Overshadowed by his famous father – one of William Cobbett’s biographers concluded that ‘his sons tended to be rather pale copies of the original’ – Cobbett was a useful but politically divisive member for his father’s former constituency of Oldham.
Cobbett first attempted to join his father in the Commons in April 1833, offering as a Radical at Coventry, where William, who had contested the constituency in 1820, had been asked to suggest an opponent to Edward Ellice.
Cobbett feared that at Chichester ‘he had failed to conciliate many of the Dissenters… by the open manner [in] which he stated his determination to uphold the Church of England’, and his staunch Anglicanism proved problematic when he contested the vacancy at Oldham in July 1835 created by his father’s death.
As well as publishing an edition of William’s writings, Cobbett and his brothers continued the Political Register after his death, but it collapsed in September 1835.
The retirement of Fielden’s Radical colleague prompted Cobbett’s renewed candidature for Oldham in 1847. He was by then ‘known to be Fielden’s prospective son-in-law’, although he did not marry Mary Fielden until 1851,
At Westminster, however, Cobbett generally voted with the Liberals, dividing against Disraeli’s budget, 16 Dec. 1852, and rallying to Palmerston on Cobden’s censure motion on Canton, 3 Mar. 1857. He supported repeal of the ‘taxes on knowledge’, 14 Apr. 1853, and routinely divided for abolition of church rates and the ballot. However, he opposed removal of Jewish disabilities in 1853, believing that this should be dealt with by a reformed House representing popular opinion.
Taking on Fielden’s mantle, much of Cobbett’s attention was occupied with the factory question. He served on the council of the Association for the protection and enforcement of John Fielden’s Ten Hours Act, established in 1849 amidst concern that this legislation was being evaded by the relay system.
Cobbett also strove in the committee-rooms to improve working-class employment conditions, sitting on the 1853-4 inquiry into colliery accidents,
Re-elected in 1857, when he was opposed by Fox and another Liberal, Cobbett endorsed Palmerston’s foreign policy and highlighted his own efforts to promote factory legislation.
Cobbett, who continued to divide for the ballot, supported Locke King’s efforts to abolish the property qualification, acting as teller on his motion, 10 June 1857, and putting his name to his 1858 bill.
Cobbett’s vote on Derby’s reform bill had been decried at a public meeting which declared him ‘utterly unfit to represent radical Oldham’,
Cobbett’s speaking prowess assisted Joseph Crook’s successful attempt to curb working hours in bleaching and dyeworks in 1860, when his description of harsh working conditions ‘so excited the House’ that it overcame efforts to impede the bill by appointing yet another select committee, 9 May 1860.
Cobbett’s political fluidity led the Preston Guardian to describe him as ‘a sort of hybrid politician’, and although he had yet to formally adopt the Conservative label, at the 1865 election he campaigned jointly with the Conservative candidate.
