mentions that his father, Sir Buckley Flashman, had been in Parliament, but "they did for him at Reform" – implying that the elder Flashman had sat for[15] a rotten or pocket borough.

Television edit

Video games edit

  • The video game Assassin's Creed III briefly mentions pocket and rotten boroughs in a database entry entitled "Pocket Boroughs", with Old Sarum identified as one of the worst examples of a pocket borough. In the game, shortly before the Boston Massacre, a non-player character (NPC) can be heard speaking to a group of people on the colonies' lack of representation in Parliament and listing several rotten boroughs, including Old Sarum.

Quotations edit

  • "[Borough representation is] the rotten part of the constitution." – William Pitt the Elder[citation needed]
  • Thomas Paine, Rights of Man, 1791:

    The county of Yorkshire, which contains near a million souls, sends two county members; and so does the county of Rutland which contains not a hundredth part of that number. The town of Old Sarum, which contains not three houses, sends two members; and the town of Manchester, which contains upwards of sixty thousand souls, is not admitted to send any. Is there any principle in these things?

  • Gilbert and Sullivan, HMS Pinafore:

    Sir Joseph Porter:
    I grew so rich that I was sent
    By a pocket borough into Parliament.
    I always voted at my party's call,
    And I never thought of thinking for myself at all.
    Chorus:
    And he never thought of thinking for himself at all.
    Sir Joseph:
    I thought so little, they rewarded me
    By making me the Ruler of the Queen's Navee!

  • From Iolanthe by Gilbert and Sullivan:

    Fairy Queen: Let me see. I've a borough or two at my disposal. Would you like to go into Parliament?

  • Patrick O'Brian, The Letter of Marque:

    "Could you not spend an afternoon at Milport, to meet the electors? There are not many of them, and those few are all my tenants, so it is no more than a formality; but there is a certain decency to be kept up. The writ will be issued very soon."

  • The Borough of Queen's Crawley in Thackeray's Vanity Fair is a rotten borough eliminated by the Reform Act of 1832:

    When Colonel Dobbin quitted the service, which he did immediately after his marriage, he rented a pretty country place in Hampshire, not far from Queen's Crawley, where, after the passing of the Reform Bill, Sir Pitt and his family constantly resided now. All idea of a peerage was out of the question, the baronet's two seats in Parliament being lost. He was both out of pocket and out of spirits by that catastrophe, failed in his health, and prophesied the speedy ruin of the Empire.

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Carpenter, William (1831). The People's Book; Comprising their Chartered Rights and Practical Wrongs. London: W. Strange. p. 406.
  2. ^ Namier, Lewis (1929). The Structure of Politics at the Accession of George III. London: Macmillan.
  3. ^ a b c Pearce, Robert D.; Stearn, Roger (2000). Government and Reform: Britain, 1815–1918 (2nd ed.). London: Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 9780340789476.
  4. ^ Hampsher-Monk, Iain (1979). "Civic Humanism and Parliamentary Reform: The Case of the Society of the Friends of the People". Journal of British Studies. 18 (2): 70–89. doi:10.1086/385738. JSTOR 175513. S2CID 143821652.
  5. ^ England (1793). The State of the Representation of England and Wales, Delivered to the Society, the Friends of the People ... on ... the 9th of February, 1793. London.
  6. ^ Emsley, Clive (985). "Repression, 'Terror' and the Rule of Law in England During the Decade of the French Revolution". The English Historical Review. Oxford University Press. 100 (397): 801–825. JSTOR 572566.
  7. ^ Taylor, Miles (2003). "Empire and Parliamentary Reform: The 1832 Reform Act Revisited". In Burns, Arthur; Innes, Joanna (eds.). Rethinking the Age of Reform: Britain 1780-1850. Cambridge University Press. pp. 295–312. ISBN 9780521823944.
  8. ^ Evans, Eric J. (1990). Liberal Democracies. Joint Matriculation Board. p. 104.
  9. ^ "Rotten Boroughs". Private Eye. Retrieved 3 February 2020.
  10. ^ Murray, J. "Banksy's brew not so bewitching this time round", 3 News, 11 November 2011. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
  11. ^ "Tower Hamlets – London's rotten borough | Coffee House". The Spectator. 26 May 2014. Retrieved 13 September 2018.
  12. ^ Morris, Nigel (13 August 2015). "Eric Pickles to lead electoral fraud investigation into 'rotten boroughs' after Tower Hamlets scandal". The Independent. Retrieved 13 February 2020.
  13. ^ Elworthy, John (20 April 2019). "Fenland named by Electoral Reform Society as top of their 'rotten boroughs' on two counts – and candidate apathy is blamed for putting us there". Cambs Times. Retrieved 21 May 2021.
  14. ^ Quinn, Ben (30 November 2012). "City of London Corporation: 'last rotten borough' faces calls for reform". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 18 October 2023.
  15. ^ "sit". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  16. ^ "Black Adder – Episode Guide: Dish and Dishonesty". BBC. Retrieved 2 May 2010.

