John Walter, the proprietor of The Times, was born at Printing House Square, London, and ‘trained from birth to exercise a potent and controlling influence in the counsels of a newspaper’ owned by his father.
With his father’s return for Nottingham declared void on petition in 1843, Walter accepted an invitation from local Conservatives to contest the seat at the subsequent by-election, but, unable to cement the same alliance with local Chartists achieved by his father, he was defeated. Standing again in 1847, however, Walter topped the poll, even though, due to his father’s illness (he died the day of the poll), he had not participated in the campaign. Having stood on both occasions as a nominal Conservative candidate, in August 1847 he appeared before his constituents to explain his political sentiments, and declared ‘I acknowledge no man as my political leader. … [M]y political allegiance lies buried in my father’s grave’.
Successfully returned as a ‘Liberal-Conservative’ at the 1852 general election, he continued to sit with the Liberals and voted against Disraeli’s budget, 16 Dec. 1852. Although he divided in favour of John Roebuck’s motion of censure on the Aberdeen administration’s conduct in the Crimean war, 29 Jan. 1855, Walter, through the pages of The Times, demanded a successful prosecution of the conflict, believing that ‘when the country would go for war, it was not worth while to oppose it, hurting themselves and doing no good’.
Choosing to contest his home county of Berkshire as a Liberal in 1859, Walter, by now a supporter of a considerable extension of the franchise and the abolition of church rates, was returned unopposed.
Despite his opposition on educational reform, Walter was generally supportive of the Liberal government while sitting for Berkshire. Moreover, defending his seat in 1865, he stated that ‘the whole government of the country depends on party … and ought to be carried out by the Liberal party’.
Throughout his parliamentary career, Walter sought to establish a distinction between his dual roles as proprietor of The Times and member of parliament.
The most important act of Walter’s proprietorship was arguably his decision, made in response to the abolition of the newspaper tax in 1855, to maintain a higher price for The Times, first 4d., then from 1861, 3d. Hostile to the new ‘penny press’, Walter was guided by moral considerations as much as economic ones, and believed that the higher price would uphold what he felt was the unique character of The Times: a mediator between the government and the governed that was ‘more conservative in its effects than any machinery that constitution-mongers can devise’.
Walter’s parliamentary career was remembered as ‘not one of great prominence’, and although he carried out his duties with ‘punctilious efficiency’, serving regularly on select committees, including inquiries into the free distribution of parliamentary papers, printing, and the copyright bill,
