Popular at court, in Parliament and in his constituency, Paget held household appointments in Whig and Liberal governments throughout the Victorian period. He was described by the Radical Thomas Perronet Thompson as ‘always a popular man with all parties, and a good specimen of the English patrician’.
Paget went to Ireland when his father was appointed lord lieutenant by George Canning in 1827. Anglesey was controversially recalled by the duke of Wellington in December 1828, but was reappointed by Earl Grey’s ministry the following year, after which the family became thoroughgoing Whigs in politics.
A Whig loyalist, whose principles were ‘of a thoroughly Liberal stamp’, Paget rarely spoke in Parliament, apparently making his first contribution in support of the repeal of the corn laws in 1846.
Paget gave loyal support to Palmerston, who had maintained the ‘honour of the British flag’ and successfully concluded the Crimean War, over Canton in 1857.
Paget was unexpectedly defeated at Lichfield at the 1865 general election, despite ‘his popular character and his long connection with the town’, and did not seek a return to Parliament.