Further reading edit

rotten, pocket, boroughs, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, articl. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Rotten and pocket boroughs news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message A rotten or pocket borough also known as a nomination borough or proprietorial borough was a parliamentary borough or constituency in England Great Britain or the United Kingdom before the Reform Act 1832 which had a very small electorate and could be used by a patron to gain unrepresentative influence within the unreformed House of Commons The same terms were used for similar boroughs represented in the 18th century Parliament of Ireland The Reform Act 1832 abolished the majority of these rotten and pocket boroughs Old Sarum in Wiltshire an uninhabited hill which until 1832 elected two Members of Parliament Painting by John Constable 1829 Contents 1 Background 2 Rotten boroughs 3 Pocket boroughs 4 Reform 5 Contemporary defences 6 Later usage 7 In popular culture 7 1 Literature 7 2 Television 7 3 Video games 7 4 Quotations 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 Further readingBackground editA parliamentary borough was a town or former town that had been incorporated under a royal charter giving it the right to send two elected burgesses as Members of Parliament MPs to the House of Commons It was not unusual for the physical boundary of the settlement to change as the town developed or contracted over time for example due to changes in its trade and industry so that the boundaries of the parliamentary borough and of the physical settlement were no longer the same For centuries constituencies electing members to the House of Commons did not change to reflect population shifts and in some places the number of electors became so few that they could be bribed or otherwise influenced by a single wealthy patron In the early 19th century reformists scornfully called these boroughs rotten boroughs because they had so few inhabitants left or pocket boroughs because their MPs were elected by the whim of the patron thereby being in his pocket the actual votes of the electors were a mere formality since all or most of them voted as the patron instructed them with or without bribery As voting was by show of hands at a single polling station at a single time few would vote contrary to the declared wishes of the patron Often only one candidate would be nominated or two for a two seat constituency so that the election was uncontested because other candidates saw it as futile to stand Thus an MP might be elected by only a few voters although the number of constituents would usually be higher while at the same time many new towns which had grown due to increased trade and industry were inadequately represented For example before 1832 the town of Manchester which expanded rapidly during the Industrial Revolution from a small settlement into a large city was merely part of the larger county constituency of Lancashire and did not elect its own MPs Many of these ancient boroughs elected two MPs By the time of the 1831 general election out of 406 elected members 152 were chosen by fewer than 100 voters each and 88 by fewer than fifty voters 1 By the early 19th century moves were made towards reform with eventual success when the Reform Act 1832 abolished the rotten boroughs and redistributed representation in Parliament to new major population centres The Ballot Act 1872 introduced the secret ballot which greatly hindered patrons from controlling elections by preventing them from knowing how an elector had voted At the same time the practice of paying or entertaining voters treating was outlawed and election expenses fell dramatically Rotten boroughs editThe term rotten borough came into use in the 18th century it meant a parliamentary borough with a tiny electorate so small that voters were susceptible to control in a variety of ways as it had declined in population and importance since its early days The word rotten had the connotation of corruption as well as long term decline In such boroughs most or all of the few electors could not vote as they pleased due to the lack of a secret ballot and their dependency on the owner of the borough Only rarely were the views or personal character of a candidate taken into consideration except by the minority of voters who were not beholden to a particular interest Typically rotten boroughs had gained their representation in Parliament when they were more flourishing centres but the borough s boundaries had never been updated or else they had become depopulated or even deserted over the centuries Some had once been important places or had played a major role in England s history but had fallen into insignificance as for example when industry moved away For example in the 12th century Old Sarum had been a busy cathedral city reliant on the wealth expended by its own Sarum Cathedral within its city precincts but it was abandoned when the cathedral was moved to create the present Salisbury Cathedral built on a new site nearby New Sarum The new site immediately attracted merchants and workers who built up a new town around it Despite this dramatic loss of population the constituency of Old Sarum retained its right to elect two MPs effectively putting the election of two MPs under control by a single landowning family Many such rotten boroughs were controlled by landowners and peers who might