A Cumbrian of humble origins, Hudson was a London wine merchant ‘largely connected with the Portuguese trade’.
Hudson is only known to have spoken on two occasions in the Commons after 1832. On 7 March 1833 he moved unsuccessfully for the House to recognise the necessity of reducing the salaries, fees and pensions paid to public servants, in proportion to the reduction in incomes and costs experienced by ‘all other classes of the community’ since 1825, thus seeking to reduce the annual bill from £16 million to £13.5 million.
Hudson gave general support to the Whigs, dividing in favour of the Irish disturbances bill, and Lord Althorp’s Irish church reform bill, 11 Mar. 1833, but opposed the ministry by voting in the minority for retaining the appropriation clause of the Irish church temporalities bill, 21 June.
By the time of the 1835 general election Hudson had ‘given some offence by inattention to his friends’ in his constituency and, having carried out an inconclusive canvass, surprised his supporters by insisting upon retiring on the eve of the nomination.
