The 'Liberal Unionists' were a
British political party that split away from the
Liberals in
1886, and had effectively merged with the
Conservatives by the turn of the century. The formal merger was completed in
1912. Their principal leaders were
Lord Hartington (later the Duke of Devonshire) and
Joseph Chamberlain.
The reason for the split in the Liberals was the conversion of
William Ewart Gladstone to the cause of
Irish Home Rule. The
1885 General Election had left
Charles Stewart Parnell's Irish
Nationalists holding the balance of power, and had convinced Gladstone that the Irish wanted and deserved Home Rule. Some Liberals believed that Gladstone's
Home Rule bill would lead to ''de facto'' independence for Ireland, and the dissolution of the United Kingdom, which they could not countenance. Seeing themselves as defenders of the Union of Britain and Ireland, they called themselves Liberal Unionists.
Most of the Liberal Unionists were drawn from the
Whig faction of the party, including Hartington,
Lord Lansdowne, and
George Goschen, and had been expected to split from the party anyway, for reasons connected with economic and social policy. The surprise was that a small group of
Radicals led by Chamberlain joined the breakaway. The
National Liberal Federation supported Gladstone, so the rebels formed their own organisations: the Committee for the Preservation of the Union, the National Radical Union, and later the Liberal Unionist Association.
The
1886 election left the Conservative Party as the largest party in the House of Commons, but without an overall majority. The leading Liberal Unionists were invited to join the Conservative
Lord Salisbury's government. Salisbury said he was even willing to let Hartington become Prime Minister of a coalition ministry but the latter declined. In part, Hartington was worried this would split the Liberal Unionists and lose them votes from pro-Unionist Liberal supporters. The Liberal Unionists, despite providing the necessary margin for Salisbury's majority, continued to sit on the opposition benches throughout the life of the parliament elected in 1886, and Hartington and Chamberlain continued to occupy the opposition front benches alongside their former colleagues
Gladstone and
Harcourt.
However, a few months later Goschen, by far the most conservative of the leading Liberal Unionists, received an invitation to become the new
Chancellor of the Exchequer in the place of Lord
Randolph Churchill when the latter suddenly resigned in December 1886. After consulting Hartington, Goschen agreed to join the Conservative government and remained Chancellor for the next six years.
Whilst the Whiggish wing of the Liberal Unionists were talking to the Conservatives, the party's Radical Unionist wing sat down for a series of meetings with their former Liberal colleagues. Lead by Joseph Chamberlain and
Sir George Otto Trevelyan the 'Round Table Conference' was a perhaps half hearted attempt to see if reunion of the Liberal party was possible. Despite some progress (and Chamberlain's statement that they were united on 99 out of 100 issues regarding the future of Liberalism), the issue of Home Rule for Ireland could not be reconciled. Neither Hartington or Gladstone took direct part in these meetings - and there seemed to be no other Liberal statesman who would be able to reunite the party. Within a few months the talks were over, though some Radical Unionists including Trevelyan later rejoined the Liberal Party.
The failed talks of 1887 forced the Liberal Unionist party to continue to develop its links with the Conservatives. In Parliament, they supported the Salisbury administration - though for political presentation reasons, they sat on the opposite side of
House of Commons with the Liberal Party . Relations between former political colleagues hardened with the return of Gladstone as Prime Minister following the
1892 General Election. Forming a minority government with Irish Nationalist support, the Liberals introduced the
second Home Rule bill. Leading the opposition against the bill were the Duke of Devonshire (as Hartington had become in 1891 following the death of his father) and Joseph Chamberlain. The Home Rule bill was defeated this time in the House of Lords and Gladstone resigned not long after.
By now all chance of a reunion between the two Liberal parties had disappeared, and it was no great surprise when leading Liberal Unionists joined Salisbury's administration in 1895. The resulting government was generally referred to as "Unionist", and the distinction between Conservatives and Liberal Unionists began to dissolve - indeed some like Goschen formally joining the Conservatives without bothering any more with the Liberal Unionist label. However, despite these ever-closer bonds, the Liberal Unionists continued to maintain a separate identity. The party's strength in the House of Commons fell from 78 seats in 1886 to 47 in 1892 but recovered to 71 and then 68 in the General Elections of
1895 and
1900. They managed to stay strong in the West of England, Birmingham (the centre of Joseph Chamberlain's power base) and Scotland.
The Liberal Unionists retained their cohesion until 1903 when they were split in a division between Devonshire and Chamberlain over the issue of
free trade. After Chamberlain took up the issue of
Tariff Reform in May 1903, Devonshire and other supporters of free trade left the Liberal Unionist Association in
1904 in protest. Chamberlain took over the leadership, but a number of Liberal Unionists including MPs defected back to the Liberal Party .
In the
1906 General Election the Liberal Unionists shared the same fate as their Conservative allies in a big reduction in their parliamentary strength. They now numbered only 23 (or 25 according to other calculations) MPs in the House of Commons, but now the Unionists were more divided between those who supported tariffs and those who kept faith with free trade. A few months later Chamberlain was crippled by a stroke, although he remained the official leader of the Liberal Unionists. His son
Austen Chamberlain acted as his deputy for both the Tariff Reform League and the Liberal Unionists, and the party was able to increase its parliamentary caucus in the two
1910 General Elections to 31 and then 35 MPs. In 1912, however, the Liberal Unionist Association merged with the Conservatives to form the Conservative and Unionist Party (the modern
Conservative Party).
