"Locke was not typical of Whig argument: most Whigs argued not from natural law, as he did, but from historic legal precedent that the Crown in Parliament had often regulated the succession in the past, and might do so again. Even this legal argument could end in the same extreme conclusion that ultimate sovereignty lay with the people, who chose governments by contract. Tories tried to press Whig doctrine to this conclusion; Whigs resisted. Basic to the Whigs' popular appeal was a widespread, visceral, unthinking English anti-Catholicism, plus a better-informed, if paranoid, concern about the growth of "arbitrary power"."
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J. C. D. Clark, From Restoration to Reform: The British Isles 1660–1832 (2014), p. 144
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Whigs_(British_political_party)
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Whigs (British political party)
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