‘A man of great talents’, it has been said that Gisborne’s ‘political career was so unsettled that it was hard for him to make any real mark’.
Having briefly sat in the unreformed Parliament, Gisborne was elected in second place for North Derbyshire in 1832, when he expressed support for currency reform, the abolition of the Irish church, and removing bishops from the upper house.
After his unopposed return in 1835, when his credo was ‘the rights and power of the people’, Gisborne distinguished himself with his baiting of Sir Robert Peel, whom he half-admired, but profoundly disagreed with on most issues.
Sapped by his exertions, Gisborne proposed retiring at the next election if he could be succeeded by someone of similar opinions and if the Conservatives undertook to provide no opposition, an offer they did not take up.
He began very well, but after some little time, regularly broke down, was silent for some moments, sent for oranges, coughed, stuck again and again and again, and finally, pleading “some physical disability” which had suddenly deprived him of his voice, sunk overwhelmed … We thought he was drunk, but the Whigs say the fault was he was not – and that when he is tipsy and is not prepared he is very good.
Benjamin Disraeli to his sister, 31 Jan. 1840, Benjamin Disraeli letters, ed. J. Gunn and M. Wiebe (1987), iii. 254; Hansard, 31 Jan. 1840, vol. 51, cc. 719-25.
Gisborne had no wish to remain at Carlow, and endeavoured to be returned instead for Totnes, where he was defeated by seven votes, 21 Apr. 1840.
He finally secured a seat at a by-election at Nottingham, 5 Apr. 1843, but his victory over a Conservative owed much to the influence of the Chartist leader Feargus O’Connor, who pronounced himself ‘satisfied’ with Gisborne’s pledges at the nomination.
Gisborne staunchly supported repeal of the Corn Laws, and in 1844 argued for the ‘utter removal’ of the Irish church.
Gisborne was beaten at the subsequent election in 1847, trailing in third behind a Chartist and a Conservative.
