The house of commons.
The dignified aspect of the House
of Commons is altogether secondary to its efficient
use. It is dignified: in a Government
in which the most prominent parts are good because
they are very stately, any prominent part, to be good
at all, must be somewhat stately. The human imagination
exacts keeping in government as much as in art; it
will not be at all influenced by institutions which
do not match with those by which it is principally
influenced. The House of Commons needs to be
impressive, and impressive it is: but its use
resides not in its appearance, but in its reality.
Its office is not to win power by awing mankind, but
to use power in governing mankind.
The main function of the House of
Commons is one which we know quite well, though our
common constitutional speech does not recognise it.
The House of Commons is an electoral chamber; it is
the assembly which chooses our president. Washington
and his fellow-politicians contrived an electoral
college, to be composed (as was hoped) of the wisest
people in the nation, which, after due deliberation,
was to choose for president the wisest man in the
nation. But that college is a sham; it has no
independence and no life. No one knows, or cares
to know, who its members are. They never discuss,
and never deliberate. They were chosen to vote
that Mr. Lincoln be President, or that Mr. Breckenridge
be President; they do so vote, and they go home.
But our House of Commons is a real choosing body;
it elects the people it likes. And it dismisses
whom it likes too. No matter that a few months
since it was chosen to support Lord Aberdeen or Lord
Palmerston; upon a sudden occasion it ousts the statesman
to whom it at first adhered, and selects an opposite
statesman whom it at first rejected. Doubtless
in such cases there is a tacit reference to probable
public opinion; but certainly also there is much free
will in the judgment of the Commons. The House
only goes where it thinks in the end the nation will
follow; but it takes its chance of the nation following
or not following; it assumes the initiative, and acts
upon its discretion or its caprice.
When the American nation has chosen
its President, its virtue goes out of it, and out
of the Transmissive College through which it chooses.
But because the House of Commons has the power of dismissal
in addition to the power of election, its relations
to the Premier are incessant. They guide him
and he leads them. He is to them what they are
to the nation. He only goes where he believes
they will go after him. But he has to take the
lead; he must choose his direction, and begin the
journey. Nor must he flinch. A good horse
likes to feel the rider’s bit; and a great deliberative
assembly likes to feel that it is under worthy guidance.
A Minister who succumbs to the House, who
ostentatiously seeks its pleasure, who does
not try to regulate it, who will not boldly
point out plain errors to it, seldom thrives.
The great leaders of Parliament have varied much, but
they have all had a certain firmness. A great
assembly is as soon spoiled by over-indulgence as
a little child. The whole life of English politics
is the action and reaction between the Ministry and
the Parliament. The appointees strive to guide,
and the appointers surge under the guidance.
The elective is now the most important function of
the House of Commons. It is most desirable to
insist, and be tedious, on this, because our tradition
ignores it. At the end of half the sessions of
Parliament, you will read in the newspapers, and you
will hear even from those who have looked close at
the matter and should know better, “Parliament
has done nothing this session. Some things were
promised in the Queen’s speech, but they were
only little things; and most of them have not passed.”
Lord Lyndhurst used for years to recount the small
outcomings of legislative achievement; and yet those
were the days of the first Whig Governments, who had
more to do in legislation, and did more, than any
Government. The true answer to such harangues
as Lord Lyndhurst’s by a Minister should have
been in the first person. He should have said
firmly, “Parliament has maintained me, and
that was its greatest duty; Parliament has carried
on what, in the language of traditional respect, we
call the Queen’s Government; it has maintained
what wisely or unwisely it deemed the best executive
of the English nation”. The second function
of the House of Commons is what I may call an expressive
function. It is its office to express the mind
of the English people on all matters which come before
it. Whether it does so well or ill I shall discuss
presently. The third function of Parliament is
what I may call preserving a sort of technicality
even in familiar matters for the sake of distinctness the
teaching function. A great and open council of
considerable men cannot be placed in the middle of
a society without altering that society. It ought
to alter it for the better. It ought to teach
the nation what it does not know. How far the
House of Commons can so teach, and how far it does
so teach, are matters for subsequent discussion.
Fourthly, the House of Commons has
what may be called an informing function a
function which though in its present form quite modern
is singularly analogous to a mediaeval function.
In old times one office of the House of Commons was
to inform the sovereign what was wrong. It laid
before the Crown the grievances and complaints of particular
interests. Since the publication of the Parliamentary
debates a corresponding office of Parliament is to
lay these same grievances, these same complaints,
before the nation, which is the present sovereign.
The nation needs it quite as much as the king ever
needed it. A free people is indeed mostly fair,
liberty practises men in a give-and-take, which is
the rough essence of justice. The English people,
possibly even above other free nations, is fair.
But a free nation rarely can be and the
English nation is not quick of apprehension.
It only comprehends what is familiar to it what
comes into its own experience, what squares with its
own thoughts. “I never heard of such a
thing in my life,” the middle-class Englishman
says, and he thinks he so refutes an argument.
The common disputant cannot say in reply that his
experience is but limited, and that the assertion
may be true, though he had never met with anything
at all like it. But a great debate in Parliament
does bring home something of this feeling. Any
notion, any creed, any feeling, any grievance which
can get a decent number of English members to stand
up for it, is felt by almost all Englishmen to be
perhaps a false and pernicious opinion, but at any
rate possible an opinion within the intellectual
sphere, an opinion to be reckoned with. And it
is an immense achievement. Practical diplomatists
say that a free Government is harder to deal with than
a despotic Government; you may be able to get the
despot to hear the other side; his Ministers, men
of trained intelligence, will be sure to know what
makes against them; and they may tell him.
But a free nation never hears any side save its own.
The newspapers only repeat the side their purchasers
like: the favourable arguments are set out, elaborated,
illustrated; the adverse arguments maimed, misstated,
confused. The worst judge, they say, is a deaf
judge; the most dull Government is a free Government
on matters its ruling classes will not hear.
I am disposed to reckon it as the second function of
Parliament in point of importance, that to some extent
it makes us hear what otherwise we should not.
Lastly, there is the function of legislation,
of which of course it would be preposterous to deny
the great importance, and which I only deny to be
as important as the executive management of the
whole State, or the political education given by Parliament
to the whole nation. There are, I allow, seasons
when legislation is more important than either of
these. The nation may be misfitted with its laws,
and need to change them: some particular corn
law may hurt all industry, and it may be worth a thousand
administrative blunders to get rid of it. But
generally the laws of a nation suit its life; special
adaptations of them are but subordinate; the administration
and conduct of that life is the matter which presses
most. Nevertheless, the statute-book of every
great nation yearly contains many important new laws,
and the English statute-book does so above any.
An immense mass, indeed, of the legislation is not,
in the proper language of jurisprudence, legislation
at all. A law is a general command applicable
to many cases. The “special acts”
which crowd the statute-book and weary Parliamentary
committees are applicable to one case only. They
do not lay down rules according to which railways
shall be made, they enact that such a railway shall
be made from this place to that place, and they have
no bearing upon any other transaction. But after
every deduction and abatement, the annual legislation
of Parliament is a result of singular importance;
were it not so, it could not be, as it often is considered,
the sole result of its annual assembling.
