The ‘youthful scion of the House of Warwick’, it has been said of Lord Brooke that ‘beyond his opposition to the free-trade policy of Sir Robert Peel, he took no very active part in Parliamentary life’.
Heir to the earldom of Warwick, Brooke was first rumoured as a Conservative candidate for Warwick, which his father and uncle, Sir Charles John Greville, had both represented, at the 1841 general election.
Brooke’s opinions were fully in accordance with his constituents, however, and at a meeting of the Warwickshire Agricultural Protection Association, 29 Dec. 1845, he declared that ‘Old England that had never crouched to a foreign foe, would not fall before the machinations of a malicious and artful party of interested cotton spinners’.
Brooke opposed further instalments of free trade, such as repeal of the navigation laws in 1849, and backed Disraeli’s proposal to relieve agriculture, 15 Mar. 1849, as well as his budget, 26 Nov. 1852. He supported Berkeley’s motion to reconsider the corn laws, 14 May 1850, and Cayley’s motions to repeal malt duty, 5 July 1850, 8 May 1851. On religious issues, Brooke was a firm Protestant, opposing Jewish emancipation and further Catholic relief as well as other political reforms. Brooke intervened on a number of occasions about county rates and unsuccessfully opposed the bill to exempt Birmingham from the levy, 29 Mar. 1849.
Brooke succeeded as 4th earl of Warwick in 1853 but although he ‘remained throughout his life a protectionist, … he took no active steps to promote the policy which he favoured’, possessing a ‘modest and retiring disposition’.