give the seats in Parliament to their like minded friends or relations or who went to Parliament themselves if they were not already members of the House of Lords They also commonly sold them for money or other favours the peers who controlled such boroughs had a double influence in Parliament as they themselves held seats in the House of Lords This patronage was based on property rights which could be inherited and passed on to heirs or else sold like any other form of property Despite the small number of voters in each district listed below for all or much of the time of their existence the boroughs had not just one MP which would already have been disproportionate but rather had two MPs Examples of rotten boroughs Borough County Houses Voters NotesOld Sarum Wiltshire 00 3 0 7Gatton Surrey 0 23 0 7Newtown Isle of Wight 0 14 23East Looe Cornwall 167 38Dunwich Suffolk 0 44 32 Most of this formerly prosperous town had fallen into the seaPlympton Erle Devon 182 40 One seat was controlled from the mid 17th century to 1832 by the Treby family of Plympton HouseBramber West Sussex 0 35 20Callington Cornwall 225 42 Controlled by the Rolle family of Heanton Satchville and Stevenstone in DevonTrim County Meath Parliament of IrelandBefore being awarded a peerage Arthur Wellesley later Duke of Wellington served in the Irish House of Commons as a Member for the rotten borough of Trim Robert Stewart Viscount Castlereagh served as a Member for the rotten borough of Plympton Erle Pocket boroughs editPocket boroughs were boroughs which could effectively be controlled by a single person who owned at least half of the burgage tenements the occupants of which had the right to vote in the borough s parliamentary elections A wealthy patron therefore had merely to buy up these specially qualified houses and install in them his own tenants selected for their willingness to do their landlord s bidding or given such precarious forms of tenure that they dared not displease him As there was no secret ballot until 1872 the landowner could evict electors who did not vote for the two men he wanted A common expression referring to such a situation was that Mr A had been elected on Lord B s interest There were also boroughs which were controlled not by a particular patron but rather by the Crown specifically by the departments of state of the Treasury or Admiralty and which thus returned the candidates nominated by the ministers in charge of those departments 2 Some rich individuals controlled several boroughs for example the Duke of Newcastle is said to have had seven boroughs in his pocket One of the representatives of a pocket borough was often the man who controlled it and for this reason they were also referred to as proprietorial boroughs 3 14 Pocket boroughs were seen by their 19th century owners as a valuable method of ensuring the representation of the landed interest in the House of Commons citation needed Significantly diminished by the Reform Act 1832 pocket boroughs were for all practical purposes abolished by the Reform Act of 1867 This considerably extended the borough franchise and established the principle that each parliamentary constituency should hold roughly the same number of electors Boundary commissions were set up by subsequent Acts of Parliament to maintain this principle as population movements continued citation needed Reform editIn the late 18th century many political societies such as the London Corresponding Society and the Society of the Friends of the People called for parliamentary reform 4 Specifically they thought that the rotten borough system was unfair and they called for a more equal distribution of representatives that reflected the population of Britain 5 However legislation enacted by William Pitt the Younger caused these societies to disband by making it illegal for them to meet or publish information 6 In the 19th century there were moves toward reform which broadly meant ending the over representation of boroughs with few electors The culmination of the process of Catholic Emancipation in 1829 finally brought the reform issue to a head The reform movement had a major success in the Reform Act 1832 which disfranchised the 56 boroughs listed below most of them in the south and west of England This redistributed representation in Parliament to new major population centres and places with significant industries which tended to be farther north BuckinghamshireWendover AmershamCornwallBossiney Callington Camelford East Looe Fowey Lostwithiel Mitchell or St Michael s Newport Saltash St Germans St Mawes Tregony West LooeDevonBeeralston Okehampton Plympton Erle HampshireNewtown Isle of Wight Stockbridge Whitchurch Yarmouth Isle of WightKentNew Romney QueenboroughNorthamptonshireBrackley Higham FerrersSuffolkAldeburgh Dunwich OrfordSomersetIlchester Milborne Port Minehead SurreyBletchingley Gatton HaslemereSussexBramber East Grinstead Seaford Steyning WinchelseaWiltshireDownton Great Bedwyn Heytesbury Hindon Ludgershall Old Sarum Wootton BassettYorkshireAldborough West Riding Boroughbridge North Riding Hedon East Riding Other countiesAppleby Westmorland Bishop s Castle Shropshire Castle Rising Norfolk Corfe Castle Dorset Newton Lancashire Weobley HerefordshireContemporary defences editA substantial number of Tory constituencies were rotten and pocket boroughs and their right to representation was defended by the successive Tory governments in office between 1807 and 