Some persons will perhaps think that
I ought to enumerate a sixth function of the House
of Commons a financial function. But
I do not consider that, upon broad principle, and
omitting legal technicalities, the House of Commons
has any special function with regard to financial
different from its functions with respect to other
legislation. It is to rule in both, and to rule
in both through the Cabinet. Financial legislation
is of necessity a yearly recurring legislation; but
frequency of occurrence does not indicate a diversity
of nature or compel an antagonism of treatment.
In truth, the principal peculiarity
of the House of Commons in financial affairs is nowadays
not a special privilege, but an exceptional disability.
On common subjects any member can propose anything,
but not on money the Minister only can propose
to tax the people. This principle is commonly
involved in mediaeval metaphysics as to the prerogative
of the Crown, but it is as useful in the nineteenth
century as in the fourteenth, and rests on as sure
a principle. The House of Commons now
that it is the true sovereign, and appoints the real
executive has long ceased to be the checking,
sparing, economical body it once was. It now
is more apt to spend money than the Minister of the
day. I have heard a very experienced financier
say, “If you want to raise a certain cheer in
the House of Commons make a general panegyric on economy;
if you want to invite a sure defeat, propose a particular
saving”. The process is simple. Every
expenditure of public money has some apparent public
object; those who wish to spend the money expatiate
on that object; they say, “What is 50,000 pounds
to this great country? Is this a time for cheese-paring
objection? Our industry was never so productive;
our resources never so immense. What is 50,000
pounds in comparison with this great national interest?”
The members who are for the expenditure always come
down; perhaps a constituent or a friend who will profit
by the outlay, or is keen on the object, has asked
them to attend; at any rate, there is a popular vote
to be given, on which the newspapers always
philanthropic, and sometimes talked over will
be sure to make enconiums. The members against
the expenditure rarely come down of themselves; why
should they become unpopular without reason?
The object seems decent; many of its advocates are
certainly sincere: a hostile vote will make enemies,
and be censured by the journals. If there were
not some check, the “people’s house”
would soon outrun the people’s money. That
check is the responsibility of the Cabinet for the
national finance. If any one could propose a
tax, they might let the House spend it as it would,
and wash their hands of the matter; but now, for whatever
expenditure is sanctioned even when it
is sanctioned against the Ministry’s wish the
Ministry must find the money. Accordingly, they
have the strongest motive to oppose extra outlay.
They will have to pay the bill for it; they will have
to impose taxation, which is always disagreeable, or
suggest loans, which, under ordinary circumstances,
are shameful. The Ministry is (so to speak) the
bread-winner of the political family, and has to meet
the cost of philanthropy and glory, just as the head
of a family has to pay for the charities of his wife
and the toilette of his daughters.
In truth, when a Cabinet is made the
sole executive, it follows it must have the sole financial
charge, for all action costs money, all policy depends
on money, and it is in adjusting the relative goodness
of action and policies that the executive is employed.
From a consideration of these functions,
it follows that we are ruled by the House of Commons;
we are, indeed, so used to be so ruled, that it does
not seem to be at all strange. But of all odd
forms of government, the oddest really is government
by a public meeting. Here are 658 persons,
collected from all parts of England, different in
nature, different in interests, different in look,
and language. If we think what an empire the
English is, how various are its components, how incessant
its concerns, how immersed in history its policy; if
we think what a vast information, what a nice discretion,
what a consistent will ought to mark the rulers of
that empire, we shall be surprised when we see them.
We see a changing body of miscellaneous persons, sometimes
few, sometimes many, never the same for an hour; sometimes
excited, but mostly dull and half weary impatient
of eloquence, catching at any joke as an alleviation.
These are the persons who rule the British Empire who
rule England, who rule Scotland, who rule Ireland,
who rule a great deal of Asia, who rule a great deal
of Polynesia, who rule a great deal of America, and
scattered fragments everywhere.
Paley said many shrewd things, but
he never said a better thing than that it was much
harder to make men see a difficulty than comprehend
the explanation of it. The key to the difficulties
of most discussed and unsettled questions is commonly
in their undiscussed parts: they are like the
background of a picture, which looks obvious, easy,
just what any one might have painted, but which, in
fact, sets the figures in their right position, chastens
them, and makes them what they are. Nobody will
understand Parliament government who fancies it an
easy thing, a natural thing, a thing not needing explanation.
You have not a perception of the first elements in
this matter till you know that government by a club
is a standing wonder.
There has been a capital illustration
lately how helpless many English gentlemen are when
called together on a sudden. The Government, rightly
or wrongly, thought fit to entrust the quarter-sessions
of each county with the duty of combating its cattle-plague;
but the scene in most “shire halls” was
unsatisfactory. There was the greatest difficulty
in getting, not only a right decision, but any
decision, I saw one myself which went thus. The
chairman proposed a very complex resolution, in which
there was much which every one liked, and much which
every one disliked, though, of course, the favourite
parts of some were the objectionable parts to others.
This resolution got, so to say, wedged in the meeting;
everybody suggested amendments; one amendment was
carried which none were satisfied with, and so the
matter stood over. It is a saying in England,
“a big meeting never does anything”; and
yet we are governed by the House of Commons by
“a big meeting”.
It may be said that the House of Commons
does not rule, it only elects the rulers. But
there must be something special about it to enable
it to do that. Suppose the Cabinet were elected
by a London club, what confusion there would be, what
writing and answering! “Will you speak
to So-and-So, and ask him to vote for my man?”
would be heard on every side. How the wife of
A. and the wife of B. would plot to confound the wife
of C. Whether the club elected under the dignified
shadow of a queen, or without the shadow, would hardly
matter at all; if the substantial choice was in them,
the confusion and intrigue would be there too.
I propose to begin this paper by asking, not why the
House of Commons governs well? but the fundamental almost
unasked question how the House of Commons
comes to be able to govern at all?
The House of Commons can do work which
the quarter-sessions or clubs cannot do, because it
is an organised body, while quarter-sessions and clubs
are unorganised. Two of the greatest orators in
England Lord Brougham and Lord Bolingbroke spent
much eloquence in attacking party government.
Bolingbroke probably knew what he was doing; he was
a consistent opponent of the power of the Commons;
he wished to attack them in a vital part. But
Lord Brougham does not know; he proposes to amend
Parliamentary government by striking out the very elements
which make Parliamentary government possible.
At present the majority of Parliament obey certain
leaders; what those leaders propose they support,
what those leaders reject they reject. An old
Secretary of the Treasury used to say, “This
is a bad case, an indefensible case. We must
apply our majority to this question.” That
secretary lived fifty years ago, before the Reform
Bill, when majorities were very blind, and very “applicable”.
Nowadays, the power of leaders over their followers
is strictly and wisely limited: they can take
their followers but a little way, and that only in
certain directions. Yet still there are leaders
and followers. On the Conservative side of the
House there are vestiges of the despotic leadership
even now. A cynical politician is said to have
watched the long row of county members, so fresh and
respectable-looking, and muttered, “By Jove,
they are the finest brute votes in Europe!”
