Returned for Derby on the Cavendish interest, Lord James Cavendish voted for the septennial bill in 1716 and the repeal of the Occasional Conformity and Schism Acts in 1719, when he was absent from the division on the peerage bill. In his only reported speech, 25 May 1721, he recommended allowing Sir John Blunt, one of the South Sea Company directors, £1,000 out of his estate. In the 1727 Parliament he took an independent line, voting against the Government on the Hessians 1730, the army 1732, and the repeal of the Septennial Act 1734, but with them on the civil list 1729, and the excise bill 1733, when he was called a fool by George II for voting against them on the city of London’s petition against the bill.
biography text
Volume
Parlimentarian
Parliamentarian
57505