1830 During this period they came under criticism from figures such as Thomas Paine and William Cobbett 3 It was argued in defence of such boroughs that they provided stability and were also a means for promising young politicians to enter Parliament with William Pitt the Elder being cited as a key example 3 22 Some MPs claimed that the boroughs should be retained as Britain had enjoyed periods of prosperity while they were part of the constitution of Parliament Because British colonists in the West Indies and British North America and those in the Indian subcontinent had no representation of their own at Westminster representatives of these groups often claimed that rotten boroughs provided opportunities for virtual representation in Parliament for colonial interest groups 7 The Tory politician Spencer Perceval asked the nation to look at the system as a whole saying that if pocket boroughs were disenfranchised the whole system was liable to collapse 8 Later usage editThe magazine Private Eye has a column entitled Rotten Boroughs which lists stories of municipal wrongdoing 9 In this instance boroughs refers to local government districts rather than parliamentary constituencies In his book The Age of Consent 2003 George Monbiot compared small island states with one vote in the United Nations General Assembly to rotten boroughs The term rotten borough is sometimes used to disparage electorates used to gain political leverage In Hong Kong and Macau functional constituencies with small voter bases attached to special interests are often referred to as rotten boroughs by long time columnist Jake van der Kamp In New Zealand the term has been used to refer to electorates which by dint of an agreement for a larger party have been won by a minor party enabling that party to gain more seats under the country s proportional representation system 10 The Spectator has described the London Borough of Tower Hamlets as a rotten borough 11 and in 2015 The Independent reported that Tower Hamlets was to be the subject of an investigation into electoral fraud 12 The Electoral Reform Society produced a list of Rotten Boroughs for the 2019 United Kingdom local elections with Fenland District Council at the top 13 The Corporation of the City of London has been referred to as the UK s Last Rotten Borough 14 due to the fact that only four of its 25 electoral wards hold elections where voting by residents decides the result The other wards are decided on votes cast by business leaders not residents making this the only local government authority in the UK that now lacks a popular franchise In popular culture editLiterature edit In the satirical novel Melincourt or Sir Oran Haut Ton 1817 by Thomas Love Peacock an orang utan named Sir Oran Haut Ton is elected to parliament by the ancient and honourable borough of Onevote The election of Sir Oran forms part of the hero s plan to persuade civilisation to share his belief that orang utans are a race of human beings who merely lack the power of speech The borough of Onevote stood in the middle of a heath and consisted of a solitary farm of which the land was so poor and intractable that it would not have been worth the while of any human being to cultivate it had not the Duke of Rottenburgh found it very well worth his while to pay his tenant for living there to keep the honourable borough in existence The single voter of the borough Mr Christopher Corporate elects two MPs each of whom can only be considered as the representative of half of him In the parliamentary novels of Anthony Trollope rotten boroughs are a recurring theme John Grey Phineas Finn and Lord Silverbridge are all elected by rotten boroughs In Chapter 7 of the novel Vanity Fair published 1847 1848 author William Makepeace Thackeray introduces the fictitious borough of Queen s Crawley so named in honour of a stopover in the small Hampshire town of Crawley by Queen Elizabeth I who delighted by the quality of the local beer instantly raised the small town of Crawley into a borough giving it two members in Parliament At the time of the story set in the early 19th century the place had lost population so that it was come down to that condition of borough which used to be denominated rotten Queen s Crawley re appears in Thackeray s The Virginians published in 1857 1859 In Charles Dickens novel Our Mutual Friend 1864 1865 a borough called Pocket Breaches elects Mr Veneering as its MP The novel Rotten Borough was a controversial story published by Oliver Anderson under the pen name Julian Pine in 1937 republished in 1989 In Diana Wynne Jones 2003 book The Merlin Conspiracy Old Sarum features as a character with one line being I m a rotten borough I am In the Aubrey Maturin series of sea faring tales the pocket borough of Milport also known as Milford is initially held by General Aubrey the father of protagonist Jack Aubrey In the twelfth novel in the series The Letter of Marque 1988 Jack s father dies and the seat is offered to Jack himself by his cousin Edward Norton the owner of the borough The borough has just seventeen electors all of whom are tenants of Mr Norton In the 1969 first novel of George MacDonald Fraser s The Flashman Papers series the eponymous antihero Harry Flashman mentions that his father Sir Buckley Flashman had been in Parliament but they did for him at Reform implying that the elder Flashman had sat for 15 a rotten or pocket borough Television edit In the episode Dish