Styled a viscount after his father took a peerage as Earl Russell in July 1861, Amberley was ‘pure Russell, short, black hair, not very strong, not very good sight; artistic and deeply religious’.
With his father anxious for him to enter parliament, Amberley stood as a Liberal for Leeds in 1865, declaring himself a fervent supporter of civil and religious liberties, the abolition of church rates and the lowering of the borough franchise to £6, but he was defeated.
Giving his first major speech on the Conservative ministry’s reform bill, Amberley criticised Derby’s administration for maintaining ‘injurious distinctions’, arguing that ‘we must get rid altogether of the spirit of class’ and legislate for ‘all members of one common nation’.
Although his ‘physique and temperament’ were later described as ‘not suited to the House’,
With a dissolution of parliament looming in 1868, his wife recorded that Amberley ‘has no ardent wish for any seat but will not say so for his father’s sake’.
Amberley bought Ravenscroft, a property near Chepstow in Monmouthshire in 1870, and settled into a more domestic life, but he remained weak, and suffered from epilepsy in 1873. The death of his daughter and wife from diphtheria in the summer of 1874 plunged him into a severe depression, and he died of bronchitis at Ravenscroft in January 1876.
