Finlay’s father, a cadet of Finlay of the Moss near Killearn, was the founder of a flourishing mercantile establishment in Glasgow. Himself displaying considerable flair as an entrepreneur, which involved him in the purchase of three cotton mills, he became chairman of the Glasgow chamber of commerce. From 1807 he successfully challenged the continental system imposed by Buonaparte, exporting contraband goods to Europe via strategic depots.
The Whigs confidently described Finlay as ‘entirely ours on the grand Catholic question’
The question of the Corn Laws caused some friction between Finlay and his constituents. He had opposed any alteration in the laws, 21 June 1813, and had seen no necessity for a corn importation restriction bill, 24 May 1814, but following select committee experience, and on the strength of observations in France the preceding summer, he spoke out for protection on 23 Feb. 1815, provided that the price fixed was not too high. He thought (1 Mar.) that 75s. or 76s. should be the limit. Although his vote was given against the bill, he was one of the Members assailed by the mob on the way to Parliament on 6 Mar. and next day his house in Glasgow was attacked. Subsequently he supported his constituents’ petition to the effect that 76s. should be the limit and that 80s. was excessive. On 24 Mar. he was formally pardoned by Glasgow council.
Finlay had voted with opposition against maintaining the militia in peacetime, 28 Feb. 1815, and against the deportation of Spanish Liberal refugees from Gibraltar, 1 Mar. He voted for retrenchment of the civil list throughout that session and on 1 May for the reception of the London petition against the renewal of war. In debate he opposed the new taxes, 13 Mar., describing the chancellor as ‘the most formidable antagonist the manufacturing interest of the country had ever met with’; next day he vindicated a Glasgow cotton manufacturers’ petition for the repeal of the cotton duty, promising to move for a select committee on the state of cotton manufacture. He was a prominent opponent in March 1816 of the renewal of the property tax, on which he again presented Glasgow petitions, insisting against the chancellor that it was oppressive to manufacturers. Throughout that session he voted in the minorities for retrenchment, though he saw no reason to reduce the navy treasurer’s salary, 1 Apr., and voted in one civil list majority, 24 May. He voted for the resumption of cash payments by the Bank. Never dogmatic, he admitted that the time was not ripe for free trade in woollens, 29 Apr.
Finlay attributed commercial distress to low wages due to post-war competition for employment, 13 Mar. 1817. He thought the seditious meetings bill necessary, 14 Mar., and pointed out that there was evidence of malcontent plotting in Glasgow. He had himself employed Alexander Richmond as a spy on the conspirators and notified the Home secretary in February, expressing the belief that the plot was ineffective and likely to fail because of a revival of trade.
Owing his seat to Lord Archibald Hamilton, Finlay supported the latter’s motion critical of the treatment of state prisoners in Scotland, 10 Feb. 1818, but described the petitions against it presented by Hamilton as misleading and untrue, 19 Feb., 3, 10 Mar., and voted against the opposition attacks on government informers, 11 Feb., 5 Mar. He saw ‘no occasion’ for Sir Robert Peel’s cotton factories bill, designed to prevent the abuse of child labour, 19, 23 Feb., and feared that ‘a mistaken notion of humanity’ might lead the House ‘to injure those whom they wished to serve’, 23 Apr., further pointing out that, if the bill passed, ‘this country could no longer enjoy her present superiority in manufactures in the foreign markets’, 27 Apr. It was out of preference for laissez faire, too, that he opposed such measures as the steamboats bill, 5 May. On 19 May he called for the resumption of payments in specie by the Bank. He found the lord advocate’s bill to regulate Scottish burgh accounts totally inadequate, 10 Apr., 5 May, and voted in the minority on Admiralty salaries, 16 Mar., in the majority against the Duke of Clarence’s marriage grant, 15 Apr., and in the minorities against the miscellaneous estimates and aliens bill, 22 May. On 3 June he was in the majority against Brougham’s motion to promote the education of the poor.
Although Finlay renewed his candidature for Glasgow Burghs in February 1818, he anticipated defeat and did not pursue a petition he threatened when ousted by a casting vote. There was a false rumour of his intervening in Selkirk Burghs, but he had secured his return for Malmesbury instead. His conduct remained independent. On 2 Feb. 1819 he stayed in with ministers on Tierney’s motion.
In the autumn of 1819 Finlay became an alarmist, advocating the creation of a national guard. Lord Melville was informed by Sir John Marjoribanks, 1 Sept.:
You will be pleased to hear that Finlay (who was equivocal in politics) most fully read his recantation in a conversation I had with him. He said he was not ashamed to confess that he had changed radically and if he had the choice to new model the House of Commons he would not alter it in any degree—you will see him steadily supporting government in the next session.
SRO GD51/5/97.
This seems to have been the case. On 16 Dec. he denied that government had turned a deaf ear to Scottish distress and on 24 Dec. argued that ministers were doing their best in the face of commercial distress, in a speech which exhibited his views on the subject of free trade. He rejected a simplistic view that free trade was a panacea for commercial ills, thinking it very difficult to realize; and, taking issue with David Ricardo, blamed over-speculation, over-importation and over-manufacture for the prevailing distress, which must in any case be seen in the context of a universal trade recession. That, on the whole, his preference was for free trade was to be indicated in a speech of 16 May 1820. Finlay declined standing for Glasgow Burghs in 1820, went out of Parliament soon afterwards and was an unsuccessful candidate for Glasgow in 1830. He died 4 Mar. 1842.
