Charles Grey, 2nd Earl Grey

prime minister of United Kingdom
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Also known as: Baron Grey, Charles Grey, Viscount Howick, Viscount Howick
Quick Facts
Also called (1801–06):
Baron Grey, or (1806–07) Viscount Howick
Born:
March 13, 1764, Falloden, Northumberland, Eng.
Died:
July 17, 1845, Howick, Northumberland (aged 81)
Also Known As:
Viscount Howick
Charles Grey, Viscount Howick
Baron Grey
Political Affiliation:
Whig Party

Charles Grey, 2nd Earl Grey (born March 13, 1764, Falloden, Northumberland, Eng.—died July 17, 1845, Howick, Northumberland) was a British politician, leader of the Whig (liberal) Party, and prime minister (1830–34), who presided over the passage of the Reform Act of 1832, modernizing the franchise and the electoral system.

Entry into politics

Grey received a conventional aristocratic education at Eton and Cambridge. When only 22 he was elected member of Parliament for Northumberland. Entering the London world in 1786, he gravitated immediately to the fashionable but rakish circle of the leader of the liberal Whig Party, Charles James Fox; the politician-playwright Richard Sheridan; and the Prince of Wales. Handsome, witty, and attractive, Grey soon became prominent among the aristocratic Whig set that provided the political opposition to the conservative government of William Pitt (1759–1806). When the French Revolution in 1789 revived the political agitation caused by the American Revolution, Grey was one of the young Whig aristocrats who formed the Society of the Friends of the People (1792) to encourage lower and middle-class demands for parliamentary reform. These activities—which at the time were considered radical—followed by the outbreak of war with revolutionary France in 1793, split the Whig Party. The emotions generated by the conflict with France, the repressive, though popular, measures taken by the government, and the extreme and often absurd lengths to which Fox carried his pro-French sympathies turned his following into an impotent and discredited minority. Grey’s parliamentary reform bill of 1797 was heavily defeated, and for some years afterward Fox’s faction of the Whigs virtually withdrew from parliamentary life.

Grey’s marriage in 1794 to Mary Elizabeth Ponsonby, the daughter of a leading Irish liberal family, strengthened his sympathies with the cause of Catholic emancipation; however, it weakened his zeal for politics. A devoted husband with a growing family (numbering 15 children by 1819), Grey found contentment in a close and affectionate home life. In 1801 his bachelor uncle Sir Henry allowed him to use Howick, a country house on the Northumberland coast, as his permanent residence. Howick was four days travel from London, and Grey’s dilatoriness in coming south for the parliamentary sessions frequently evoked Fox’s good-humoured reproaches. Some of Grey’s political extremism had also waned. His criticisms of the government for resuming the war with France in 1803 were noticeably milder than those of his chief.

Foreign secretary

When on Pitt’s death in 1806 Lord Grenville formed the so-called government of All the Talents that included the Fox group, Grey (now Lord Howick) became first lord of the Admiralty. When Fox died the same year, Grey took his place as foreign secretary and leader of the Foxite Whigs. The dismissal of the ministry the following year, because of a disagreement with the King over relieving Catholic disabilities, left Grey with an ingrained distaste for office without freedom of action or pledges without certainty of performance. The loss of his seat for Northumberland as a result of his Catholic sympathies, followed by his removal in 1807 to the House of Lords, increased his political detachment. In the political negotiations of 1810–12, which were initiated by the Prince of Wales when he became regent, Grey and Grenville frigidly declined to accept anything less than complete power. The end of the war came with the Pittite Cabinet of Robert Banks Jenkinson, 2nd earl of Liverpool, firmly established in office.

Between 1815 and 1830 Grey was patron, rather than leader, of the quarrelsome and divided Whig opposition. While holding that Catholic Emancipation was a condition of any genuine Whig government, he accepted the fact that parliamentary reform must wait until there was solid support for it in the country. He thought the political stability of Britain was endangered both by the reactionary postwar policy of the administration of Lord Liverpool and by the demands for democratic reform put forward by doctrinaire agitators. His private conclusion was that the task of a Whig ministry, if one could ever be formed, would be to produce a measure of reform large enough to satisfy respectable opinion and yet conservative enough to preserve the basic principles of the aristocratic constitution.

Grey’s Reform Bill

In 1830 Grey’s opportunity came at last. The grant of Catholic emancipation in 1829 had destroyed the last cohesion of the conservative Liverpool party. The collapse of the Duke of Wellington’s ministry in 1830 brought Grey into office on his own terms and with popular backing for a reform of the antiquated parliamentary representative system. But the extent of the changes proposed in his bill of 1831 staggered even his own supporters, and it needed a fresh general election and the coercion of the House of Lords before the bill ultimately passed into law. Grey had misjudged the temper of both houses and involved himself in a painful conflict with the new king William IV when he had reluctantly to ask for enough new peers to be created to carry the bill. He had not, however, misjudged the temper of the country. A wave of popular enthusiasm sustained him during the long battle for reform in 1831–32 and returned a vast liberal majority to the House of Commons in 1833. The epochmaking Reform Act of 1832 was the crowning achievement of the old Whig Party, and he had shown courage and imagination in forcing it through to the statute book. But the measure that he envisaged as a conservative and healing act of statesmanship was regarded by many of his new supporters as a springboard for further extensive changes in church and state. The strains of the new era produced quarrels and resignations in his Cabinet, and Grey retired from politics two years later.

Norman Gash