Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 July 2017
When Walter Bagehot first published his English Constitution in 1865, it was already possible to regard ‘Her Majesty’s Opposition’ as an established part of the constitution. Indeed, Bagehot regarded it as an essential concomitant of cabinet government, and remarked that a ‘critical opposition is the consequence of cabinet government’. Already the folklore of politics was full of apposite quotations from statesmen of the old school about the virtues of an opposition, although perhaps only Disraeli and Derby were prepared to accept the doctrine, attributed to George Tierney (1761-1830) that ‘the duty of an Opposition was very simple – it was to oppose everything and propose nothing’.
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9 D.N. Chester and Nona Bowring, Questions in Parliament, Oxford 1961.
10 Aretas Akers-Douglas to Lord Salisbury, 19 May 1893, quoted in Viscount Chilston, Chief Whip, 1961, p. 247.
11 For details see H. J. Hanham, Elections and Party Management: Politics in the Time of Disraeli and Gladstone, 1959.
12 Cited in Hanham, Elections and Party Management, p. 387.
13 County Council Magazine, Vol. I, p. 65.
14 Lowell, Government of England, Vol. II, pp. 104f.
15 Dunbabin, J.P.B., ‘Parliamentary Elections in Great Britain, 1868-1900 . . .’, English Historical Review, Vol. LXXXI, pp. 82–99 CrossRefGoogle Scholar, and Hanham, Elections and Party Management, passim.