Described by Joseph Hume as ‘a loose fish’ whose votes could not be trusted, Sir Matthew White Ridley began his parliamentary career as a constitutional Whig before going over to the Conservatives in 1835.
Defending his seat at the 1832 general election, Ridley expressed his support for a further extension of the franchise and called for the abolition of the window and house tax. Though returned at the top of the poll, his popularity amongst his constituents, which had long been a source of concern to his agents,
At the 1835 general election Ridley was roundly criticised by his constituents over his voting record and attendance, and forced to deny he had been ‘idle, inattentive, or absent’.
Ridley continued to divide with Peel and Stanley following the reappointment of Melbourne as premier, particularly on corporation reform. He was in the minority for a Conservative motion to give freemen with votes in parliamentary elections the municipal franchise, and moved an amendment that the proposed legislation should not alter the private property of existing corporations, which was withdrawn, 3 July. He defended the rights of freemen again, 16 July, declaring that their ‘birthrights and privileges … ought to be preserved’,
While staying at Richmond, Surrey, Ridley died suddenly of apoplexy in July 1836, and was succeeded in the baronetcy and to his estates, bank and business by his eldest son Matthew, who subsequently severed all ties with the family business and declined an offer to stand for Parliament in his father’s place. His refusal broke the 89-year long representation of Newcastle-upon-Tyne by the Ridleys, though he later represented Northumberland North as a Conservative, 1859-80.
