The constituency of Westminster contained Whitehall, the Houses
of Parliament and Buckingham Palace.
It was also an area where the nobility had their "town residences".
However, it was one of the few boroughs that allowed all householders
who paid the poor rate to vote in parliamentary elections. As a result
of its broad franchise, the Westminster electorate was unusually large.
By 1820 over 20,000 people had the vote in Westminster and many of
them held Radical political views.
Charles Fox, the leading Radical Whig
in the House of Commons, represented Westminster
between 1784 and 1806. Another Radical, Richard
Sheridan won a bitterly fought campaign in 1806. Two Radicals,
Thomas Cochrane and Sir
Francis Burdett, were elected in 1807. When Cochrane retired in
1818 he was replaced by another Radical, John
Cam Hobhouse.

James
Gillray drew this picture of Richard
Sheridan winning Westminster.

Available
from Amazon Books (order below)