Cruger was elected to Parliament as a radical Whig in the election of 1774 in which British policy towards the colonies was an important issue.
As we have already seen, none of the demands of the radical Whigs found their way into the Declaration.
Yet these were minor victories compared to the more sweeping demands for reform made by the more radical Whigs which did not find their way into the Declaration.
He and his fellow radical Whigs suspected many conservative Whigs of being secret Tories.
After the death of his teacher, Mantell was schooled by John Button, a philosophically radical Whig who shared similar political beliefs with Mantell's father.
While waiting, she socialized with Edward Dilly, a publisher, bookseller, dissenter, and radical whig.
Anne refused to appoint Sunderland: she disliked the radical Whigs, whom she saw as a threat to her royal prerogative.
The more radical Whigs, like Sheridan, broke with Burke more readily at this point.
In 1806 and 1807 he was elected alongside Richard Mansel Philipps, a radical Whig who was soon mired in scandal over debt and fraud.
The rebellion of Monmouth, the candidate of the radical Whigs to succeed Charles II, was easily crushed and Monmouth himself executed.