Described by a contemporary as ‘an epitome of the history of Sunderland – modern, energetic, practical’, Candlish was a self-made man who became a leading radical in his native borough.
Candlish first came forward for Sunderland at the 1865 general election, but without the backing of his fellow Liberal candidate, Henry Fenwick, finished bottom of the poll. He was returned the following year, however, at a by-election necessitated by Fenwick’s ministerial appointment, when Candlish pursued a highly personalised campaign against him.
In a review of the 1867 parliamentary session, Candlish informed his constituents that ‘on every occasion when a division was taken’ he had ‘invariably voted with the Liberal party’.
Although a declared supporter of complete religious equality, Candlish could diverge from his party on ecclesiastical matters, particularly in his attitudes towards Catholicism. With Conservative support, he successfully passed an amendment to the offices and oaths bill to ensure that the lord lieutenant of Ireland could not be a Roman Catholic, believing that ‘to throw open the viceregal office to a Roman Catholic would necessarily and irresistibly lead to the opening of the office of monarch of this country’, 9 Apr. 1867, and his opposition to a clause in the poor law amendment bill that proposed Catholic children be educated in their own religion at the workhouse, 26 July 1866, drew criticism from his constituents.
Returned to the Commons with an increased majority at the 1868 general election, Candlish continued to promote the shipping interest and successfully introduced amendments to the merchant shipping acts of 1871 and 1872. Although a visit to India in 1870 caused a subsequent breakdown in health, he remained, in the words of a colleague, a ‘glutton for work’ and became a vocal critic of the cost of the Abyssinian war.
