Bathurst, who was again returned on the interest of Lord St. Germans in 1820, continued to give silent support to Lord Liverpool’s ministry, in which his father was colonial secretary. He divided against economies in revenue collection, 4 July. He was present on 18 Sept. 1820 when the ‘Mountain’, whom he described as ‘chuckling with the hopes of a revolution’, gave a foretaste of the trouble to be expected over the proceedings against Queen Caroline; later in the year he predicted that ministers would be forced to drop the bill of pains and penalties.
In June 1825 Bathurst was promoted to lieutenant-colonel and appointed to the staff in the Ionian Islands, where Frederick Cavendish Ponsonby*, who had recently married his sister Emily, was serving as a major-general. That December, en route to Corfu, he spent a week in Naples with the Hollands’ eldest son, who found him ‘lively, good-natured, and though he has some family defects ... very amiable’.