But all satire apart, the principle of Parliament is
obedience to leaders. Change your leader if you
will, take another if you will, but obey N while
you serve N, and obey N when you have gone
over to N. The penalty of not doing so, is
the penalty of impotence. It is not that you
will not be able to do any good, but you will not
be able to do anything at all. If everybody does
what he thinks right, there will be 657 amendments
to every motion, and none of them will be carried
or the motion either.
The moment, indeed, that we distinctly
conceive that the House of Commons is mainly and above
all things an elective assembly, we at once perceive
that party is of its essence. There never was
an election without a party. You cannot get a
child into an asylum without a combination. At
such places you may see “Vote for orphan A.”
upon a placard, and “Vote for orphan B. (also
an idiot!!!)” upon a banner, and the party of
each is busy about its placard and banner. What
is true at such minor and momentary elections must
be much more true in a great and constant election
of rulers. The House of Commons lives in a state
of perpetual potential choice; at any moment it can
choose a ruler and dismiss a ruler. And therefore
party is inherent in it, is bone of its bone, and
breath of its breath.
Secondly, though the leaders of party
no longer have the vast patronage of the last century
with which to bribe, they can coerce by a threat far
more potent than any allurement they can
dissolve. This is the secret which keeps parties
together. Mr. Cobden most justly said: “He
had never been able to discover what was the proper
moment, according to members of Parliament, for a
dissolution. He had heard them say they were
ready to vote for everything else, but he had never
heard them say they were ready to vote for that.”
Efficiency in an assembly requires a solid mass of
steady votes; and these are collected by a deferential
attachment to particular men, or by a belief in the
principles those men represent, and they are maintained
by fear of those men by the fear that if
you vote against them, you may yourself soon not have
a vote at all.
Thirdly, it may seem odd to say so,
just after inculcating that party organisation is
the vital principle of representative government, but
that organisation is permanently efficient, because
it is not composed of warm partisans. The body
is eager, but the atoms are cool. If it were
otherwise, Parliamentary government would become the
worst of governments a sectarian government.
The party in power would go all the lengths their
orators proposed all that their formulae
enjoined, as far as they had ever said they would
go. But the partisans of the English Parliament
are not of such a temper. They are Whigs, or
Radicals, or Tories, but they are much else too.
They are common Englishmen, and, as Father Newman
complains, “hard to be worked up to the dogmatic
level”. They are not eager to press the
tenets of their party to impossible conclusions.
On the contrary, the way to lead them the
best and acknowledged way is to affect a
studied and illogical moderation. You may hear
men say, “Without committing myself to the tenet
that 3 + 2 make 5, though I am free to admit that the
honourable member for Bradford has advanced very grave
arguments in behalf of it, I think I may, with the
permission of the Committee, assume that 2 + 3 do
not make 4, which will be a sufficient basis for the
important propositions which I shall venture to submit
on the present occasion.” This language
is very suitable to the greater part of the House
of Commons. Most men of business love a sort of
twilight. They have lived all their lives in
an atmosphere of probabilities and of doubt, where
nothing is very clear, where there are some chances
for many events, where there is much to be said for
several courses, where nevertheless one course must
be determinedly chosen and fixedly adhered to.
They like to hear arguments suited to this intellectual
haze. So far from caution or hesitation in the
statement of the argument striking them as an indication
of imbecility, it seems to them a sign of practicality.
They got rich themselves by transactions of which they
could not have stated the argumentative ground and
all they ask for is a distinct though moderate conclusion,
that they can repeat when asked; something which they
feel not to be abstract argument, but abstract
argument diluted and dissolved in real life. “There
seem to me,” an impatient young man once said,
“to be no stay in Peel’s arguments.”
And that was why Sir Robert Peel was the best leader
of the Commons in our time; we like to have the rigidity
taken out of an argument, and the substance left.
Nor indeed, under our system of government, are the
leaders themselves of the House of Commons, for the
most part, eager to carry party conclusions too far.
They are in contact with reality. An Opposition,
on coming into power, is often like a speculative merchant
whose bills become due. Ministers have to make
good their promises, and they find a difficulty in
so doing. They have said the state of things
is so and so, and if you give us the power we will
do thus and thus. But when they come to handle
the official documents, to converse with the permanent
under-secretary familiar with disagreeable
facts, and though in manner most respectful, yet most
imperturbable in opinion very soon doubts
intervene. Of course, something must be done;
the speculative merchant cannot forget his bills; the
late Opposition cannot, in office, forget those sentences
which terrible admirers in the country still quote.
But just as the merchant asks his debtor, “Could
you not take a bill at four months?” so the new
Minister says to the permanent under-secretary, “Could
you not suggest a middle course? I am of course
not bound by mere sentences used in debate; I have
never been accused of letting a false ambition of
consistency warp my conduct; but,” etc.,
etc. And the end always is that a middle
course is devised which looks as much as possible
like what was suggested in opposition, but which is
as much as possible what patent facts facts
which seem to live in the office, so teasing and unceasing
are they prove ought to be done. Of
all modes of enforcing moderation on a party, the
best is to contrive that the members of that party
shall be intrinsically moderate, careful, and almost
shrinking men; and the next best to contrive that
the leaders of the party, who have protested most
in its behalf, shall be placed in the closest contact
with the actual world. Our English system contains
both contrivances; it makes party government permanent
and possible in the sole way in which it can be so,
by making it mild.
But these expedients, though they
sufficiently remove the defects which make a common
club or quarter-sessions impotent, would not enable
the House of Commons to govern England. A representative
public meeting is subject to a defect over and above
those of other public meetings. It may not be
independent. The constituencies may not let it
alone. But if they do not, all the checks which
have been enumerated upon the evils of a party organisation
would be futile. The feeling of a constituency
is the feeling of a dominant party, and that feeling
is elicited, stimulated, sometimes even manufactured
by the local political agent. Such an opinion
could not be moderate; could not be subject to effectual
discussion; could not be in close contact with pressing
facts; could not be framed under a chastening sense
of near responsibility; could not be formed as those
form their opinions who have to act upon them.
Constituency government is the precise opposite of
Parliamentary government. It is the government
of immoderate persons far from the scene of action,
instead of the government of moderate persons close
to the scene of action; it is the judgment of persons
judging in the last resort and without a penalty, in
lieu of persons judging in fear of a dissolution,
and ever conscious that they are subject to an appeal.
Most persons would admit these conditions
of Parliamentary government when they read them, but
two at least of the most prominent ideas in the public
mind are inconsistent with them. The scheme to
which the arguments of our demagogues distinctly tend,
and the scheme to which the predilections of some
most eminent philosophers cleave, are both so.
They would not only make Parliamentary government work
ill, but they would prevent its working at all; they
would not render it bad, for they would make it impossible.
The first of these is the ultra-democratic
theory. This theory demands that every man of
twenty-one years of age (if not every woman too) should
have an equal vote in electing Parliament. Suppose
that last year there were twelve million adult males
in England. Upon this theory each man is to have
one twelve-millionth share in electing a Parliament;
the rich and wise are not to have, by explicit law,
more votes than the poor and stupid; nor are any latent
contrivances to give them an influence equivalent
to more votes. The machinery for carrying out
such a plan is very easy. At each census the country
ought to be divided into 658 electoral districts,
in each of which the number of adult males should
be the same; and these districts ought to be the only
constituencies, and elect the whole Parliament.
