Holme Sumner, the heir of an Indian nabob, was returned for his county for the fourth time in 1820.
He unsuccessfully proposed a reduction of the grant to Queen Caroline to £30,000, 31 Jan. 1821, when he clashed with Matthew Wood over her alleged failure to pay bills. In what Thomas Creevey* described as a ‘Billingsgate attack’, he characterized her conduct since arriving in England as ‘one continued effort to bring into contempt every institution in the country’, and, though the adultery charge against her had been dropped, he stated his continued belief in her guilt.
At a county meeting, 10 Feb. 1823, he was given another rough ride for his refusal to support its petition for parliamentary reform. Far less assured than hitherto, he lamely admitted that the agriculture select committee had sat ‘for two years, without being able to devise a remedy for their distress’, and, to the delight of Cobbett, he repented of his support for Peel’s 1819 Currency Act.
Holme Sumner spoke regularly in the 1820 Parliament on matters of local interest which, from his county’s location, often encompassed London affairs. On 16 May 1820 he introduced a bill for a new church at Newington, Surrey, in the face of strong local opposition. He complained at the second reading stage, 26 May, of disorder at vestry meetings held to oppose it; it gained royal assent, 30 June 1820 (1 Geo. IV, c. 41).
Out of the House, Holme Sumner made his presence felt at Surrey quarter sessions by opposing an attempt to exempt women from treadmill punishment in 1827, and by deprecating a motion against the game laws three years later. At a county meeting, 21 Mar. 1829, he accused the sheriff Felix Ladbroke of partiality in fixing the date and spoke strongly against the Wellington administration’s plans to grant Catholic emancipation.
Holme Sumner fought a spirited, though ultimately unsuccessful contest against two reformers in West Surrey in 1832.
