Do you agree with the view that Disraeli’s support for the 1867 Reform Act was motivated mainly by personal ambition? (Written in timed conditions) Despite the fact that Disraeli’s motives in supporting the 1867 reform act are often disputed, both sources 8 and 9 assert that Disraeli’s main objective was to discredit his opponents and in doing so bolster his own reputation. In contradictions, sources 7 supports the idea that he was instead motivated by a desire to educate and benefit his party and the working classes. Regarding household suffrage, and the conservative victory in the 1874 electing, Source 8 comments that Disraeli “encouraged” the idea that this had been his objective “all along”, strongly implying that in the aftermath of success he was scrabbling to take credit for the election win, desperate for the favoured reputation it would bring him amongst the new working class majority.
However, as source 7 is dated prior to the passing of the bill, we know that increasing the popularity of the Conservative Party within the boroughs had been on his mind well before the passing of the bill, even if it was not his primary motivation in supporting the bill. In fact, that source 7 Disraeli observes that “the Conservative party can win the smaller [boroughs], of which there are many”: proves that he was considering the impact of the bill on his own party, and having drawn the conclusion that alteration to the franchise would benefit the Conservatives is naturally keen that it should pass. He is clearly aware of the less democratic aspects of the electoral system, (“the ‘working classes’ […] Depend upon [the upper classes] for employment and existence”) and recommending the bill on the grounds that it will allow the conservatives to take advantage of this fact.
The Term Paper on How Far Do Sources 1 and 2 Support the View of the Relationship Between Britain and Ireland Explained in Source 3?
Source 3 suggests that the relationship between Britain and Ireland is dire, but doesn’t highlight on the relationship but more so on the “squalid ape-hood” of the Irish. The source states that the Irish “darken all our towns” and describes them as “the sorest evil this country has to deal with”, also stating that the Irish man is primarily there to offer work “for wages that will buy him tomatoes ...
However, considering Disraeli’s skill in manipulation members of both houses in order to achieve his goals (allying himself with the more traditional branch of the Liberals to prevent the opposing party from passing a reform act) it is possible that he is vying for support from his party leader only so that he can claim the glory when the bill passes. As source 8 puts it, Disraeli “never really denied that his main objective was to ‘dish the Whigs’” – a phrase in which no mention of politically empowering the working class or bringing his party out of the political wilderness that it inhabited prior to the 1860s is made. Source 9 supports this viewpoint, emphasising Disraeli’s rivalry with Gladstone as demonstrated in his blocking of the Liberal-raised reform bill (“only one major aim: to destroy Gladstone’s leadership”) as the singular driving factor in his determination to guarantee the 1867 Reform Act.
The source also insists that Disraeli was “simply seizing an unexpected opportunity […] to consolidate his own leadership of the Conservative party,” a line of argument made credible by the fact that Disraeli had made little contribution to social reforms prior to this date. Overall, Disraeli’s support for the 1867 Reform act may largely have been won by the opportunities it presented for the education and strengthening of his party, but I would conclude that such prospected appealed to him mostly because he saw himself as the spearhead of this success, and was eager to advance his own political standing.
The Essay on Democratic Party Republicans People Support
Am I Republican or Democrat? If I were to vote in this upcoming election I would chose to vote for the democratic party. I agree with much of what it is supporting and feel they treat everyone equally. The democratic party is a more liberal and social party than the republicans. They have a much more wide variety of people then republicans. Democrats are for equality and freedom. They support ...