But if the above prerequisites are needful for Parliamentary
government, that Parliament would not work.
Such a Parliament could not be composed
of moderate men. The electoral districts would
be, some of them, in purely agricultural places, and
in these the parson and the squire would have almost
unlimited power. They would be able to drive
or send to the poll an entire labouring population.
These districts would return an unmixed squirearchy.
The scattered small towns which now send so many members
to Parliament, would be lost in the clownish mass;
their votes would send to Parliament no distinct members.
The agricultural part of England would choose its
representatives from quarter-sessions exclusively.
On the other hand a large part of the constituencies
would be town districts, and these would send up persons
representing the beliefs or unbeliefs of the lowest
classes in their towns. They would, perhaps, be
divided between the genuine representatives of the
artisans not possibly of the best of the
artisans, who are a select and intellectual class,
but of the common order of workpeople and
the merely pretended members for that class whom I
may call the members for the public-houses. In
all big towns in which there is electioneering these
houses are the centres of illicit corruption and illicit
management. There are pretty good records of
what that corruption and management are, but there
is no need to describe them here. Everybody will
understand what sort of things I mean, and the kind
of unprincipled members that are returned by them.
Our new Parliament, therefore, would be made up of
two sorts of representatives from the town lowest
class, and one sort of representatives from the agricultural
lowest class. The genuine representatives of
the country would be men of one marked sort, and the
genuine representatives for the county men of another
marked sort, but very opposite: one would have
the prejudices of town artisans, and the other the
prejudices of county magistrates. Each class would
speak a language of its own; each would be unintelligible
to the other; and the only thriving class would be
the immoral representatives, who were chosen by corrupt
machination, and who would probably get a good profit
on the capital they laid out in that corruption.
If it be true that a Parliamentary government is possible
only when the overwhelming majority of the representatives
are men essentially moderate, of no marked varieties,
free from class prejudices, this ultra-democratic
Parliament could not maintain that government, for
its members would be remarkable for two sorts of moral
violence and one sort of immoral.
I do not for a moment rank the scheme
of Mr. Hare with the scheme of the ultra-democrats.
One can hardly help having a feeling of romance about
it. The world seems growing young when grave old
lawyers and mature philosophers propose a scheme promising
so much. It is from these classes that young
men suffer commonly the chilling demonstration that
their fine plans are opposed to rooted obstacles, that
they are repetitions of other plans which failed long
ago, and that we must be content with the very moderate
results of tried machinery. But Mr. Hare and
Mr. Mill offer as the effect of their new scheme results
as large and improvements as interesting as a young
enthusiast ever promised to himself in his happiest
mood.
I do not give any weight to the supposed
impracticability of Mr. Hare’s scheme because
it is new. Of course it cannot be put in practice
till it is old. A great change of this sort happily
cannot be sudden; a free people cannot be confused
by new institutions which they do not understand,
for they will not adopt them till they understand them.
But if Mr. Hare’s plan would accomplish what
its friends say, or half what they say, it would be
worth working for, if it were not adopted till the
year 1966. We ought incessantly to popularise
the principle by writing; and, what is better than
writing, small preliminary bits of experiment.
There is so much that is wearisome and detestable in
all other election machineries, that I well understand,
and wish I could share, the sense of relief with which
the believers in this scheme throw aside all their
trammels, and look to an almost ideal future when
this captivating plan is carried.
Mr. Hare’s scheme cannot be
satisfactorily discussed in the elaborate form in
which he presents it. No common person readily
apprehends all the details in which, with loving care,
he has embodied it. He was so anxious to prove
what could be done, that he has confused most people
as to what it is. I have heard a man say, “He
never could remember it two days running”.
But the difficulty which I feel is fundamental, and
wholly independent of detail.
There are two modes in which constituencies
may be made. First, the law may make them, as
in England and almost everywhere: the law may
say such and such qualifications shall give a vote
for constituency X; those who have that qualification
shall be constituency X. These are what we may
call compulsory constituencies, and we know all about
them. Or, secondly, the law may leave the electors
themselves to make them. The law may say all
the adult males of a country shall vote, or those
males who can read and write, or those who have 50
pounds a year, or any persons any way defined, and
then leave those voters to group themselves as they
like. Suppose there were 658,000 voters to elect
the House of Commons; it is possible for the legislature
to say, “We do not care how you combine.
On a given day let each set of persons give notice
in what group they mean to vote; if every voter gives
notice, and every one looks to make the most of his
vote, each group will have just 1000. But the
law shall not make this necessary it shall
take the 658 most numerous groups, no matter whether
they have 2000, or 1000, or 900, or 800 votes the
most numerous groups, whatever their number may be;
and these shall be the constituencies of the nation.”
These are voluntary constituencies, if I may so call
them; the simplest kind of voluntary constituencies.
Mr. Hare proposes a far more complex kind; but to
show the merits and demerits of the voluntary principle
the simplest form is much the best.
The temptation to that principle is
very plain. Under the compulsory form of constituency
the votes of the minorities are thrown away. In
the city of London, now, there are many Tories, but
all the members are Whigs; every London Tory, therefore,
is by law and principle misrepresented: his city
sends to Parliament not the member whom he wished
to have, but the member he wished not to have.
But upon the voluntary system the London Tories, who
are far more than 1000 in number, may combine; they
may make a constituency, and return a member.
In many existing constituencies the disfranchisement
of minorities is hopeless and chronic. I have
myself had a vote for an agricultural county for twenty
years, and I am a Liberal; but two Tories have always
been returned, and all my life will be returned.
As matters now stand, my vote is of no use. But
if I could combine with 1000 other Liberals in that
and other Conservative counties, we might choose a
Liberal member.
Again, this plan gets rid of all our
difficulties as to the size of constituencies.
It is said to be unreasonable that Liverpool should
return only the same number of members as King’s
Lynn or Lyme Regis; but upon the voluntary plan, Liverpool
could come down to King’s Lynn. The Liberal
minority in King’s Lynn could communicate with
the Liberal minority in Liverpool, and make up 1000;
and so everywhere. The numbers of popular places
would gain what is called their legitimate advantage;
they would, when constituencies are voluntarily made,
be able to make, and be willing to make the greatest
number of constituencies.
Again, the admirers of a great man
could make a worthy constituency for him. As
it is, Mr. Mill was returned by the electors of Westminster;
and they have never, since they had members, done themselves
so great an honour. But what did the electors
of Westminster know of Mr. Mill? What fraction
of his mind could be imagined by any percentage of
their minds? A great deal of his genius most
of them would not like. They meant to do homage
to mental ability, but it was the worship of an unknown
God if ever there was such a thing in this
world. But upon the voluntary plan, one thousand
out of the many thousand students of Mr. Mill’s
book could have made an appreciating constituency for
him.
I could reckon other advantages, but
I have to object to the scheme, not to recommend it.
What are the counterweights which overpower these
merits? I reply that the voluntary composition
of constituencies appears to me inconsistent with
the necessary prerequisites of Parliamentary government
as they have been just laid down.