Although by then the political distinction between the two parties had long ceased to have any real meaning, it was a factor in Austen Chamberlain's failure to become the Unionist leader in the House of Commons in
1911. When
Arthur Balfour resigned, Austen Chamberlain and
Walter Hume Long both declared themselves as candidates for the leadership of the Unionist Party in the House of Commons. However, as Austen Chamberlain was still officially at least a Liberal Unionist, his candidature was opposed by many Conservatives because they already had the Liberal Unionist Lord Lansdowne leading them in the House of Lords. In the end
Andrew Bonar Law was elected unopposed by Unionist M.P.s instead and Chamberlain would have to wait ten years for his chance to lead the party.
Leaders of the Liberal Unionists in the House of Commons, 1886-1912
★
Marquess of Hartington 1886-1891
★
Joseph Chamberlain 1891-1912
Leaders of the Liberal Unionists in the House of Lords, 1886-1912
★
Earl of Derby 1886-1891
★
Duke of Devonshire 1891-1903
★
Marquess of Lansdowne 1903-1912
Prominent Liberal Unionists
★
George Campbell, 8th Duke of Argyll
★
Francis Russell, 9th Duke of Bedford
★
John Bright
★
Chichester Parkinson-Fortescue, 1st Baron Carlingford
★
Austen Chamberlain
★
Joseph Chamberlain
★
Jesse Collings
★
Edward Stanley, 15th Earl of Derby
★
George Goschen
★
Lord Richard Grosvenor (later Lord Stalbridge)
★
Spencer Cavendish, Marquess of Hartington (later Duke of Devonshire)
★
Sir Henry James (later Lord James of Hereford)
★
Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice, 5th Marquess of Lansdowne
★
Thomas Baring, 1st Earl of Northbrook
★
Roundell Palmer, 1st Earl of Selborne
★
William Waldegrave Palmer, 2nd Earl of Selborne
★
George Otto Trevelyan (rejoined the Liberals in
1887)
★
Hugh Grosvenor, 1st Duke of Westminster
In addition, the writer
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle stood unsuccessfully twice as a Liberal Unionist parliamentary candidate in 1900 and 1906 for the Scottish seats of Edinburgh Central and Hawick Boroughs respectively. Also standing in 1906 as a Liberal Unionist was the polar explorer
Ernest Shackleton for one of the two member Dundee seats. Despite his fame - Shackleton lost.
Leo Amery who is best known for his later career as a senior Conservative politician and British Cabinet minister was originally elected as a Liberal Unionist in 1911 in a by-election - mainly because he was a strong supporter of Joseph Chamberlain and Tariff Reform.
In popular culture and the media
In
Oscar Wilde's play
The Importance of Being Earnest there is an exchange between Jack Worthing and Lady Bracknell about his suitability as a match for her daughter Gwendolen.
LADY BRACKNELL : [Sternly.]... What are your polities?
JACK: Well, I am afraid I really have none. I am a Liberal Unionist.
LADY BRACKNELL : Oh, they count as Tories. They dine with us. Or come in the evening, at any rate...
The play was first performed at the Queen's Theatre London on 14th February 1895
and ran for 83 performances. Wilde's decision to make Jack a Liberal Unionist ( in other words in the play's context, someone who doesn't hold strong political opinions either way ) is on the surface rather strange. After all, the Liberal Unionists had split away from the Liberal party on the Home Rule issue on which many of them had - and still held - very strong opinions. To someone like Lady Bracknell they did 'count as Tories' - if not quite fully socially acceptable. Evidently Lady Bracknell was able to overlook that and no doubt the view that supporters of Liberal Unionism were the same as the Conservatives (even if the Liberal Unionists didn't know it ) was a joke that an audience in 1895 could fully understand.
However with the passage in time , the 'Liberal Unionist joke' ceased to be understand by audiences . Despite this - it has usually remained in the perfomed version of the play but has been changed at least twice in two major film adaptations of the play.
In
The Importance of Being Earnest (1952 film) directed by
Anthony Asquith (the son of a former British Prime Minister
Herbert Henry Asquith ) Jack answers that he is a 'Liberal'. Lady Bracknell's answer remains the same - suggesting the Liberals are virtually identical with the Tories except she won't have them round for lunch . This is an ironical re-reading of the passage which suggests Lady Bracknell agreed with the the
Marxist Social Democratic Federation and their leader
H.H.Hyndman who thought the same about the two main British parties then. However , in 1952 this comment was oddly true about the then Liberal party whose continued political representation in parliament was largely due to the Conservative party avoid splitting the 'anti-socialist' vote. So perhaps Asquith was making a political point for the 1950s.
Since then - other adaptations of the play for TV or theatre have usually left this brief mention of a largely forgotten political party intact. However in the
The Importance of Being Earnest (2002 film) which starred
Judi Dench,
Colin Firth ,
Rupert Everett and
Reece Witherspoon - the lines were dropped even though this film re-incorporated episodes and characters in an earlier version of the play that Wilde had been encouraged to drop before the play's first performance.
See also
★
★
Liberalism
★
Contributions to liberal theory
★
Liberalism worldwide
★
List of liberal parties
★
Liberal democracy
★
Liberalism in the United Kingdom
★
Scottish Unionist Party (
1912-
1965)