762 LAISSEZ FAIRE
repeal of the Combination Acts had very little immediate
and apparent result as gauged by the improved terms they
obtained from their employers, but for all that it was of
fundamental importance. The alliance which Place effected
between the advocates of artisan interests and the Radicals in
Bgl, Parliament was exceedingly significant; eventually it proved
assistance $0 be extraordinarily fruitful. To the public the Trade Union
Lo in, appeared to be an immoral terroriser, oppressing the indi-
vidual ; but the Radicals, whom Place instructed, insisted that
the questions which had been raised should be decided in
such a sense as to give legal protection to the individual
labourer in asserting his claims. The Radical sense of justice
demanded that the labourer should be in the same position
as the employer in this matter, and that the combination of
labourers should not be regarded as a crime, when the com-
ponte binations of masters were permitted to exist. The Radical
measure of Sense of justice was also involved in the assertion of the
Ts principle which lay at the basis of Trade Union agitation up
action. tj]l 1875,—that no action which was legal, if done by other
persons for other purposes, should be condemned as criminal
when it was done by a Trade Union for trade purposes.
The association of labour movements with Radicalism
has brought about a new cleavage in English political life,
Hitherto the landed gentry had been inclined to take the
responsibility of doing their best to protect the labourer from
the capitalist and moneyed man; but they were now viewed
with suspicion by the artisans, for the corn-law agitation had
opened up a wide gulf between the industrial and agricultural
interests. Nor were the Whigs, who came into power with
the Reform Bill, inclined to break with their capitalist con-
nection, and to trust the artisan with any real power in the
matters which concerned him most deeply. The Radicals had
insisted that he should have fair play, so far as the adminis-
tration of the law was concerned ; and this result was attained
in 1875 by measures? passed in the first House of Commons in
which the power of the enfranchised artisans was clearly felt?
! The Conspiracy and Protection of Property Act and Employers and Work.
men Act (38 and 39 Vict. 86, 90).
2 Webb, Trade Unionism, 270. The fact that the Conservatives were then in
power did not greatly affect the attitude of working class leaders towards political
parties.
A.D. 1776
— 1 8E0