Immediately before the Restoration, commissions were issued for all the ‘counties, cities, towns and liberties within England and Wales as they were approved of and allowed by the late Parliament after the readmission of the secluded Members’
In the spring of 1679, after the King had remodelled the Privy Council by admitting some of the opposition leaders, notably the Earl of Shaftesbury, an attempt was made to regulate the county benches in favour of the country party. A few MPs of that persuasion were restored or appointed, but on the whole it failed, largely because the King refused to accept the recommendations of the opposition magnates.
New commissions had to be issued at the accession of James II, but of the 11 MPs known to have been left off, only four seem to have been dismissed because of their politics: Thomas Foley II (Worcestershire), Edward Harby (Northamptonshire), Sir Francis Holles (Dorset), and Robert Leighton (Shropshire). In October 1686, however, a committee of the Privy Council was appointed to review the magistracy. In December lists were entered in the Council register containing the names of those ‘to be put out’ and those ‘to be put in’. The names of 60 men who had been, were, or were to be MPs were on the first list: 39 being those of Members then sitting in James II’s Parliament. Eleven of those dismissed were exclusionists who had escaped the earlier purges. In addition to those on the Council list, a further 17 were put off the commissions, presumably because some local Tory magnate had informed the chancellor of their unreliability after the list had been compiled. Five Members who had voted against the exclusion bill were left off the commissions: the Hon. Thomas Bulkeley, Sir John Chicheley, Sir Thomas Exton, Sir Roger Norwich, and Joseph Tredenham. But Danby listed all but Exton as among the opposition to James II; it is not surprising to find 15 other purged MPs on the lists. On the other side of the coin, 58 Members were appointed, of whom 42 had been recommended by the Council. Ten of these were already justices, and were added to other benches, five of them in Middlesex and Westminster. A major purpose of this regulation was to add Roman Catholics to the magistracy, and five of the MPs proposed were of that faith: Edward Hales II, Lord Castlemaine (Roger Palmer), Edward Sackville, Sir Thomas Strickland and Sir Philip Tyrwhitt. Three more: William Barlow, Humphrey Borlase and the Hon. Ralph Widdrington may have been Roman Catholics at this time. No less than 17 MPs who were army officers were ordered to be put on the bench by the Council.
When James II realized that he could not expect the Anglican though loyal Commons to repeal the Penal Laws and Test Act, he dissolved Parliament on 2 July 1687, and made preparations to obtain a more amenable body. The lord lieutenant of each county was ordered to ask the justices and deputy lieutenants the following questions:
1. If in case he be chosen knight of the shire or burgess of a town, when the King shall think fit to call a Parliament, whether he will be for taking off the Penal Laws and Tests.
2. Whether he will assist and contribute to the election of such Members as shall be for taking off the Penal Laws and Tests.
3. Whether he can support the King’s Declaration for liberty of conscience by living friendly with those of all persuasions, as subjects of the same prince, and good Christians ought to do.
Ibid. 78-79.
The result was a massive change in the county magistracy. It was, as Dr Glassey has pointed out, more than a purge.
One reason for the extent of the changes was that the Regulators were not revising the existing commissions of the peace. They were constructing completely new lists on the basis of the answers to the three questions and the response of the lords lieutenants to the order to recommend Catholics and dissenters.
Ibid. 84.
Of the 287 MPs omitted from the commissions of the peace in 1688, 201 are known to have returned negative or evasive answers.
When it became evident to the Government in September 1688 that William’s invasion was imminent, there was a further regulation of the magistracy. In October and November 209 MPs who had been left off the commissions earlier in the year were restored. Most of them, however, refused to serve on the bench with Catholics and dissenters. The number of those restored would have been greater were it not for the fact that because of administrative muddles in the autumn no commissions were sealed for 18 counties, and, in fact, 59 Members dismissed in 1688 were not restored until the next year.
After the Revolution it was only to be expected that the county benches would be regulated. The process was slow, but by the end of 1689 all but Flintshire and Merioneth had received commissions. The number of MPs put on the bench for the first time (93) was very high. Of these, 68 were Whigs or court Tories, and only 25 could be classed as true Tories. This imbalance, however, was not the result of pressure from the Goverment. ‘The appointment of justices of the peace was carried on with less central control in the months after the Revolution than ever before ... Consequently the local magnates who drew up the lists had the field to themselves.’
APPOINTMENTS, RETENTIONS AND DISMISSALS OF MPS ON THE COMMISSIONS OF THE PEACE
Mar.1660 | July 1660 | Aft. July 1660 | 1670 | 1679 | 1680 | 1681 | 1682 | 1685 | 1687 | 1688 | 1689 | |
Appointed or restored | 171 | 347 | 28 | 36 | 27 | 124 | 24 | 25 | 33 | 58 | 113 | 250 |
Retained | 196 | 161 | - | 655 | 661 | 558 | 619 | 569 | 572 | 448 | 230 | 422 |
Dismissed | 17 | 72 | - | 47 | 15 | 118 | 37 | 27 | 11 | 87 | 287 | 92 |