The act was passed partly in response to political factors, such as the need to educate the citizens who were recently enfranchised by the
Reform Act 1867 (
30 & 31 Vict. c. 102) to vote "wisely". It also came about due to demands for reform from industrialists, who feared that Britain's competitive status in world trade, manufacture and improvement was being threatened by the lack of an effective education system. There were objections to the concept of
universal education. One was that many people remained hostile to the idea of
mass education. They claimed it would make labouring classes 'think' and thus attain
class consciousness, possibly encouraging them to revolt. Others feared that handing children to a central authority could lead to
indoctrination. Some poor people feared that mass education would equip people to defraud or mislead those without an education. Another reason was the vested interests of the church and other social groups. The churches were funded by the state with public money to provide education for the poor and did not want to lose that influence on youth. It had been deduced from the
United Kingdom Census 1861 that out of 4.3 million children of primary school age in England and Wales, 1 million were in purely voluntary (church) schools and 1.3 million were in state aided voluntary schools but 2 million had no schooling.
Lord Ripon (
Lord President of the Council) and
William Forster (Vice-President of the Council) were responsible for education in the
Gladstone government of 1868–1874 and were keen to introduce a bill, as was
Henry Bruce (
Home Secretary). Although Gladstone was sympathetic to the argument that better education had helped the Prussians to their unexpected victory in the
Austro-Prussian War (as he remarked, "Undoubtedly, the conduct of the campaign, on the German side, has given a marked triumph to the cause of systematic popular education"), he was a devout Anglican and did not want to see the existing
Church of England schools absorbed into any kind of National Education system. Education was not a legislative priority after
Irish Disestablishment and the
First Irish Land Act. A bill was eventually introduced in the 1870 session although Gladstone was at least as concerned about the
abolition of University Tests at the same time. ==Principles==