Manners, a long-serving representative for Leicestershire, and a veteran of Waterloo, was much abused during the 1830 election as a ‘leech on the public purse’, whose family were ‘the fawning, flattering parasites of every Administration, whether Whig or Tory’.
An infrequent attender who is not known to have ever spoken in the House, Manners cast votes against the Whigs’ 1833 Irish church temporalities bill, 6 May 1833, and shorter parliaments, 23 July 1833. The following year Manners supported Chandos’ motion on agricultural distress, 21 Feb. 1834, resisted the admission of dissenters to universities, 17 Apr. 1834, but supported Althorp’s proposal to replace church rates with a central grant raised from the land tax, 21 Apr. 1834.
He was returned unopposed in a compromise at the 1835 election, when he stated that ‘length of attendance in parliament has not diminished my attachment to church and state’.
