It is often assumed that Sir Lewis Namier and Sir Herbert Butterfield
demolished the 'Whig interpretation of history'. In fact, much was
allowed to remain standing by their failure to offer a new synthesis of
English party politics. In this book Dr Clark provides the key component
for such a new synthesis by a detailed exposition of the crisis of the
1750s, which was instrumental in the destruction of the party system and
the emergence of new practices in the multi-factional world. The Court
v. Country analysis of the politics of c. 1714-1760, still widely
current, is refuted by a demonstration of the survival of the Whig and
Tory parties of Queen Anne's reign until the 1750s; the long debate
about George III and the constitution is set in a new perspective; and
major new insights are offered into the nature of party and party
politics.