Under the voluntary system, the crisis
of politics is not the election of the member, but
the making the constituency. President-making
is already a trade in America, and constituency-making
would, under the voluntary plan, be a trade here.
Every party would have a numerical problem to solve.
The leaders would say, “We have 350,000 votes,
we must take care to have 350 members”; and
the only way to obtain them is to organise. A
man who wanted to compose part of a Liberal constituency
must not himself hunt for 1000 other Liberals; if he
did, after writing 10000 letters, he would probably
find he was making part of a constituency of 100,
all whose votes would be thrown away, the constituency
being too small to be reckoned. Such a Liberal
must write to the great Registration Association in
Parliament Street; he must communicate with its able
managers, and they would soon use his vote for him.
They would say, “Sir, you are late; Mr. Gladstone,
sir, is full. He got his 1000 last year.
Most of the gentlemen you read of in the papers are
full. As soon as a gentleman makes a nice speech,
we get a heap of letters to say, ‘Make us into
that gentleman’s constituency’. But
we cannot do that. Here is our list. If you
do not want to throw your vote away, you must be guided
by us: here are three very satisfactory gentlemen
(and one is an Honourable): you may vote for
either of these, and we will write your name down;
but if you go voting wildly, you’ll be thrown
out altogether.”
The evident result of this organisation
would be the return of party men mainly. The
member-makers would look, not for independence, but
for subservience and they could hardly
be blamed for so doing. They are agents for the
Liberal party; and, as such, they should be guided
by what they take to be the wishes of their principal.
The mass of the Liberal party wishes measure A, measure
B, measure C. The managers of the registration the
skilled manipulators are busy men.
They would say, “Sir, here is our card; if you
want to get into Parliament on our side, you must
go for that card; it was drawn up by Mr. Lloyd; he
used to be engaged on railways, but since they passed
this new voting plan, we get him to attend to us;
it is a sound card; stick to that and you will be
right”. Upon this (in theory) voluntary
plan, you would get together a set of members bound
hard and fast with party bands and fetters, infinitely
tighter than any members now.
Whoever hopes anything from desultory
popular action if matched against systematised popular
action, should consider the way in which the American
President is chosen. The plan was that the citizens
at large should vote for the statesman they liked
best. But no one does anything of the sort.
They vote for the ticket made by “the caucus,”
and the caucus is a sort of representative meeting
which sits voting and voting till they have cut out
all the known men against whom much is to be said,
and agreed on some unknown man against whom there is
nothing known, and therefore nothing to be alleged.
Caucuses, or their equivalent, would be far worse
here in constituency-making than there in President-making,
because on great occasions the American nation can
fix on some one great man whom it knows, but the English
nation could not fix on 658 great men and choose them.
It does not know so many, and if it did, would go
wrong in the difficulties of the manipulation.
But though a common voter could only
be ranged in an effectual constituency, and a common
candidate only reach a constituency by obeying the
orders of the political election-contrivers upon his
side, certain voters and certain members would be
quite independent of both. There are organisations
in this country which would soon make a set of constituencies
for themselves. Every chapel would be an office
for vote-transferring before the plan had been known
three months. The Church would be much slower
in learning it and much less handy in using it; but
would learn. At present the Dissenters are a most
energetic and valuable component of the Liberal party;
but under the voluntary plan they would not be a component they
would be a separate, independent element. We
now propose to group boroughs; but then they would
combine chapels. There would be a member for
the Baptist congregation of Tavistock, cum Totnes,
cum, etc., etc.
The full force of this cannot be appreciated
except by referring to the former proof that the mass
of a Parliament ought to be men of moderate sentiments,
or they will elect an immoderate Ministry, and enact
violent laws. But upon the plan suggested, the
House would be made up of party politicians selected
by a party committee, chained to that committee and
pledged to party violence, and of characteristic, and
therefore immoderate representatives, for every “ism”
in all England. Instead of a deliberate assembly
of moderate and judicious men, we should have a various
compound of all sorts of violence.
I may seem to be drawing a caricature,
but I have not reached the worst. Bad as these
members would be, if they were left to themselves if,
in a free Parliament, they were confronted with the
perils of government, close responsibility might improve
them and make them tolerable. But they would
not be left to themselves. A voluntary constituency
will nearly always be a despotic constituency.
Even in the best case, where a set of earnest men
choose a member to expound their earnestness, they
will look after him to see that he does expound it.
The members will be like the minister of a dissenting
congregation. That congregation is collected
by a unity of sentiment in doctrine A, and the preacher
is to preach doctrine A; if he does not, he is dismissed.
At present the member is free because the constituency
is not in earnest; no constituency has an acute, accurate
doctrinal creed in politics. The law made the
constituencies by geographical divisions; and they
are not bound together by close unity of belief.
They have vague preferences for particular doctrines;
and that is all. But a voluntary constituency
would be a church with tenets; it would make its representative
the messenger of its mandates, and the delegate of
its determinations. As in the case of a dissenting
congregation, one great minister sometimes rules it,
while ninety-nine ministers in the hundred are ruled
by it, so here one noted man would rule his electors,
but the electors would rule all the others.
Thus, the members for a good voluntary
constituency would be hopelessly enslaved, because
of its goodness; but the members for a bad voluntary
constituency would be yet more enslaved because of
its badness. The makers of these constituencies
would keep the despotism in their own hands.
In America there is a division of politicians into
wire-pullers and blowers; under the voluntary system
the member of Parliament would be the only momentary
mouth-piece the impotent blower; while the
constituency-maker would be the latent wire-puller the
constant autocrat. He would write to gentlemen
in Parliament, and say, “You were elected upon
‘the Liberal ticket’; and if you deviate
from that ticket you cannot be chosen again”.
And there would be no appeal for a common-minded man.
He is no more likely to make a constituency for himself
than a mole is likely to make a planet.
It may indeed be said that against
a septennial Parliament such machinations would be
powerless; that a member elected for seven years might
defy the remonstrances of an earnest constituency,
or the imprecations of the latent manipulators.
But after the voluntary composition of constituencies,
there would soon be but short-lived Parliaments.
Earnest constituencies would exact frequent elections;
they would not like to part with their virtue for a
long period; it would anger them to see it used contrary
to their wishes, amid circumstances which at the election
no one thought of. A seven years’ Parliament
is often chosen in one political period, lasts through
a second, and is dissolved in a third. A constituency
collected by law and on compulsion endures this change
because it has no collective earnestness; it does
not mind seeing the power it gave used in a manner
that it could not have foreseen. But a self-formed
constituency of eager opinions, a missionary constituency,
so to speak, would object; it would think it its bounden
duty to object; and the crafty manipulators, though
they said nothing, in silence would object still more.
The two together would enjoin annual elections, and
would rule their members unflinchingly.
The voluntary plan, therefore, when
tried in this easy form is inconsistent with the extrinsic
independence as well as with the inherent moderation
of a Parliament two of the conditions which,
as we have seen, are essential to the bare possibility
of Parliamentary government. The same objections,
as is inevitable, adhere to that principle under its
more complicated forms. It is in vain to pile
detail on detail when the objection is one of first
principle. If the above reasoning be sound, compulsory
constituencies are necessary, voluntary constituencies
destructive; the optional transferability of votes
is not a salutary aid, but a ruinous innovation.
