Liverpool Protestant Party
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The Liverpool Protestant Party (LPP) was a minor political party operating in the city of Liverpool in northwest England.
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[edit] Origins and Context
The origins of the Liverpool Protestant Party lie in the increasing dissatisfaction with the Conservative and Unionist Party felt by many Orange Lodge members and other militant Protestants in the late 19th and early 20th Centuries.
This unease was caused by a number of issues:-
- The use of the Conservative whip in parliament to oppose the extension of factory inspection to convent laundries
- The Education Act 1902 making public money available to Roman Catholic Schools (“Rome on the Rates”)
- The failure to enact a new Church Discipline Act, or amend the old one, to provide for a more effective counter to extreme ritualism in the Church of England
The fact that the Conservative Prime Minister, Arthur Balfour, was related to the aristocratic Rosebery family, leading lights of the Anglo-Catholic movement, did little to assuage this disquiet.
The first attempt to secure independent Protestant representation was made by John Kensit leader of the Protestant Truth Society, who stood for Parliament in Brighton in 1898. In Ireland this unease manifested itself in the creation of the Independent Orange Order in Belfast in 1902.
[edit] Formation
Locally within Liverpool there was disquiet due to the reluctance of the Conservative controlled Corporation to set aside areas of public open space specifically for outdoor meetings. George Wise, a prominent local Protestant leader, had been imprisoned for refusing to be bound over to keep the peace following disturbances at meetings held in public squares and gardens. On his release from Walton Gaol on 6th June he decided to pursue independent Protestant representation on the City Council.
Support was centred among Wise's adherents including large numbers of members of the Orange Orderand the congregation of the Protestant Reformers Church of which he was the Pastor. Traditionally the "orange vote" would go to the Conservatives but in 1903, the LPP was formed as a distinct party by George Wise.
[edit] 1903 to 1919
Four seats were contested and three won, including Kirkdale. Representation was also secured on the West Derby Board of Guardians, which supervised health care and poor relief in the North and East of the City. Some rapprochment with the Conservatives took place prior to World War I through co-operation to fight the Irish Home Rule Bill, although the Conservative leader in the city, Alderman Archibald Saldvidge was opposed to independent Protestant representation.
[edit] 1920-1930
The support of the Conservative Party for the establishment of the Irish Free State renewed dissatisfaction with them amongst militant Protestants. In Liverpool this was manifested in a loss of membership in the Conservative Workingmen's Association. The Liverpool Protestant Party believed the establishment of the Irish Free State was a mere stepping stone to an Irish republic. The National Protestant Electoral Federation (NPEF) was formed at this time with four aims:-
- The promotion of the study of Protestantism
- The maintenance of the Protestant succession to the throne (as established by the Act of Settlement 1701
- To assist the return of robust Protestants, irrespective of party, as representatives on public bodies
- To protect the interests of Protestant workers in Trade Unions
In Liverpool the policies of the NPEF were put into effect for the 1922 elections to the Boards of Guardians. The NPEF endorsed Protestant Party candidates and any other candidates who were willing to add the word Protestant to their party name. This resulted in two Protestant Party and two Protestant and Unionist candidates being elected with 25,787 votes between them.
[edit] 1930 to 1945
The Local Government Act 1929 abolished the Boards of Guardians and handed their responsibilities to local authorities. Liverpool Corporation took over three Boards – West Derby for the North and East of the City, Liverpool for the City Centre and Toxteth Park for the South. Some rationalisation of the various hospital and other facilities took place which meant that the Liverpool Board of Guardians nine acre facility at Brownlow Hill became redundant. The City Council decided to sell the site to the Roman Catholic Church to build a Cathedral. Sales of redundant land and property to Catholic interests had been blocked by Protestant representatives on the Boards, but under the Council the sale went ahead with Conservative approval.
This led to the Protestant Party contesting the City Council elections of November 1930. Only the party leader Pastor Longbottom was successful, in St Domingo, but in several wards the Protestant Party took enough votes from the Conservatives to cause them to lose them to Labour.
It opposed the emergent socialist politics of the Labour movement and called for curbs on immigration into Great Britain from Roman Catholic areas of Ireland. It also blamed Irish immigrants for unemployment, poor housing and high rates.
It primarily fought local government seats, but for a while did contest the Liverpool Kirkdale seat for Westminster elections (polling a quarter of the seat's vote in 1931). It had a number of councillors throughout their existence, even as late as the 1960s. It won its last seat in 1973 but activity was waning and as the "orange vote" subsided in influence the LPP found it harder to continue. In 1974 its members were invited to subsume themselves into the local Conservative Party, which they subsequently did.
The "orange vote" has not totally died in Liverpool. The Democratic Unionist Party has looked into the possibility of establishing a branch in Liverpool, possibly considering standing local government candidates there as well. Former members of the LPP have been involved with this attempt.