Gordon was six when his father, Lord Haddo, heir of the lascivious 3rd earl of Aberdeen, whose determination to provide for his several bastards created considerable problems for his legitimate successors, died suddenly in October 1791.
A reliable attender, he gave general but not undeviating support to the ministry.
Gordon presented and endorsed Aberdeenshire agriculturists’ petitions against further interference with the corn laws, 21 Feb., brought up several more, 26 Feb., 23 Mar., and spoke and voted against the second reading of the corn bill, 2 Apr. 1827.
Ministers of course counted him as one of their ‘friends’, and he was in their minority on the civil list, 15 Nov. 1830. On 26 Feb. 1831 he gave credit to the Grey ministry’s professed ‘principles of economy, retrenchment and non-intervention’, but said that ‘they only follow in the steps of their predecessors’ and warned that he was ‘not prepared to support any great change in the established forms of the constitution by the adoption of theories which may shake the whole fabric’. He duly voted against the second reading of their English reform bill, 22 Mar., and for Gascoyne’s wrecking amendment, 19 Apr.1831, after signing the Aberdeenshire anti-reform petition and denouncing the scheme in a public letter to his constituents.
Gordon voted against the second reading of the reintroduced reform bill, 6 July, for use of the 1831 census to determine the disfranchisement schedules, 19 July, against the inclusion of Chippenham in B, 27 July, and against the passage of the bill, 21 Sept. 1831. He was in the Tory majority against issuing the Liverpool writ, 5 Sept. He voted against the second reading of the Scottish reform bill, 23 Sept., and on 3 Oct. 1831, while admitting that the Scottish representative system was ‘not of a popular character’, objected to the proposed increase in burgh Members and extension of the franchise to ‘a class of persons ... which it is not desirable should continue to influence the return of Members’. He divided against the second reading of the revised reform bill, 17 Dec. 1831, the enfranchisement of Tower Hamlets, 28 Feb., and the third reading, 22 Mar. 1832. He voted against government on the Russian-Dutch loan, 26 Jan., 12 July. He voiced concern over the ‘extensive’ powers conferred on the authorities by the Scottish cholera prevention bill, 16 Feb., said that the malt drawback bill would encourage illicit distillation, 17 Feb., and thought the factories regulation bill should be referred to a select committee, 20 Feb. He voted against the second reading of the Irish reform bill, 25 May. On the Scottish measure, 22 June, he advocated the selection of a more central polling place for his county than Aberdeen; he preferred Dalkeith to Edinburgh for Midlothian, 27 June. He presented a clerical petition against the government’s Irish education scheme, 8 June 1832.
At the general election of 1832 Gordon defeated, at considerable expense to his brother, his Liberal opponent of 1831.
