A country gentleman and the former champion of Lichfield’s independent party, the ‘Blues’, Scott was described by Charles Dod as a ‘moderate Whig’, but another parliamentary guide placed him in the ‘moderate Tory party’.
was one of the Reformers who seceded with Ld Stanley & Graham, & who unwilling to follow them absolutely across the house, have staid halfway, constantly balancing between the two parties, … a game that may be kept up for a short time; but which sooner or later always brings a man to the ground.
Hatherton Journal, 20 July 1837, Hatherton papers, Staffordshire Record Office, D1178/1.
Although he had supported the reform bill, Scott took an independent line thereafter, and his endorsement of Peel’s minority government, 1834-5, irked Thomas William Anson, 1st earl of Lichfield, the main electoral influence in Lichfield, and foreshortened Scott’s parliamentary career. Locally, Scott was regarded as a ‘half-and-half’, and local Tories, like William Dyott, were also less than impressed with his voting record, the old general telling the baronet in 1835 that he had ‘sunk in favour with many of his friends’.
Scott’s father, Joseph Scott (1752-1828), had been MP for Worcester 1802-6, and received a baronetcy in 1806.
After supporting the reform bill, Scott was elected in second place ahead of a Radical at the 1832 general election, at which he professed to be ‘an independent man … tied to no minsters’, who would ‘be the tool of no party’.
At the 1835 general election, when he was elected in second place, Scott again claimed to be ‘independent of all governments’, but commented of Peel’s minority administration that ‘I do not give implicit credit to their promises, but am not inclined to give them a factious opposition’.
Scott retired at the 1837 general election, ousted by the Anson interest, who secured a ‘ministerialist’ Whig as his replacement.
