After Glynne re-entered Parliament in 1753 Mrs. E. Conway wrote to George Grenville, 4 Jan. 1754:
I don’t believe Sir John had any thoughts of standing before Mr. Williams’ death gave him so fair an opportunity, for he has always declared he would have nothing to do in a contested election ... I have a great esteem for Sir John, both as a relation and a deserving man, and one that I think won’t inflame but endeavour to keep all parties in peace.
An agreement between Sir Thomas Mostyn and Glynne secured for them uncontested elections in county and boroughs. In Newcastle’s list of candidates in March-April 1754 Glynne is marked ‘Tory, moderate’; and in the lists drawn up after the general election he is included among ‘Tories, against’. He was a frequent speaker in the House, and even for the very poorly reported Parliament of 1754-61 there are a few traces of his intervention, then as later on the orthodox Tory lines. Thus Roger Kenyon reported on 25 Feb. 1758 to Lloyd Kenyon: ‘John Glynne has speeched it away last week in support of the triennial bill, and they say pretty sensibly, but the motion was rejected again by a great majority.’ And again, on 25 June 1759: ‘The behaviour of Sir J. Glynne raised my indignation not a little ... He is, I find, a great condemner of Mr. Pitt, and little better than a chattering caff [sic].’
He continued in the new reign the pursuit of lost causes of the Tory type, with a peculiar anti-Pitt twist of his own. On 1 Dec. 1761 he
moved for a book to register alphabetically the qualifications; insinuated they might be withdrawn; hinted the difficulty of inspecting them as they stood.
Harris’s ‘Debates’.
When on 11 Dec. Pitt’s friends moved for the Spanish papers, Glynne spoke against it:
That that time twenty years had been famous for calling for papers; with intention then to condemn a minister; now it was with a view to applauding one. A paper had been produced at that time which the King of Prussia never forgave. Himself had never seen any benefits arise from motions of that sort.
Walpole, Mems. Geo. III, i. 91.
Glynne is included in Fox’s list of Members favourable to the peace preliminaries, December 1762; was counted by Jenkinson as an Administration supporter in the autumn of 1763; and was pro-Administration in his speeches. He is reported by Jenkinson to have spoken in favour of North’s resolution against privilege for seditious libel, 24 Nov. 1763,
