George Downing, created a baronet in 1663, …

Years: 1672 - 1672
January

George Downing, created a baronet in 1663, had from the first been hostile to the Dutch as the commercial rivals of England.

He had strongly supported the Navigation Act of 1660, and he now deliberately drew on the fatal and disastrous Second Anglo-Dutch War, in the first year of which, 1665, he had been expelled by the Dutch because of his intrigues and spying activities.

During its continuance he had taken part at home in the management of the treasury, introduced the appropriation of supplies (meaning that Parliament gained the right to specify that taxes should be used only for a particular purpose, rather than spent as the government saw fit), opposed strongly by Clarendon as an encroachment on the prerogative, and in May 1667 had been made secretary to the commissioners, his appointment being much welcomed by Pepys.

He had been returned for Morpeth in the Convention Parliament of April 1660, a constituency that he is to represent in every ensuing parliament till his death, and he speaks with ability on financial and commercial questions.

Appointed a commissioner of the customs in 1671, he had been sent the same year again sent to Holland to replace Sir William Temple, to break up the policy of the Triple Alliance and incite another war between the Dutch Republic and England in furtherance of the French policy.

His unpopularity there was extreme, and after three months' residence Downing flees to England, in fear of the fury of the mob.

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