‘An ultra Tory, opposed to every species of radical innovation and change’ and ‘a thorough church and state man’, Shirley’s reactionary opinions, which cost him one election, were expressed in the division lobby rather than in the chamber.
It was generally assumed that Shirley would be returned unopposed with a Whig for the new constituency of South Warwickshire at the 1832 general election. However, his nomination speech, in which he ‘abused all those who differed from him; in the most violent, & unmeasured terms’, provoked reformers into starting a second candidate, who beat Shirley to second place by thirteen votes.
Back in Parliament Shirley’s first act was to vote against the appropriation clause of the Irish church bill.
Shirley and his heir, Evelyn Philip, who had been returned for county Monaghan in 1841, supported the 1843 Irish arms bill, and in the same session he opposed O’Brien’s motion to redress Irish grievances. Such issues probably had added significance for Shirley, given the widespread unrest on his Monaghan estate in April 1843, when a combination of demographic pressure and longstanding mismanagement encouraged tenants to agitate for a rent reduction on the death of an unpopular agent.
Although Shirley seems to have reluctantly adopted many of Trench’s recommendations for the running of the estate, the episode had little effect on his political or religious views.
Shirley, who had long been rumoured to be about to stand aside for a younger representative, finally did so in May 1849.
