The1859 United Kingdom general electionreturned theLiberal Partyto a majority of seats (356 out of 654) in theHouse of Commons.TheEarl of Derby'sConservativesformed a minority government. but despite having made small overall gains in the election, Derby's government was defeated in a confidence vote by an alliance ofPalmerston'sWhigstogether withPeelites,Radicals,and theIrish Brigade.Palmerston subsequently formed a new government from this alliance which is now considered to be the firstLiberal Partyadministration.
There is no separate tally of votes or seats for the Peelites. They did not contest elections as an organised party but more as independentFree tradeConservatives with varying degrees of distance from the two main parties.
It was also the lastgeneral electionentered by theChartists,before their organisation was dissolved. As of 2024[update],this is the last election in which the Conservatives won the most seats in Wales.[1]
The election was the quietest and least competitive between 1832 and 1885, with most county elections being uncontested. The election also saw the lowest number of candidates between 1832 and 1885, with Tory gains potentially being the result of a lack of opposition as much as a change in public opinion.[2]
According toA. J. P. Taylor:
the government which Palmerston organized in June 1859 was a coalition of a different kind: not a coalition of groups which looked back to the past, but a coalition which anticipated the future. Had it not been for Palmerston himself—too individual, too full of personality to be fitted into a party-pattern—it would have been the first Liberal government in our history. Everything that was important in it was Liberal—finance, administrative reform, its very composition: the first government with unmistakable middle-class Free Traders as members.[3]