Gage, like his first cousin, Sir William Gage, a converted Roman Catholic, was returned for Minehead in 1717. Unseated on petition but returned for Tewkesbury in 1721, he made his first recorded speeches 23, 26 Nov. 1722, 6, 14 May 1723, against the special tax on Papists. In April 1727 he spoke for the motion for a vote of credit.
In the next Parliament Gage voted with the Government except on the excise bill, which he opposed. He was responsible for exposing the fraudulent sale of the Derwentwater estates, for which he was thanked by the House of Commons on 31 Mar. 1732, and awarded £2,000 under Act of Parliament 8 Geo. II, c.29, in 1735.
in getting together the party to the House and keeping watch at the door to prevent their going away. On the change, he was paid for staying away a whole sessions. At his house in the country, he would frequently leave his company to go and read letters from, or write them to the King and royal family. Soon after he was made master of the household to the Prince.
Corresp. H. Walpole, loc. cit.
With the rest of the Prince’s party he voted with the Government till 1747 when he followed his master back into opposition, putting up his son, W. H. Gage, against Newcastle’s candidate at Seaford, so ‘that he might have something to talk about at Leicester House’.
After the death of the Prince Gage made his peace with the Pelhams.
engaged in a scheme, which, if persisted in, must deprive me of the honour of representing them; although I flatter myself their resolution to choose no members but such as will give £1,500 each towards mending their roads, does not proceed from any personal dislike to me, but from the benefit they conceive the trade of Tewkesbury will receive by it.
Namier, Structure, 131.
Refusing to accede to these terms, he and his son, Thomas, were defeated in 1754 at Tewkesbury, which he had represented for 33 years. He died shortly afterwards, 21 Dec. 1754.