I have dwelt upon the proposal of
Mr. Hare and upon the ultra-democratic proposal, not
only because of the high intellectual interest of
the former and the possible practical interest of the
latter, but because they tend to bring into relief
two at least of the necessary conditions of Parliamentary
government. But besides these necessary qualities
which are needful before a Parliamentary government
can work at all, there are some additional prerequisites
before it can work well. That a House of Commons
may work well it must perform, as we saw, five functions
well: it must elect a Ministry well, legislate
well, teach the nation well, express the nation’s
will well, bring matters to the nation’s attention
well.
The discussion has a difficulty of
its own. What is meant by “well”?
Who is to judge? Is it to be some panel of philosophers,
some fancied posterity, or some other outside authority?
I answer, no philosophy, no posterity, no external
authority, but the English nation here and now.
Free government is self-government a
government of the people by the people. The best
government of this sort is that which the people think
best. An imposed government, a government like
that of the English in India, may very possibly be
better; it may represent the views of a higher race
than the governed race; but it is not therefore a free
government. A free government is that which the
people subject to it voluntarily choose. In a
casual collection of loose people the only possible
free government is a democratic government. Where
no one knows, or cares for, or respects any one else
all must rank equal; no one’s opinion can be
more potent than that of another. But, as has
been explained, a deferential nation has a structure
of its own. Certain persons are by common consent
agreed to be wiser than others, and their opinion
is, by consent, to rank for much more than its numerical
value. We may in these happy nations weigh votes
as well as count them, though in less favoured countries
we can count only. But in free nations, the votes
so weighed or so counted must decide. A perfect
free government is one which decides perfectly according
to those votes; an imperfect, one which so decides
imperfectly; a bad, one which does not so decide at
all. Public opinion is the test of this polity;
the best opinion which with its existing habits of
deference, the nation will accept: if the free
government goes by that opinion, it is a good government
of its species; if it contravenes that opinion, it
is a bad one.
Tried by this rule the House of Commons
does its appointing business well. It chooses
rulers as we wish rulers to be chosen. If it did
not, in a speaking and writing age we should soon
know. I have heard a great Liberal statesman
say, “The time was coming when we must advertise
for a grievance". What a good grievance it would
be were the Ministry appointed and retained by the
Parliament a Ministry detested by the nation.
An anti-present-government league would be instantly
created, and it would be more instantly powerful and
more instantly successful than the Anti-Corn-Law League.
It has, indeed, been objected that
the choosing business of Parliament is done ill, because
it does not choose strong Governments. And it
is certain that when public opinion does not definitely
decide upon a marked policy, and when in consequence
parties in the Parliament are nearly even, individual
cupidity and changeability may make Parliament change
its appointees too often; may induce them never enough
to trust any of them; may make it keep all of them
under a suspended sentence of coming dismissal.
But the experience of Lord Palmerston’s second
Government proves, I think, that these fears are exaggerated.
When the choice of a nation is really fixed on a statesman,
Parliament will fix upon him too. The parties
in the Parliament of 1859 were as nearly divided as
in any probable Parliament; a great many Liberals did
not much like Lord Palmerston, and they would have
gladly co-operated in an attempt to dethrone him.
But the same influence acted on Parliament within
which acted on the nation without. The moderate
men of both parties were satisfied that Lord Palmerston’s
was the best Government, and they therefore preserved
it though it was hated by the immoderate on both sides.
We have then found by a critical instance that a government
supported by what I may call “the common element” by
the like-minded men of unlike parties will
be retained in power, though parties are even, and
though, as Treasury counting reckons, the majority
is imperceptible. If happily, by its intelligence
and attractiveness, a Cabinet can gain a hold upon
the great middle part of Parliament, it will continue
to exist notwithstanding the hatching of small plots
and the machinations of mean factions.
On the whole, I think it indisputable
that the selecting task of Parliament is performed
as well as public opinion wishes it to be performed;
and if we want to improve that standard, we must first
improve the English nation, which imposes that standard.
Of the substantial part of its legislative task, the
same, too, may, I think, be said. The manner
of our legislation is indeed detestable, and the machinery
for settling that manner odious. A committee of
the whole House, dealing, or attempting to deal with
the elaborate clauses of a long bill, is a wretched
specimen of severe but misplaced labour. It is
sure to wedge some clause into the Act, such as that
which the judge said “seemed to have fallen
by itself, perhaps, from heaven, into the mind
of the legislature,” so little had it to do with
anything on either side or around it. At such
times government by a public meeting displays its
inherent defects, and is little restrained by its
necessary checks. But the essence of our legislature
may be separated from its accidents. Subject
to two considerable defects I think Parliament passes
laws as the nation wishes to have them passed.
Thirty years ago this was not so.
The nation had outgrown its institutions, and was
cramped by them. It was a man in the clothes of
a boy; every limb wanted more room, and every garment
to be fresh made. “D-mn me,” said
Lord Eldon in the dialect of his age, “if I had
to begin life again I would begin as an agitator.”
The shrewd old man saw that the best life was that
of a miscellaneous objector to the old world, though
he loved that world, believed in it, could imagine
no other. But he would not say so now. There
is no worse trade than agitation at this time.
A man can hardly get an audience if he wishes to complain
of anything. Nowadays, not only does the mind
and policy of Parliament (subject to the exceptions
before named) possess the common sort of moderation
essential to the possibility of Parliamentary government,
but also that exact gradation, that precise species
of moderation, most agreeable to the nation at large.
Not only does the nation endure a Parliamentary government,
which it would not do if Parliament were immoderate,
but it likes Parliamentary government. A sense
of satisfaction permeates the country because most
or the country feels it has got the precise thing
that suits it.
The exceptions are two. First.
That Parliament leans too much to the opinions of
the landed interest. The Cattle Plague Act is
a conspicuous instance of this defect. The details
of that bill may be good or bad, and its policy wise
or foolish. But the manner in which it was hurried
through the House savoured of despotism. The cotton
trade or the wine trade could not, in their maximum
of peril, have obtained such aid in such a manner.
The House of Commons would hear of no pause and would
heed no arguments. The greatest number of them
feared for their incomes. The land of England
returns many members annually for the counties; these
members the Constitution gave them. But what is
curious is that the landed interest gives no seats
to other classes, but takes plenty of seats from
other classes. Half the boroughs in England are
represented by considerable landowners, and when rent
is in question, as in the cattle case, they think
more of themselves than of those who sent them.
In number the landed gentry in the House far surpass
any other class. They have, too, a more intimate
connection with one another; they were educated at
the same schools; know one another’s family
name from boyhood; form a society; are the same kind
of men; marry the same kind of women. The merchants
and manufacturers in Parliament are a motley race one
educated here, another there, a third not educated
at all; some are of the second generation of traders,
who consider self-made men intruders upon an hereditary
place; others are self-made, and regard the men of
inherited wealth, which they did not make and do not
augment, as beings of neither mind nor place, inferior
to themselves because they have no brains, and inferior
to lords because they have no rank. Traders have
no bond of union, no habits of intercourse; their
wives, if they care for society, want to see not the
wives of other such men, but “better people,”
as they say the wives of men certainly
with land, and, if Heaven help, with the titles.
