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==Richard Cromwell and after== Following Oliver Cromwell's death in September 1658, his son [[Richard Cromwell|Richard]] succeeded him as Lord Protector.<ref>Ireland, pp. 388,392</ref> The younger Cromwell lacked the political and military skills of his father, and the political factionalism of the earlier Commonwealth began to resurface.<ref>Ireland, pp. 392β393</ref> When elections were called for a new parliament in December 1658, Cromwell attempted to prevent the election of both royalists and republicans.<ref>Ireland, p. 393</ref><ref>Coward, p. 107</ref> Vane, as a leader of the republican faction, was specifically targeted, but managed to win election representing [[Whitchurch (UK Parliament constituency)|Whitchurch]].<ref>Ireland, pp. 393β394</ref> In [[Third Protectorate Parliament|the parliament's session]], the republicans questioned Cromwell's claim to power, argued in favour of limiting it, and spoke against the veto power of the [[Cromwell's Other House|Cromwellian House of Lords]], which was packed with supporters of the protector.<ref>Ireland, p. 395</ref> The republicans were unsuccessful in enacting any substantive changes.<ref>Coward, p. 108</ref> [[Image:JohnLambert.jpg|thumb|left|General [[John Lambert (General)|John Lambert]]]] Vane formed an alliance with a group of republican military officers known as the [[Wallingford House party]], who met secretly in violation of laws enacted to limit military participation in political matters.<ref>Ireland, p. 402</ref> The Cromwellian factions in the parliament overreached in their attempts to control republican sentiment in the military, and Cromwell was forced to dissolve the parliament in April 1659.<ref>Coward, pp. 110β111</ref> Cromwell, with little support in the military, abdicated several days later.<ref>Ireland, p. 403</ref> Following a purge of pro-Cromwell supporters from the military and a widespread pamphleteering campaign, Cromwell's council recalled the Rump Parliament in May.<ref>Coward, p. 112</ref> In the reconstituted Rump Parliament, Vane was appointed to the new council of state. He also served as commissioner for the appointment of army officers, managed foreign affairs, and examined the state of the government's finances, which were found to be in dismal condition.<ref>Ireland, pp. 407β408, 415</ref> Through his work General [[John Lambert (General)|John Lambert]] was sent to quell [[Booth's Rebellion]], a royalist uprising in August 1659.<ref>Ireland, p. 415</ref> Lambert's support of non-mainstream religious views like Quakerism, however, ensured his political downfall.<ref>Farr, p. 184</ref> After he and other officers were stripped of their command by Parliament in October, they rallied their troops and marched on Parliament, forcibly dissolving it.<ref>Farr, p. 197</ref> A committee of safety was formed, composed of the army grandees, and including Vane and Sir [[Bulstrode Whitelocke]]. He agreed to serve in part because he feared the republican cause was destined to fail without army support.<ref>Ireland, p. 418</ref> This committee served only until December, but Vane played a vital role in trying to stop Vice Admiral Lawson from blockading London with some twenty-two ships. He negotiated with Lawson and when he couldn't stop the planned blockade, he informed the Committee of Safety.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://bcw-project.org/timelines/1659#dec|title = Timeline 1659}}</ref> When the advance of General [[George Monck]]'s army from Scotland led to the melting away of Lambert's military support, General Charles Fleetwood was forced to turn over the keys to Parliament House to the Speaker which led to the restoration of the full Long Parliament. For taking part in the committee of safety, Vane was expelled (over vocal objections from allies like Heselrige) from the Commons, and ordered into house arrest at Raby Castle.<ref>Ireland, p. 422</ref><ref>Adamson and Folland, p. 414</ref> He went to Raby in February 1660, but stayed there only briefly and eventually returned to his house at Hampstead.<ref>Adamson and Folland, pp. 415,423</ref> {{Quote box |align=right |width=30% |quote=That knave in grain<br>Sir Harry Vane<br> His case than most men's is sadder<br>There is little hope<br>He can [e]scape the rope<br> For the Rump turned him o'er the ladder. |source=Anonymous pamphleteer<ref>Adamson and Folland, p. 419</ref> }} During the tumultuous year of the late 1650s proposals for how the government should be structured and how powers should be balanced were widely debated, in private, in public debates in Parliament, and through the publication of pamphlets. Vane used all of these methods to promote his ideas. In 1660 he published ''A Needful Corrective or Balance in Popular Government''. This open letter was essentially a response to [[James Harrington (author)|James Harrington]]'s ''[[The Commonwealth of Oceana]]'', a 1656 treatise describing Harrington's view of a [[utopian]] government, which included limitations on property ownership and a legislature with an elected upper chamber.<ref>Ireland, p. 412</ref> Harrington's thesis was that power arose from property ownership, and concentrated land ownership led to [[oligarchy|oligarchic]] and monarchic forms of government.<ref>Ireland, p. 411</ref> Vane disagreed with this, arguing instead that power came from godliness, and presented a somewhat [[apocalypse|apocalyptic]] argument in support of his idea.<ref>Parnham, pp. 43β46</ref> Vane supporter Henry Stubbe stated openly in October 1659 that permanent Senators would be required. These proposals caused a terminal split in Vane's alliance with Heselrige, whose followers mostly deserted Vane.<ref>[[Austin Woolrych|Woolrych, Austin]], "Last Quests for a Settlement: 1657β1660", p. 197, in [[G. E. Aylmer|Aylmer]] (ed), ''The Interregnum'' (1972).</ref>
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