in
Exeter Hall in London in 1846 In 1820, the Merchants' Petition, written by
Thomas Tooke, was presented to the House of Commons. The petition demanded free trade and an end to protective tariffs. The prime minister, Lord Liverpool, who claimed to be in favour of free trade, blocked the petition. He argued, speciously, that complicated restrictions made it difficult to repeal protectionist laws. He added, though, that he believed Britain's economic dominance grew in spite of, not because of, the protectionist system. In 1821, the
president of the Board of Trade,
William Huskisson, composed a Commons committee report which recommended a return to the "practically free" trade of the pre-1815 years. The '''''' (
3 Geo. 4. c. 60) decreed that corn could be imported when the price of domestically harvested corn rose to 80/– (£4) per quarter but that the import of corn would again be prohibited when the price fell to 70/– per quarter. After this act was passed, the corn price never rose to 80/– until 1828. In 1827, the landlords rejected Huskisson's proposals for a sliding scale, and during the next year Huskisson and the new
prime minister, the
Duke of Wellington, devised a new sliding scale for the '''''' (
9 Geo. 4. c. 60) whereby, when domestic corn was 52/– (£2/12/–) per quarter or less, the duty would be 34/8 (£1/14/8), and when the price increased to 73/– (£3/13/–), the duty decreased to one shilling. became Conservative Prime Minister in 1841, and his government succeeded in repealing the tariffs. The
Whig governments, in power for most of the years between 1830 and 1841, decided not to repeal the Corn Laws. However the Liberal Whig MP
Charles Pelham Villiers proposed motions for repeal in the House of Commons every year from 1837 to 1845. In 1842, the majority against repeal was 303; by 1845 this had fallen to 132. Although he had spoken against repeal until 1845,
Robert Peel voted in favour in 1846. In 1853, when Villiers was made a
Privy Counsellor,
The Times stated that "it was Mr Charles Villiers who practically originated the Free Trade movement". In 1838, Villiers spoke at a meeting of 5,000 "working-class men" in Manchester. In 1840, under Villiers' direction, the Committee on Import Duties published a
blue book examining the effects of the Corn Laws. Tens of thousands of copies were printed in pamphlet form by the
Anti-Corn Law League, founded in 1838. The report was quoted in the major newspapers, reprinted in America, and published in an abridged form by
The Spectator. In the
1841 election, Sir
Robert Peel became Prime Minister and
Richard Cobden, a major proponent of free trade, was elected for the first time. Peel had studied the works of
Adam Smith,
David Hume and
David Ricardo, and proclaimed in 1839: "I have read all that has been written by the gravest authorities on political economy on the subject of rent, wages, taxes, tithes." He voted against repeal each year from 1837 to 1845. In 1842, in response to the Blue book published by Villiers' 1840 Committee on Import Duties, Peel offered a concession by modifying the sliding scale. He reduced the maximum duty to 20/– if the price were to fall to 51/– or less. In 1842, Peel's fellow-Conservative
Monckton Milnes said, at the time of this concession, that Villiers was "the solitary
Robinson Crusoe sitting on the rock of Corn Law repeal". According to historian
Asa Briggs, the Anti-Corn Law League was a large, nationwide middle-class moral crusade with a Utopian vision; its leading advocate
Richard Cobden promised that repeal would settle four great problems simultaneously: The landlords claimed that manufacturers like Cobden wanted cheap food so that they could reduce wages and thus maximise their profits, an opinion shared by socialist
Chartists.
Karl Marx said: "The campaign for the abolition of the Corn Laws had begun and the workers' help was needed. The advocates of repeal therefore promised, not only a Big Loaf (which was to be doubled in size) but also the passing of the Ten Hours Bill" (to reduce working hours). In 1876,
Thomas Carlyle commented on
John Bright, co-founder of the League along with Cobden: "as for that party, Bright, Cobden and Co., 'Cheap and Nasty' was their watchword. It was folly to suppose good things were to be had cheap. The nation had been deluded." The Anti-Corn Law League was agitating peacefully for repeal. They funded writers like
William Cooke Taylor to travel the manufacturing regions of northern England to research their cause. Taylor published a number of books as an Anti-Corn Law propagandist, most notably,
The Natural History of Society (1841),
Notes of a tour in the manufacturing districts of Lancashire (1842), and
Factories and the Factory System (1844). Cobden and the rest of the Anti-Corn Law League believed that cheap food meant greater real wages and Cobden praised a speech by a working man who said: The magazine
The Economist was founded in September 1843 by politician
James Wilson with help from the Anti-Corn Law League; his son-in-law
Walter Bagehot later became its editor. ==Prelude to repeal==