The Letters of Queen Victoria/Volume 3/Chapter 23/To John Russell 21 January 1854

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The Letters of Queen Victoria/Volume 3, Volume III
Queen Victoria to Lord John Russell
21th January 1854. The Reform Bill by Queen Victoria
3398325The Letters of Queen Victoria/Volume 3, Volume III — Queen Victoria to Lord John Russell
21th January 1854. The Reform Bill
Queen Victoria

Queen Victoria to Lord John Russell.

WINDSOR CASTLE, 21st January 1854. The Queen has received Lord John Russell’s letter of the 19th, and the Bill as now agreed upon by the Cabinet, which she hopes may meet the wishes of the Country and pass into law.[1] From what she understands the chief argument used in opposition to the measure will be, that corruption and bribery is the evil which the Country really complains of, and not an unequal distribution of the representation, and that a new distribution or even extension of the franchise will not touch the evil, and may be said perhaps in some instances to tend towards increasing it. The success of the measure will therefore, she concludes, in some degree depend upon the Bribery Bills which will accompany it. How far are these advanced? and what expectation has Lord John Russell of succeeding in framing such a measure as would remove that ground of objection to the Reform Bill?

  1. Notwithstanding the impending war, the Government considered itself bound in honour to bring in a Reform Bill. Lord Palmerston and his special supporters were opposed to the project, but the measure was brought forward on the 13th of February. After a chequered career it was withdrawn. The Bill for the prevention of corrupt practices at elections was introduced on the 10th of February, and after many vicissitudes and several Ministerial defeats in the Commons as well as in the Lords, it was, in a modified form, carried.