or other proceeding depending in either House of Parliament,
with a view to influence the votes of the members,
is a high crime and misdemeanor, derogatory to the
honor of the crown, a breach of the fundamental privileges
of Parliament, and subversive of the constitution
of the country.” It was opposed by Pitt,
chiefly on the ground that Mr. Baker only based the
necessity for such a resolution on common report,
which he, fairly enough, denied to be a sufficient
justification of it; and partly on the undoubted and
“inalienable right of peers, either individually
or collectively, to advise his Majesty, whenever they
thought the situation of public affairs made such
a step an essential part of their duty.”
But it was supported by Lord North as “necessary
on constitutional principles,” since the acts
so generally reported and believed “affected
the freedom of debate;” and by Fox, who declared
that the action which was reported, if true, “struck
at the great bulwark of our liberties, and went to
the absolute annihilation, not of our chartered rights
only, but of those radical and fundamental ones which
are paramount to all charters, which were consigned
to our care by the sovereign disposition of Nature,
which we cannot relinquish without violating the most
sacred of all obligations, to which we are entitled,
not as members of society, but as individuals and
as men; the right of adhering steadily and uniformly
to the great and supreme laws of conscience and duty;
of preferring, at all hazards and without equivocation,
those general and substantial interests which members
have sworn to prefer; of acquitting themselves honorably
to their constituents, to their friends, to their own
minds, and to that public whose trustees they were,
and for whom they acted.” He avowed his
conviction that rumor in this instance spoke truth,
and, affirming that “the responsibility of ministers
is the only pledge and security the people of England
possesses against the infinite abuses so natural to
the exercise of royal powers,” argued that, if
“this great bulwark of the constitution were
once removed, the people would become in every respect
the slaves and property of despotism. This must
be the necessary consequence of secret influence.”
He argued that the sole distinction between an absolute
and a limited monarchy was that the sovereign in one
is a despot, and may do as he pleases, but that in
the other he is himself subjected to the laws, and
consequently is not at liberty to advise with any
one in public affairs who is not responsible for that
advice, and that the constitution has clearly directed
his negative to operate under the same wise restrictions.
Mr. Baker’s resolution was carried by a large
majority; but, as we have seen, did not deter the
King from dismissing the ministry.