A self-made man and leading Leicester hosier, Harris crowned a long career of service in the cause of reform by representing his native town in Parliament.
After Leicester’s two sitting Reformers were unseated on petition for bribery in June 1848, Harris and his friend and fellow businessman John Ellis were brought forward and returned without opposition, 2 Sept. 1848. Claiming that ‘he had no ambition to go to Parliament and stood before them solely at the earnest request of a large number of fellow-townsmen’, Harris stressed his long support for reforming and dissenting causes and promised to provide a ‘check on extravagant government’.
no constituency ever had a more honest or more faithful representative … His duty to those whom he represented was his first object. Though far advanced in years, I believe he never failed to remain in post when his vote was required for the public good.
Lomas, Character and its conquests, 183.
At the 1852 election Harris and Ellis retired in favour of the former incumbents.
