Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "The 1830 vote of no confidence against the government of the Duke of Wellington occurred in November 1830.Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington became Prime Minister of the United Kingdom in January 1828. By late 1830, the support for his government in the Parliament was crumbling: the government's policy of Catholic Emancipation split the Tory Party, and the political and popular pressure for parliamentary reform grew rapidly against the government's will. On 15 November 1830, Chancellor of the Exchequer Henry Goulburn proposed a motion in the House of Commons that the House go into a committee to consider the Civil List for 1831. Sir Henry Parnell, Bt, a Whig MP, proposed conversely an inquiry into the details of the Civil List before it went into the committee. The original motion of the Chancellor was then vetoed by a vote of 204 to 233 in the House. Surprised by the unexpected defeat, Wellington submitted his resignation on the next day. King William IV invited The Earl Grey to form a government which was to propose the Great Reform Bill of 1832."@en }
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- 1830_vote_of_no_confidence_against_the_government_of_the_Duke_of_Wellington abstract "The 1830 vote of no confidence against the government of the Duke of Wellington occurred in November 1830.Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington became Prime Minister of the United Kingdom in January 1828. By late 1830, the support for his government in the Parliament was crumbling: the government's policy of Catholic Emancipation split the Tory Party, and the political and popular pressure for parliamentary reform grew rapidly against the government's will. On 15 November 1830, Chancellor of the Exchequer Henry Goulburn proposed a motion in the House of Commons that the House go into a committee to consider the Civil List for 1831. Sir Henry Parnell, Bt, a Whig MP, proposed conversely an inquiry into the details of the Civil List before it went into the committee. The original motion of the Chancellor was then vetoed by a vote of 204 to 233 in the House. Surprised by the unexpected defeat, Wellington submitted his resignation on the next day. King William IV invited The Earl Grey to form a government which was to propose the Great Reform Bill of 1832.".