In the reformed Commons, Attwood remained a powerful advocate of currency reform. However, despite their joint campaign against monetary orthodoxy, on political questions Attwood was ‘diametrically opposed’ to the views of his Radical brother Thomas Attwood (1783-1856), MP for Birmingham, 1832-9, and was an ‘unflinching Tory’.
Attwood’s father and namesake had co-founded a bank in Birmingham in 1791 and at a young age he was put in control of the London branch. By 1805, under his ‘energetic management’, the London bank ‘was rapidly becoming completely independent of the Birmingham connection’.
The representative of a series of rotten boroughs before 1832, with his brother’s assistance Attwood led a campaign against the monetary system, expressed through parliamentary speeches, some of which were published, evidence to select committees and deputations to lobby ministers.
Although Attwood thought that Thomas’s unsuccessful motion on public distress, 21 Mar. 1833, might have been better timed, he offered full-hearted support, contending that the monetary system ‘rested on a rotten foundation’.
Attwood expressed equally trenchant views on the renewal of the Bank of England’s charter. It was a ‘most monstrous’ bargain for the public, he thought, as the government had granted the Bank great privileges yet received little in return.
How had the House itself been occupied?—night after night, Session after Session, they were engaged in ameliorating, as they called it, every institution, changing every law, improving every system … as they imagined, in accordance with the spirit of the present times—satisfying the desires, and complying with the demands, of the people. But, complying as they imagined with the demands, they had lost the confidence of the people. No body of men assembled within those walls were less trusted by the country than themselves.
Ibid., 17 July 1834, vol. 25, c. 66.
In truth, Attwood argued, political discontent was rooted in distress and sustained prosperity would restore popular confidence in established institutions.
Although he was a regular contributor to debate, much of Attwood’s time was occupied with committee work. He was a diligent member of the inquiries on agriculture in 1834 and 1836, the investigation into joint-stock banks which ran from 1836 to 1838 and the committee on banks of issue in 1840 and 1841.
In 1842, Attwood intervened in the debates on Peel’s financial policy, which comprised tariff revision and the reintroduction of the income tax. Mounting a stinging critique, 23 Mar. 1842, he declared that to propose more ‘commercial reform … was to proceed in the hackneyed footsteps of every successive administration which had governed the country for the last twenty years’.
Attwood’s increasingly ‘feeble health’ meant that, despite the urging of the Morning Post, which had long been an admirer, he played no part in the 1844 debates on the bank charter bill or on other financial measures thereafter.
