Victoria East In 1884, Innes stood for election for Victoria East, a frontier district around
Alice. He won a seat in the
Cape House of Assembly, partly thanks to support from the region's
Xhosa voters, mobilised by his political ally,
John Tengo Jabavu. Innes stood for election on an uncompromisingly liberal Native policy: , a vital ally to Innes and many other
Cape liberals. "[T]he policy of repression has been tried, and it has failed. What the country requires is that the existing laws should be fairly and equitably administered, and that the Natives should cease to be the subjects of rash experiments in the art of 'vigorous' government." As a result of his motion, a Commission of Inquiry was set up and recommended "firstly and most emphatically. . . that there should be a complete segregation of Europeans from Natives, both in gaols and convict stations".
In Rhodes's government (c. 1900), who "infected Cape public life with a harmful virus" that shaped Innes's parliamentary career. Innes served as
Attorney-General in
Cecil Rhodes's government from 1890, but resigned three years later (supported by Merriman and Sauer) in protest. Rhodes's right-hand man
James Sivewright had given a lucrative government railway contract to his friend and business associate James Logan without going to tender (or notifying his Cabinet, who found out only when the press scandal broke). Innes refused to work with Sivewright, with the effect that Rhodes had to dissolve his government. In 1894, Rhodes adopted an increasingly caustic attitude to the Boer colonies, becoming, in Innes's words, "the high priest of opportunism"; he had "decided on a more forceful policy, which led him to exchange the constitutionalism of the statesman for the lawlessness of the revolutionary". The nadir was Rhodes's involvement in the
Jameson Raid, an event which, Innes said, "no one ... concerned for the true interests of South Africa can recall without regret". The Raid inflamed racial tension between the English and Afrikaners, and
President Kruger's suspicions, and thus led to the
Second Boer War. Rhodes's attitude after the Raid had not helped. He had gravely betrayed his allies in the
Afrikaner Bond; yet, far from showing remorse, he switched allegiances to their enemies, the
Progressive Party, emerging more ambitious and
jingoistic than ever before. Summing up Rhodes's legacy, Innes said he had "infected Cape public life with a harmful virus, and to South Africa he brought not peace but a sword."
Sprigg's government and the Boer War Innes detested Rhodes, adamantly refused ever again to work for him, and deplored his co-opting and debasement of the Progressive Party. But he never became as estranged from the Progressives and pro-
imperialists as many of his Cape liberal allies like
W. P. Schreiner,
Merriman,
Sauer and
James and
Percy Molteno. , four-time
Prime Minister, and uncle by marriage to Innes, whom he appointed as his
Attorney-General. Innes encouraged the
Cape Colony to fund the British
Royal Navy, and, unlike Merriman and Sauer, refused to support the 1898
vote of no-confidence in Sir
Gordon Sprigg's government – partly because he had wanted the government's
redistribution bill to pass, but also because he felt some loyalty to Sprigg and his supporters, with whom he retained a measure of influence. And Innes never became fully pro-
Boer; he was critical of
President Kruger's illiberal
Uitlander policy and firmly believed, even after the
Jameson Raid, that South Africa's best hope was Union within the
Empire. When Sprigg was re-elected as
Prime Minister in June 1900, succeeding Schreiner, Innes was happy to accept appointment again as
Attorney-General, the only non-Progressive in Sprigg's
Cabinet. Innes was gravely concerned about British conduct during the
War, and, in determined correspondence with
Lord Milner, urged more conciliatory tactics and criticised the unnecessary imposition of
martial law (writing to Milner: "I
hate the thing. It is abhorrent to me."). But Innes always empathised with both sides, and forever regarded Milner – in the view of many, the period's
jingoistic arch-villain – with respect and even admiration. Innes's movement away from the mainstream of
Cape liberalism and into the Progressive government created some distance between him and his former allies. But he remained a lifelong friend and admirer of, especially, Merriman and Schreiner. == Judicial career ==