and Dishonesty of the BBC television comedy Blackadder the Third Edmund Blackadder attempts to bolster support for the Prince Regent in Parliament by getting the incompetent Baldrick elected to the fictional rotten borough of Dunny on the Wold presumably a reference to Dunwich He easily accomplished this with a result of 16 472 to nil even though the constituency had only one voter Blackadder himself 16 Video games edit The video game Assassin s Creed III briefly mentions pocket and rotten boroughs in a database entry entitled Pocket Boroughs with Old Sarum identified as one of the worst examples of a pocket borough In the game shortly before the Boston Massacre a non player character NPC can be heard speaking to a group of people on the colonies lack of representation in Parliament and listing several rotten boroughs including Old Sarum Quotations edit Borough representation is the rotten part of the constitution William Pitt the Elder citation needed Thomas Paine Rights of Man 1791 The county of Yorkshire which contains near a million souls sends two county members and so does the county of Rutland which contains not a hundredth part of that number The town of Old Sarum which contains not three houses sends two members and the town of Manchester which contains upwards of sixty thousand souls is not admitted to send any Is there any principle in these things Gilbert and Sullivan HMS Pinafore Sir Joseph Porter I grew so rich that I was sent By a pocket borough into Parliament I always voted at my party s call And I never thought of thinking for myself at all Chorus And he never thought of thinking for himself at all Sir Joseph I thought so little they rewarded me By making me the Ruler of the Queen s Navee From Iolanthe by Gilbert and Sullivan Fairy Queen Let me see I ve a borough or two at my disposal Would you like to go into Parliament Patrick O Brian The Letter of Marque Could you not spend an afternoon at Milport to meet the electors There are not many of them and those few are all my tenants so it is no more than a formality but there is a certain decency to be kept up The writ will be issued very soon The Borough of Queen s Crawley in Thackeray s Vanity Fair is a rotten borough eliminated by the Reform Act of 1832 When Colonel Dobbin quitted the service which he did immediately after his marriage he rented a pretty country place in Hampshire not far from Queen s Crawley where after the passing of the Reform Bill Sir Pitt and his family constantly resided now All idea of a peerage was out of the question the baronet s two seats in Parliament being lost He was both out of pocket and out of spirits by that catastrophe failed in his health and prophesied the speedy ruin of the Empire See also editApportionment politics Functional constituencies in Hong Kong and Macau GerrymanderingReferences editNotes edit Carpenter William 1831 The People s Book Comprising their Chartered Rights and Practical Wrongs London W Strange p 406 Namier Lewis 1929 The Structure of Politics at the Accession of George III London Macmillan a b c Pearce Robert D Stearn Roger 2000 Government and Reform Britain 1815 1918 2nd ed London Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 9780340789476 Hampsher Monk Iain 1979 Civic Humanism and Parliamentary Reform The Case of the Society of the Friends of the People Journal of British Studies 18 2 70 89 doi 10 1086 385738 JSTOR 175513 S2CID 143821652 England 1793 The State of the Representation of England and Wales Delivered to the Society the Friends of the People on the 9th of February 1793 London Emsley Clive 985 Repression Terror and the Rule of Law in England During the Decade of the French Revolution The English Historical Review Oxford University Press 100 397 801 825 JSTOR 572566 Taylor Miles 2003 Empire and Parliamentary Reform The 1832 Reform Act Revisited In Burns Arthur Innes Joanna eds Rethinking the Age of Reform Britain 1780 1850 Cambridge University Press pp 295 312 ISBN 9780521823944 Evans Eric J 1990 Liberal Democracies Joint Matriculation Board p 104 Rotten Boroughs Private Eye Retrieved 3 February 2020 Murray J Banksy s brew not so bewitching this time round 3 News 11 November 2011 Retrieved 1 February 2014 Tower Hamlets London s rotten borough Coffee House The Spectator 26 May 2014 Retrieved 13 September 2018 Morris Nigel 13 August 2015 Eric Pickles to lead electoral fraud investigation into rotten boroughs after Tower Hamlets scandal The Independent Retrieved 13 February 2020 Elworthy John 20 April 2019 Fenland named by Electoral Reform Society as top of their rotten boroughs on two counts and candidate apathy is blamed for putting us there Cambs Times Retrieved 21 May 2021 Quinn Ben 30 November 2012 City of London Corporation last rotten borough faces calls for reform The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 18 October 2023 sit Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required Black Adder Episode Guide Dish and Dishonesty BBC Retrieved 2 May 2010 Further reading edit Namier Lewis 1957 1929 The Structure of Politics at the Accession of George III Spielvogel Jackson J 2003 Western Civilization Volume II Since 1500 p 493 nbsp Look up pocket borough or rotten borough in Wiktionary the free dictionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rotten and pocket boroughs amp oldid 1184156475, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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