A ‘thorough-going Tory’, Packe, a landowner and farmer, was an active county member who supported protectionism, paternalism and the established Church during a thirty year parliamentary career.
Packe was returned without opposition at a by-election, 18 Feb. 1836, for South Leicestershire, a constituency firmly under Conservative control.
At the 1841 general election, Packe was returned in second place in a Conservative victory over the Liberals, and he faced no further opposition.
Packe supported Halford’s attempts to ameliorate the condition of Leicestershire’s hosiery workers by abolishing the frame rent, promising that ‘so long as he had a seat in that House he would never allow a year to pass without endeavouring to abolish it’.
The Times sarcastically remarked of Packe’s protectionist speech on the address, 4 Feb. 1850, that: ‘He acted the part of a tenant-farmer so perfectly that his nearest friends could hardly have recognised under the home-spun and corduroys the wealthy country gentleman, a colonel of the yeomanry, and Member’.
Packe was a member of the 1854 select committee on public houses, but disowned its recommendations, which included restricting Sunday opening hours, as necessary only for London, not the countryside.
In 1854, Packe proposed that Dissenters be partially relieved from church rates, but his bill was reluctantly withdrawn after receiving little support.
After being returned unopposed at the 1857 general election, when he expressed ‘his opposition to Lord Palmerston’s domestic and foreign policy in general’, Packe continued to resist the church rate abolition bills of Sir John Trelawny, who noted that his adversary ‘twaddled lugubriously amidst a well-sustained din’.
Packe was returned without opposition at the 1859 general election, but thereafter his activity waned, although he was re-elected in 1865, despite rumours that he would retire.
