- Fox-North Coalition
[
James Gillray caricatured the Fox-North Coalition. Fox is at right, followed by North, and then byEdmund Burke , with a skeleton leg. George III is the blockhead in the center.]The Fox-North Coalition was a government in
Great Britain that held office during1783 . As the name suggests, the ministry was a coalition of the groups supportingCharles James Fox and Lord North. The official head wasWilliam Cavendish-Bentinck, 3rd Duke of Portland who took office onApril 2 1783 .Fox was a Whig by background and North came from the nominal Tory Party, however both had fallen out with the government of Lord Shelburne. They combined their forces in the House of Commons to throw out the Shelburne ministry and then formed a government of their own.
King George III despised the government and Fox in particular but found that no other ministry could be formed at this stage despite several offers to
William Pitt the Younger . As a result the King declined to provide the government with the normal tools ofpatronage and they were forced to look elsewhere.The government also came under strain when from the opposition Pitt introduced a proposal for electoral reform to tackle bribery and
rotten borough s. The proposal did not pass but caused tensions within the coalition which contained both proponents and opponents of political reform.The
British East India Company was in trouble and Fox proposed nationalising it, thus providing the government with a new source of appointments so they could reward and maintain support. TheEast India Bill was introduced and passed in the Commons but the King remained deeply opposed. He informed theHouse of Lords that he would regard any peer who voted for the bill as his enemy. The bill was defeated onDecember 17 1783 and the King immediately dismissed the coalition. It was succeeded by a government formed byWilliam Pitt the Younger .After being dismissed, Fox and North tried to force Pitt from power through defeat in the House of Commons, but he refused to resign. The response of opinion in the country, evidenced by petitions, resolutions of borough corporations and the actions of the London mobs, showed strong opposition to the coalition and support for Pitt. In March
1784 a general election was called in which Pitt's government made massive gains, especially in constituencies decided by popular votes.Members of the Cabinet, April - December 1783
*The Duke of Portland -
First Lord of the Treasury andLeader of the House of Lords
*Lord North -Secretary of State for the Home Department and jointLeader of the House of Commons
*Charles James Fox -Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs and jointLeader of the House of Commons
*Lord Stormont -Lord President of the Council
*Lord Carlisle -Lord Privy Seal
*Lord Keppel -First Lord of the Admiralty
*Lord John Cavendish -Chancellor of the Exchequer
*Lord Townshend -Master-General of the Ordnance
*Lord Northington -Lord Lieutenant of Ireland
*The Lord Chancellorship & Great Seal is in CommissionBibliography
* Black, Jeremy. "George III: America’s Last King". Yale University Press, 2006 (ISBN 0300117329).
* Richard Pares; "King George III and the Politicians" (1953) [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=7861542 online edition]
* George Otto Trevelyan, "George the Third and Charles Fox: The Concluding Part of the American Revolution." (1912) 2 vol [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=6035149 online edition vol 1] , [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=65473061 online edition v2]
* J. Steven Watson; "The Reign of George III, 1760-1815," 1960, the standard scholarly history [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=22810171 online edition] -------
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