Eliot, like his elder brother Edward James, sat on the family interest and supported Pitt. He was for a while a barrister on the western circuit (on 28 Feb. 1793 he was given leave of absence to practise there).
On the death of his elder brother in 1797, Eliot became heir to the title. On 31 Dec. 1798 he defended Pitt’s income tax proposals, having voted on 4 Jan. of that year for the assessed taxes. He intervened briefly on behalf of administration, 28 Feb. 1800, to thwart Tierney’s resolution hostile to the restoration of the French monarchy.
he highly approved of the good sense and moderation with which ministers were quitting office, before Mr Pitt (as he hoped) was pledged, but he strongly deprecated any coalition between Mr Pitt and Mr Fox, and made no scruple of declaring his aversion to Lord Grenville as a minister.
On 15 Jan. 1805 he moved the address in the Lords. He displayed his aversion to Grenville in 1806 after Pitt’s death and was in return harassed in his Cornish boroughs.
