Villiers, a Liberal who was unseated twice on petition, had a personal history as chequered as his parliamentary career. Born in Derbyshire, he and his brother Charles were the natural sons of Charles Meynell, whose father Hugo had sat in the Commons from 1762-80.
Villiers had meanwhile been called to the bar, and entered Parliament as MP for Saltash on the interest of his friend William Russell in 1831. He generally supported the reform bill, although he was hostile to some elements. Its passage ended his first spell in the Commons when Saltash lost its representation.
Villiers divided with the Liberals on the speakership, 19 Feb. 1835, and the address, 26 Feb. 1835. He appears to have backed Chandos’s motion for repeal of the malt tax, 10 Mar. 1835. His only known contributions to debate in this period related to his Canterbury contest. Presenting a petition from the borough for the ballot and freedom of election, he claimed to have witnessed intimidation by clergymen, 18 Mar. 1835.
Villiers returned from the Continent to offer again at Canterbury in 1837, but finished bottom of the poll, while Conyngham retained his seat.
Despite this ill-feeling, the tenacious Villiers proved difficult for Canterbury’s Liberals to drop. In September 1839 he received a requisition asking him to relinquish his claims on Canterbury’s Liberal voters, but refused to do so, having promised the Radical Association that he would offer again.
Villiers had acknowledged that Conservative victory at the by-election would scupper his future chances at Canterbury, and this proved to be the case. Instead at the 1841 general election he offered for Sudbury, where his running-mate David Ochterlony Dyce Sombre provided the funds necessary to win over the borough’s notoriously venal voters. He and Dyce Sombre won the show of hands, following which Villiers declared the key election question to be ‘cheap or dear bread – whether the produce of the labourers’ industry should be monopolised by the aristocracy or enjoyed by the labourer himself’, and proclaimed that he had come to free Sudbury from the Tories. However, having ‘fought many political battles’, he contended that ‘it was not the eloquence of the Candidate, but the voice of the people that won it’.
Villiers apparently left England for the Continent a few days after the select committee on the Sudbury disfranchisement bill concluded its proceedings in 1843. He did not give evidence to that inquiry, nor to the commission which investigated Sudbury’s murky electoral history the following year. His brother Charles appeared before the latter body, but refused to answer most questions for fear of incriminating himself, although he revealed that Villiers had last been heard of in Milan.
