‘A consistent Liberal and Free Trader’, best known for his assault on the navigation laws which protected British shipping, Ricardo possessed an ‘almost hereditary title to be heard’ on financial questions.
Although raised as an Anglican, Ricardo hailed from a family of Portuguese Jews who had settled in Amsterdam and later England.
Ricardo subsequently emerged as a leading critic of the navigation laws, which regulated and protected British shipping, ‘battering them heavily with Parliamentary shot and pamphleteering shell’.
After 1846, when he became chairman of the North Staffordshire Railway Company, Ricardo took an active interest in railway debates, including lobbying a parliamentary committee for legislation to allow his enterprise to take over the Birmingham Canal Company.
Although his business career restricted his parliamentary contributions, Ricardo remained an active member. Despite his Anglicanism, Ricardo had told his constituents in 1847 that ‘he was opposed to Church monopoly as well as all other monopolies’, and generally cast votes in favour of religious liberty, including Jewish emancipation and further Catholic relief.
After the outbreak of the Crimean War in March 1854, Ricardo became a leading critic of government policy. He shared the view of many Radicals that the incompetence of the war’s prosecution was due to aristocratic exclusiveness, writing after the fall of Aberdeen’s coalition, 26 Jan. 1855:
Things have come to a most dismal pass politically. We have engaged in a disastrous war without a ministry at the moment. ... whatever may be the composition of the new ministry they will have plenty of Dukes, Lords & Baronets but they will most carefully eschew any man of business. There is not a clerk in Manchester or the City of London that would not have known how to supply the army with what it wanted.
John Lewis Ricardo to George Wilson, 26 Jan. 1855, George Wilson papers, Greater Manchester County Record Office, M20, vol. 22.
More specifically, in Parliament and in his pamphlet The war policy of commerce (1855), Ricardo counselled against the government restricting Anglo-Russian trade through a blockade or other measures.
Although Ricardo had been a noted athlete in his youth, he was never a well man, and was often laid up with gout.
In his last years in Parliament, Ricardo pressed for the abolition of the Stade tolls on trade between Britain and Hanover and took an interest in legislation affecting the Staffordshire pottery and extractive industries, including voicing his constituents’ complaints about the mining operations of the Duchy of Lancaster.
From the mid-1850s, Ricardo lost control of the ETC board, who were increasingly receptive to their competitors’ offers to form a cartel to fix prices. He retired as chairman in 1856, when he was presented with 1,000 volumes of books by employees, but returned to the position. However, Ricardo was at odds with his board, and came to believe that nationalisation of the telegraphic system would better secure the public interest than a cartel of commercial companies.
