Edmond De La Poer inherited an estate of more than 13,000 acres at Gurteen, Co. Waterford from his father, John William Power, MP for Dungarvan, 1837 and County Waterford, 1837-40. As landlords, his family was reputed to be ‘so identified with the people that, judging from social intercourse, and from conduct elicited on trying occasions, it would be difficult to say, without reference to property, whether they belonged to the gentry or the farmer class’.
Having only joined the Liberal ranks in October 1866, to support the election of the Hon. Charles White for Tipperary, De La Poer was adopted as a candidate a vacancy at County Waterford the following month.
De La Poer voted for the abolition of church rates in March 1867, the amendment of the parliamentary oath for Catholic members, and a committee to examine the temporalities and privileges of the Irish Church that May. He largely approved of the Liberal amendments to the Conservatives’ reform bill that June, and, with respect to the proposed abolition of religious tests for Oxford University, he favoured extending the measure to Cambridge University. He consistently backed Liberal amendments to the Irish reform bill in 1868, including the ballot, the joint return of two members to represent Dublin University and the Queen’s University, and adjustments to the occupation franchise.
In March 1868 De La Poer joined a deputation to the chancellor of exchequer calling for the establishment of a national department of science and art in Ireland.
Notwithstanding his support for these initiatives, Le Poer appears to have been an infrequent visitor to the division lobby. While still serving as an MP, he enlisted in the Papal Forces in 1870, served in the ambulance during the Carlist war in 1872, and resided in Rome in 1873. He was absent for the ministerial defeat over the Irish universities bill that March and accepted the Chiltern Hundreds in June.
