Potwalloper

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A potwalloper (sometimes potwalloner or potwaller) is an archaic term referring to a borough constituency returning members to the British House of Commons before 1832 and the Reform Act created a uniform suffrage. (Several potwalloper constituencies were also represented in the Irish House of Commons, prior to its abolition in 1801). A potwalloper borough was one in which a householder had the right to vote if he had, in his house, a hearth large enough to boil, or wallop, a cauldron, or pot.

The potwalloper was the variant of the borough franchise which was one of the widest, and the tendency was for the franchise to be reduced. From the time of the restoration, the only British boroughs to elect on a potwalloper or inhabitant franchise were: