Of ‘ultra Reform principles’, Chalmers was ‘an active and efficient’ committee man whose parliamentary career was curtailed by a debilitating spinal disorder.
Chalmers offered for the reformed constituency of Montrose Burghs at the 1832 general election, but although he described his rival as a ‘lukewarm and vacillating Reformer’, his own political opinions were vague.
In Parliament, Chalmers, who was ‘very punctual and attentive to the local interests’ of his constituency, divided with the Whigs in the key votes of his first session, including Irish church reform, 2 Apr. 1835, and continued to back the Whigs’ Irish policy in later years.
Two main themes were apparent in Chalmers’s extensive committee service. Firstly, he was concerned with railway bills and breaches of procedure, which seemed to demonstrate the necessity for different standing orders to be applied to different categories of private bills.
Despite his ailment, Chalmers continued to participate in local affairs, joining with other landowners to sponsor a public works scheme in Brechin in 1842, although for much of the time he was bed-ridden.
