A silent and inactive Conservative squire, Farnham was unfavourably compared to a log of wood at one election nomination.
In Parliament, Farnham, who is not known to have ever spoken in debate, supported the new poor law, albeit with some clipping of the Commission’s powers, agricultural protection and opposed financial support to the Catholic seminary at Maynooth. He repeatedly cast votes in favour of the immediate abolition of slave apprenticeships, 30 Mar. 1838, 22, 28 May 1838. Farnham was more expansive at local party meetings, which he regularly attended. A direct, if rather limited, public speaker, he frequently lambasted the Whigs’ ‘feeble administration’, which clung on to office by giving ‘concession upon concession’ to Daniel O’Connell’s Irish party.
Protectionism, paternalism and Protestantism proved to be the guiding themes of Farnham’s political career over the next six years. He became increasingly hostile to the new poor law, and was a general supporter of factory legislation, including measures to regulate the East Midlands hosiery and lace industries, 20 May 1846, 9 June 1847. Although he supported Peel’s revised corn law of 1842, Farnham later repudiated his leader, who, he told local agriculturalists, ‘had in the hour of their greatest need deserted their interests’ by converting to free trade, which would also lower wages.
At the 1847 general election, when he was again returned without opposition, Farnham expressed sympathy with Conservative distrust of the party leadership after Peel’s apostasy, but nonetheless expressed support for the protectionist chiefs, Lord Stanley and Lord George Bentinck.
Although he was returned unopposed at the 1852 general election, the nomination was an uncomfortable experience for Farnham, who spoke against the malt tax. Jeered by the crowd at Loughborough, his parliamentary performance was derided by a Liberal speaker, who complained that Farnham had sat for fifteen years ‘without even once making a speech, or without having gained one particle of influence’. He added sarcastically that a better representative would be a log of wood, sent to ‘Lord Derby, “To be used as occasion may require”.’
Whilst out riding in February 1853, a stone bridge collapsed on Farnham, breaking his horse’s back, although he escaped unscathed.
Despite being pelted with a variety of missiles at the nomination, Farnham was elected in second place at the 1857 general election, ahead of the independent Conservative and ultra-Protestant, Charles Hay Frewen, the former MP for East Sussex.
Farnham did little of note in the remainder of his time in the Commons before retiring at the 1859 general election, citing ill-health.