Men who study the structure of Parliament, not in
abstract books, but in the concrete London world,
wonder not that the landed interest is very powerful,
but that it is not despotic. I believe it would
be despotic if it were clever, or rather if its representatives
were so, but it has a fixed device to make them stupid.
The counties not only elect landowners, which is natural,
and perhaps wise, but also elect only landowners of
their own county, which is absurd.
There is no free trade in the agricultural mind; each
county prohibits the import of able men from other
counties. This is why eloquent sceptics Bolingbroke
and Disraeli have been so apt to lead the
unsceptical Tories. They will have people
with a great piece of land in a particular spot, and
of course these people generally cannot speak, and
often cannot think. And so eloquent men who laugh
at the party come to lead the party. The landed
interest has much more influence than it should have;
but it wastes that influence so much that the excess
is, except on singular occurrences (like the cattle
plague), of secondary moment.
It is almost another side of the same
matter to say that the structure of Parliament gives
too little weight to the growing districts of the
country and too much to the stationary, In old times
the south of England was not only the pleasantest
but the greatest part of England. Devonshire
was a great maritime county when the foundations of
our representation were fixed; Somersetshire and Wiltshire
great manufacturing counties. The harsher climate
of the northern counties was associated with a ruder,
a stern, and a sparser people. The immense preponderance
which our Parliament gave before 1832, and though pruned
and mitigated, still gives to England south of the
Trent, then corresponded to a real preponderance in
wealth and mind. How opposite the present contrast
is we all know. And the case gets worse every
day. The nature of modern trade is to give to
those who have much and take from those who have little.
Manufacture goes where manufacture is, because there
and there alone it finds attendant and auxiliary manufacture.
Every railway takes trade from the little town to the
big town because it enables the customer to buy in
the big town. Year by year the North (as we may
roughly call the new industrial world) gets more important,
and the South (as we may call the pleasant remnant
of old time) gets less important. It is a grave
objection to our existing Parliamentary constitution
that it gives much power to regions of past greatness,
and refuses equal power to regions of present greatness.
I think (though it is not a popular
notion) that by far the greater part of the cry for
Parliamentary reform is due to this inequality.
The great capitalists, Mr. Bright and his friends,
believe they are sincere in asking for more power
for the working man, but, in fact, they very naturally
and very properly want more power for themselves.
They cannot endure they ought not to endure that
a rich, able manufacturer should be a less man than
a small stupid squire. The notions of political
equality which Mr. Bright puts forward are as old as
political speculation, and have been refuted by the
first efforts of that speculation. But for all
that they are likely to last as long as political
society, because they are based upon indelible principles
in human nature. Edmund Burke called the first
East Indians, “Jacobins to a man,” because
they did not feel their “present importance equal
to their real wealth”. So long as there
is an uneasy class, a class which has not its just
power, it will rashly clutch and blindly believe the
notion that all men should have the same power.
I do not consider the exclusion of
the working classes from effectual representation
a defect in this aspect of our Parliamentary
representation. The working classes contribute
almost nothing to our corporate public opinion, and
therefore, the fact of their want of influence in
Parliament does not impair the coincidence of Parliament
with public opinion. They are left out in the
representation, and also in the thing represented.
Nor do I think the number of persons
of aristocratic descent in Parliament impairs the
accordance of Parliament with public opinion.
No doubt the direct descendants and collateral relatives
of noble families supply members to Parliament in
far greater proportion than is warranted by the number
of such families in comparison with the whole nation.
But I do not believe that these families have the least
corporate character, or any common opinions, different
from others of the landed gentry. They have the
opinions of the propertied rank in which they were
born. The English aristocracy have never been
a caste apart, and are not a caste apart now.
They would keep up nothing that other landed gentlemen
would not. And if any landed gentlemen are to
be sent to the House of Commons, it is desirable that
many should be men of some rank. As long as we
keep up a double set of institutions one
dignified and intended to impress the many, the other
efficient and intended to govern the many we
should take care that the two match nicely, and hide
where the one begins and where the other ends.
This is in part effected by conceding some subordinate
power to the august part of our polity, but it is
equally aided by keeping an aristocratic element in
the useful part of our polity. In truth, the deferential
instinct secures both. Aristocracy is a power
in the “constituencies”. A man who
is an honourable or a baronet, or better yet, perhaps,
a real earl, though Irish, is coveted by half the
electing bodies; and caeteris paribus, a manufacturer’s
son has no chance with him. The reality of the
deferential feeling in the community is tested by the
actual election of the class deferred to, where there
is a large free choice betwixt it and others.
Subject therefore to the two minor,
but still not inconsiderable, defects I have named,
Parliament conforms itself accurately enough, both
as a chooser of executives and as a legislature, to
the formed opinion of the country. Similarly,
and subject to the same exceptions, it expresses the
nation’s opinion in words well, when it happens
that words, not laws, are wanted. On foreign
matters, where we cannot legislate, whatever the English
nation thinks, or thinks it thinks, as to the critical
events of the world, whether in Denmark, in Italy,
or America, and no matter whether it thinks wisely
or unwisely, that same something, wise or unwise,
will be thoroughly well said in Parliament. The
lyrical function of Parliament, if I may use such a
phrase, is well done; it pours out in characteristic
words the characteristic heart of the nation.
And it can do little more useful. Now that free
government is in Europe so rare and in America so
distant, the opinion, even the incomplete, erroneous,
rapid opinion of the free English people is invaluable.
It may be very wrong, but it is sure to be unique;
and if it is right it is sure to contain matter of
great magnitude, for it is only a first-class matter
in distant things which a free people ever sees or
learns. The English people must miss a thousand
minutiae that continental bureaucracies know even
too well; but if they see a cardinal truth which those
bureaucracies miss, that cardinal truth may greatly
help the world.
But if in these ways, and subject
to these exceptions, Parliament by its policy and
its speech well embodies and expresses public opinion,
I own I think it must be conceded that it is not equally
successful in elevating public opinion. The teaching
task of Parliament is the task it does worst.
Probably at this moment, it is natural to exaggerate
this defect. The greatest teacher of all in Parliament,
the head-master of the nation, the great elevator
of the country so far as Parliament elevates
it must be the Prime Minister: he has
an influence, an authority, a facility in giving a
great tone to discussion, or a mean tone, which no
other man has. Now Lord Palmerston for many years
steadily applied his mind to giving, not indeed a mean
tone, but a light tone, to the proceedings of Parliament.
One of his greatest admirers has since his death told
a story of which he scarcely sees, or seems to see,
the full effect. When Lord Palmerston was first
made leader of the House, his jaunty manner was not
at all popular, and some predicted failure. “No,”
said an old member, “he will soon educate us
down to his level; the House will soon prefer
this Ha! Ha! style to the wit of Canning and
the gravity of Peel.” I am afraid that we
must own that the prophecy was accomplished.
