2nd Parliament of William III and Mary II

Parliaments of England
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Blessed Parliament 1604
Addled Parliament 1614
3rd Parliament of King James I 1621
4th Parliament of King James I 1624
Useless Parliament 1625
2nd Parliament of King Charles I 1626
3rd Parliament of King Charles I 1628
Short Parliament Apr. 1640
Long Parliament (1) Nov. 1640
Oxford Parliament 1644
Long Parliament (2) 1645
Rump Parliament (1) 1648
Barebone's Parliament 1653
First Protectorate Parliament 1654
Second Protectorate Parliament 1656
Third Protectorate Parliament 1659
Rump Parliament (2) 1659
Long Parliament (3) 1660
Convention Parliament 1660
Cavalier Parliament 1661
Habeas Corpus Parliament 1679
Exclusion Bill Parliament 1680
Oxford Parliament 1681
Loyal Parliament 1685
Convention Parliament 1689
2nd Parliament of King William III and Queen Mary II 1690
3rd Parliament of King William III 1695
4th Parliament of King William III 1698
5th Parliament of King William III 1701
6th Parliament of William III Dec. 1701
1st Parliament of Queen Anne 1702
2nd Parliament of Queen Anne 1705
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Sir John Trevor, Speaker
The House of Lords, depicted in a 1695 Dutch engraving.

The 2nd Parliament of King William III and Queen Mary II was summoned by William III of England and Mary II of England on 6 February 1690 and assembled on 20 March 1690.

The new parliament was more or less equally divided along party lines, with 243 Whig and 241 Tory members, plus 28 others. Sir John Trevor was installed as Speaker of the House of Commons. The ministry, however, was not formed on party lines but drawn from both parties, albeit dominated by Tories. Its nominal head was the Lord Treasurer, Marquess of Carmarthen.

In the second session a number of innovative measures were approved to deal with the question of raising the large amounts of short-term money required to finance the Williamite war in Ireland and the Nine Years War in Europe and North America. These introduced the practice of deficit financing and an institutionalized National Debt.

By 1694, towards the end of the parliament, the Whig party, led by the First Whig Junto, were in the ascendancy and dominating the government. The 1693–94 session concerned itself with the raising of huge amounts of money to support the war effort. A financial crisis was averted when the new Chancellor of the Exchequer, Charles Montagu introduced the successful Million Lottery and established the Bank of England.

The 6th and last session of the parliament began in November 1694. After the death of Queen Mary in December the Tories were again resurgent and highly critical of the cost and conduct of the war with France. But accusations of corruption against certain leading Tories resulted in the replacement of the Speaker by Paul Foley and the impeachment of Lord Carmarthen, now the Duke of Leeds. The scandals obliged the King to dissolve the parliament on 11 October 1695.[1]

Notable acts of the parliament

See also

References

  1. ^ "No. 3122". The London Gazette. 10 October 1695. p. 1.
  • "The 2nd Parliament of William and Mary". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
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