WILLIAM HAY is Assistant Professor of History at Mississippi State University and a Senior Fellow with the Foreign Policy Research Institute. He has published on British history and international relations in journals including Diplomacy & Statecraft, Albion, and Orbis: A Journal of World Affairs.
Illustrations Acknowledgements Abbreviations Introduction Party Structure and the Whigs in British Politics Elections, the Press, and Whig Tactics in Opposition: 1812-17 1818 and the Westmorland Election Social Tension and Party Politics in 1819 Public Opinion and the Limits of Opposition: 1820-26 A Revolution in Parties: 1827-30 Conclusion Notes Bibliography
Between 1808 and 1830, the Whigs made a remarkable transition from opposition to office that highlights important trends in early Nineteenth-Century Britain. The Whig Revival examines how a coalition between provincial interest groups and the parliamentary party established them as a viable governing party by 1830. Where earlier studies have focused on the Whigs experience in government or liberal reform movements, this work examines their years in opposition and how the struggle for power broadened the political nation beyond metropolitan elites.