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Summary HISTORY A LEVEL CHANGES TO THE FRANCHISE NOTES (A*)

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textbook notes covering early changes to the franchise. clear and concise. got me an A*!

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pressures for change to the franchise
The franchise c1780 and its significance for representation of the people

the county franchise

 vote to all freeholders of property worth 40 shillings a year
 uniform
 inflation + rising price of land had increased the amount of men who qualified

the borough franchise

 not uniform
 open boroughs - vote exercised by many men, various qualifications, not very
susceptible to influence
 scot and lot - males who paid their local tax
 potwalloper - those who posessed a hearth where they could boil their pots - large
electorates
 burgage - men who ownded various properties - ownership of the votes guarded
 corporation - voters were members of the town councils - seats were filled through
nomination rather than election - extremely corrupt
 tresury - seats that came under the control of government departments - chief
employers
 pocket boroughs - most property owned by one person - could nominate his chosen
candidate for election to parliament
 rotten boroughs - once been areas of economic activity, now depopluated - still
retained their parliamentary representation

the size of the electorate

 estimated 214,000 electors out of a population of 8 million
 even more restricted in scotland - 4,500 men out of 2.6 million

elections and ‘interests’

 in the 1790s there was no signifcicant pressure for reform - even though the system
was corrupt
 content with a system that represented ‘interests’ e.g. agriculture rather than the
population
 limited amount of contests - only 72
 elections could be v expensive - candidates persuaded electors to vote for them
through bribes - ‘treating’ of food
 large amount of popular involvement in elecetions
 O’Gorman’s perspective on the unreformed system
o in many ways it worked quite well
o concerned with not numerical but virtual representation - MPs sat not as
representatives of the voters but as champions of the interests which made up
the nation

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