Prior to his election as MP for Nottingham in December 1861, Sir Robert Clifton had enjoyed an indulgent and raffish existence.
Having been largely resident in France in the preceding years, his entrance into the 1861 Nottingham by-election was unexpected, although the family of Clifton did have a history of parliamentary service, most notably Sir Gervase Clifton, the first baronet, who had represented the town in 1626.
However, a number of factors ensured his election. Firstly, he effectively had the field to himself, following the failure of local Conservatives to put forward a candidate, and the total absence of Lincoln through ailing health. Secondly, his ‘rollicking, free and easy personality’, encapsulated best by his openness about his love of a ‘flutter’ and his complete disregard for teetotalism, appeared to transcend his dubious past in the eyes of his supporters.
Given his political elasticity, it is not surprising that there has been some confusion about his political allegiance.
His generally sober first four years in parliament contrasted sharply with his re-election for Nottingham in July 1865. Standing again as an independent Liberal, he now faced a single Conservative candidate, although his real battle was against the official Liberal candidates Samuel Morley and Charles Paget, both selected by ‘Number 30’. In the ensuing campaign, election agents from both sides hired hundreds of local men to dominate the streets of Nottingham and intimidate voters. Against a backdrop of ‘bribery and near-terrorism’, Clifton, benefiting from Conservative votes, came in second.
Not surprisingly, the result was contested. In February 1866, a petition headed by Paget was presented to parliament, complaining of an undue election.
Clifton’s ejection from the Commons seemed to have little effect on his popularity in Nottingham. Although barred from standing in the borough’s 1866 double by-election, the irrepressible Clifton returned to electioneering in Nottingham at the 1868 general election; his handsome victory at the top of the polls leading one local newspaper to declare ‘if Liberalism is in the ascendant in this town it can be at any time completely overridden by the paramount personal influence of Sir Robert Clifton’.