No Prime Minister, so popular and so influential,
has ever left in the public memory so little noble
teaching. Twenty years hence, when men inquire
as to the then fading memory of Palmerston, we shall
be able to point to no great truth which he taught,
no great distinct policy which he embodied, no noble
words which once fascinated his age, and which, in
after years, men would not willingly let die.
But we shall be able to say “he had a genial
manner, a firm, sound sense; he had a kind of cant
of insincerity, but we always knew what he meant;
he had the brain of a ruler in the clothes of a man
of fashion”. Posterity will hardly understand
the words of the aged reminiscent, but we now feel
their effect. The House of Commons, since it
caught its tone from such a statesman, has taught the
nation worse, and elevated it less, than usual.
I think, however, that a correct observer
would decide that in general, and on principle, the
House of Commons does not teach the public as much
as it might teach it, or as the public would wish to
learn. I do not wish very abstract, very philosophical,
very hard matters to be stated in Parliament.
The teaching there given must be popular, and to be
popular it must be concrete, embodied, short.
The problem is to know the highest truth which the
people will bear, and to inculcate and preach that.
Certainly Lord Palmerston did not preach it. He
a little degraded us by preaching a doctrine just
below our own standard a doctrine not enough
below us to repel us much, but yet enough below to
harm us by augmenting a worldliness which needed no
addition, and by diminishing a love of principle and
philosophy which did not want deduction.
In comparison with the debates of
any other assembly, it is true the debates by the
English Parliament are most instructive. The debates
in the American Congress have little teaching efficacy;
it is the characteristic vice of Presidential government
to deprive them of that efficacy; in that government
a debate in the legislature has little effect, for
it cannot turn out the executive, and the executive
can veto all it decides. The French Chambers
are suitable appendages to an Empire which desires
the power of despotism without its shame; they prevent
the enemies of the Empire being quite correct when
they say there is no free speech; a few permitted
objectors fill the air with eloquence, which every
one knows to be often true, and always vain. The
debates in an English Parliament fill a space in the
world which, in these auxiliary chambers, is not possible.
But I think any one who compares the discussions on
great questions in the higher part of the press, with
the discussions in Parliament, will feel that there
is (of course amid much exaggeration and vague ness)
a greater vigour and a higher meaning in the writing
than in the speech: a vigour which the public
appreciate a meaning that they like to hear.
The Saturday Review said, some years
since, that the ability of Parliament was a “protected
ability”: that there was at the door a
differential duty of at least 2000 pounds a year.
Accordingly the House of Commons, representing only
mind coupled with property, is not equal in mind to
a legislature chosen for mind only, and whether accompanied
by wealth or not. But I do not for a moment wish
to see a representation of pure mind; it would be
contrary to the main thesis of this essay. I
maintain that Parliament ought to embody the public
opinion of the English nation; and, certainly, that
opinion is much more fixed by its property than by
its mind. The “too clever by half”
people who live in “Bohemia,” ought to
have no more influence in Parliament than they have
in England, and they can scarcely have less.
Only, after every great abatement and deduction, I
think the country would bear a little more mind; and
that there is a profusion of opulent dulness in Parliament
which might a little though only a little be
pruned away.
The only function of Parliament which
remains to be considered is the informing function,
as I just now called it; the function which belongs
to it, or to members of it, to bring before the nation
the ideas, grievances, and wishes of special classes.
This must not be confounded with what I have called
its teaching function. In life, no doubt, the
two run one into another. But so do many things
which it is very important in definition to separate.
The facts of two things being often found together
is rather a reason for, than an objection to, separating
them, in idea. Sometimes they are not found
together, and then we may be puzzled if we have not
trained ourselves to separate them. The teaching
function brings true ideas before the nation, and is
the function of its highest minds. The expressive
function brings only special ideas, and is the function
of but special minds. Each class has its ideas,
wants, and notions; and certain brains are ingrained
with them. Such sectarian conceptions are not
those by which a determining nation should regulate
its action, nor are orators, mainly animated by such
conceptions, safe guides in policy. But those
orators should be heard; those conceptions should
be kept in sight. The great maxim of modern thought
is not only the toleration of everything, but the
examination of everything. It is by examining
very bare, very dull, very unpromising things, that
modern science has come to be what it is. There
is a story of a great chemist who said he owed half
his fame to his habit of examining after his experiments,
what was going to be thrown away: everybody knew
the result of the experiment itself, but in the refuse
matter there were many little facts and unknown changes,
which suggested the discoveries of a famous life to
a person capable of looking for them. So with
the special notions of neglected classes. They
may contain elements of truth which, though small,
are the very elements which we now require, because
we already know all the rest.
This doctrine was well known to our
ancestors. They laboured to give a character
to the various constituencies, or to many of them.
They wished that the shipping trade, the wool trade,
the linen trade, should each have their spokesman;
that the unsectional Parliament should know what each
section in the nation thought before it gave the national
decision. This is the true reason for admitting
the working classes to a share in the representation,
at least as far as the composition of Parliament is
to be improved by that admission. A great many
ideas, a great many feelings have gathered among the
town artisans a peculiar intellectual life
has sprung up among them. They believe that they
have interests which are misconceived or neglected;
that they know something which others do not know;
that the thoughts of Parliament are not as their thoughts.
They ought to be allowed to try to convince Parliament;
their notions ought to be stated as those of other
classes are stated; their advocates should be heard
as other people’s advocates are heard.
Before the Reform Bill, there was a recognised machinery
for that purpose. The member for Westminster,
and other members, were elected by universal suffrage
(or what was in substance such); those members did,
in their day, state what were the grievances and ideas or
were thought to be the grievances and ideas of
the working classes. It was the single, unbending
franchise introduced in 1832 that has caused this
difficulty, as it has others.
Until such a change is made the House
of Commons will be defective, just as the House of
Lords was defective. It will not look right.
As long as the Lords do not come to their own House,
we may prove on paper that it is a good revising chamber,
but it will be difficult to make the literary argument
felt. Just so, as long as a great class, congregated
in political localities, and known to have political
thoughts and wishes, is without notorious and palpable
advocates in Parliament, we may prove on paper that
our representation is adequate, but the world will
not believe it. There is a saying in the eighteenth
century, that in politics, “gross appearances
are great realities”. It is in vain to
demonstrate that the working classes have no grievances;
that the middle classes have done all that is possible
for them, and so on with a crowd of arguments which
I need not repeat, for the newspapers keep them in
type, and we can say them by heart. But so long
as the “gross appearance” is that there
are no evident, incessant representatives to speak
the wants of artisans, the “great reality”
will be a diffused dissatisfaction. Thirty years
ago it was vain to prove that Gatton and Old Sarum
were valuable seats, and sent good members. Everybody
said, “Why, there are no people there”.
Just so everybody must say now, “Our representative
system must be imperfect, for an immense class has
no members to speak for it”. The only answer
to the cry against constituencies without inhabitants
was to transfer their power to constituencies with
inhabitants. Just so, the way to stop the complaint
that artisans have no members is to give them members to
create a body of representatives, chosen by artisans,
believing, as Mr. Carlyle would say, “that artisanism
is the one thing needful”.