Resident at Melton Constable, Norfolk since 1236, the Astleys had long provided county representatives, among them Astley’s grandfather, Edward, and father, Jacob Henry. The latter, whilst professing his independence, had inclined firmly toward the Whigs.
Astley had meanwhile maintained his interest in agricultural questions, petitioning for legislation regarding Norfolk enclosures, 6 Feb. 1829, and attending a Norwich meeting which discussed reduction of malt duties in October 1830.
Though Astley is not recorded as having contributed to parliamentary debate – he admitted to being ‘not much of a public speaker’ – he dealt with local legislation relating to the road network, land drainage, and harbour improvement.
The presence of a Conservative nominee at the 1835 election awakened Astley from his ‘slumbers of security’, although previously one newspaper had declared the prospects of any opposition ‘perfectly hopeless’, such was the influence of Astley and Coke.
Astley finished fourth at the 1837 election, which marked the end of Whig dominance in Norfolk, where both he and Ffolkes were replaced by Conservatives. Commenting on his defeat, Astley blamed ‘a degree of intimidation, coercion and bribery unexampled in a contested County Election’.
During the severe agricultural distress of the early 1830s, Astley had taken a leading role in the creation of a subscription to aid poorer local individuals wishing to emigrate, and, in 1835 he reduced rents on his Northumberland and Norfolk estates by ten and twenty to twenty-five percent respectively.
