The illegitimate son of Charles Philip Yorke (1764-1834), who had held a number of ministerial offices during the French Wars, Douglas was successively a Reformer, Conservative, Peelite, Liberal and ‘Radical Reformer’ during the course of his political life.
Douglas was acknowledged by Yorke in his will, 27 Apr. 1827, as his ‘natural son’, to whom his estate was to revert after the death of his wife, and on Douglas’s marriage in 1832 his father settled £10,000 upon him.
Douglas had served as private secretary to the former prime minister Frederick John Robinson, 1st viscount Goderich, whose mother was a first cousin of his father, while Goderich was secretary of state for the colonies, Nov. 1830-Apr. 1833.
Despite his presence in Grey’s ministry, Douglas’s patron Goderich was no Whig, but a Liberal Tory or Canningite, who resigned over Irish appropriation with Lord Edward Stanley and Sir James Graham in 1834, by which time he had been created 1st earl of Ripon, and, after a hiatus, joined Peel’s Conservative party.
In his first Parliament, Douglas was a Conservative loyalist on most issues, but although he supported the new Poor Law, he unsuccessfully proposed that outdoor relief to the able-bodied be reconsidered, 16 Aug. 1838, and spoke in favour of abolishing the Commission, 21 July 1840.
Once his party was in power, Douglas offered no opposition to the renewal of the new Poor Law or the Commission, with the exception of supporting the abolition of assistant Commissioners, 27 June 1842. He defended Peel’s commercial reforms, 8 Feb. 1842, as alterations to the sliding scale established by past Tory governments and totally different from the low fixed duty on corn proposed by the Whigs.
The following year, Douglas supported the repeal of the corn laws, and with the acquiescence of the earl of Warwick, was returned unopposed at the 1847 general election.
As his free trade views were no longer tolerated at Warwick he retired at the 1852 general election, but unsuccessfully sought a return as a Liberal at the 1853 Durham city by-election.
Back at Westminster, Douglas offered general support for Palmerston’s leadership while supporting political reforms such as the ballot, seconding Henry Berkeley’s annual motion on the issue, 23 Apr. 1861.
Unsurprisingly, Banbury’s Conservatives were unimpressed with Douglas’s strong association with political Nonconformity and when he reluctantly stood again at the 1865 general election with the backing of the Liberation Society which was keen to secure his re-election, he was beaten into third place by a Conservative, and the rival he had ousted in 1859 regained the seat.
