One of the ‘non-elité’ MPs elected to the 1818 parliament, Evans was an extremely wealthy provincial industrialist, banker and landowner whose Liberalism was complementary, rather than antagonistic, to the Whig party.
In 1826, he sought election for Leicester, challenging the Tory corporation which had long controlled the town’s representation. He was defeated after spending £20,000 transporting out-voters, being out-spent by the corporation.
A supporter of freer trade, which he said ‘produced harmony of nations’, he divided in favour of the motions of Whitmore and Hume for a low fixed duty on corn in the 1833 and 1834 sessions.
In 1835, the Conservatives took both Leicester seats, relegating Evans to third place, but he was returned in second place in the 1837 general election for North Derbyshire, replacing his brother-in-law Thomas Gisborne, which proved to be the only contest he would face in the constituency. On his return to Parliament, Evans served on the committee on pensions, on which he generally sided with the chancellor of the exchequer, Spring Rice, rather than radicals such as Hume and Grote.
Returned unopposed at the 1841 election, Evans opposed Peel’s 1842 budget.
He voted for the repeal of the navigation laws in 1849, but the following year supported Buxton’s unsuccessful motion against free trade for slave-grown sugar.
In his final session in Parliament after again being returned unopposed in 1852, Evans opposed repeal of the ‘knowledge’ taxes and supported Gladstone’s financial policy.
Evans’s parliamentary career limited his involvement on Derby town council, to which he had first been elected in 1835, but he was made an alderman in February 1856.
