Corrance took a keen interest in agricultural questions while serving as ‘a very active and not wholly undistinguished’ Conservative MP for East Suffolk.
Corrance declined an approach to offer at a double by-election for East Suffolk in July 1866
Mr. Corrance talked politics which the electors of East Suffolk could not make out very clearly; Lord Rendlesham could not talk politics at all. Mr. Corrance was a farmers’ friend; Lord Rendlesham hardly knew the difference between a farmer and a shopkeeper. Mr. Corrance understands something about sheep and turnips, the four-course system and the administration of poor relief; to Lord Rendlesham every one of these subjects was a puzzle and a bore.
Public men of Ipswich and East Suffolk, 2.
On the hustings, Corrance noted that he had been asked to call himself a ‘Liberal Conservative, but this I declined to do’, as ‘when a man of broad and liberal views comes forward as a Conservative it is needless to qualify the name of Conservative, his character will be found hereafter in his votes’. Although ‘party men’ had to ‘make our will in many instances subordinate to others’, he added, this did not mean that their ‘liberal and generous views’ would be lost. He declared his support for the reforms proposed by Derby’s government, including extension of the Factory Acts, provision for the metropolitan sick and poor, legislation on relations between masters and men, and poor law reform. He also advocated an overhaul of the system of rating – a constant refrain during his parliamentary career – and believed a franchise based on payment of rates to be ‘the only broad, comprehensive, and intelligible basis’ for parliamentary reform. He wished to see the county franchise threshold lowered, and legislation to prevent bribery and corruption. An Anglican, he nonetheless professed support for the removal of church rates. He favoured repeal of the malt tax and legislation on tenant-right in Ireland, but avoided the issue of the game laws.
Corrance’s ‘complicated’ and ‘abstruse’ speaking style, filled with ‘long chapters of incomprehensible philosophy’ and ‘abstract speculation’ had its advantages, in that he ‘could never be pinned down to a dogma of which his critics were quite sure they disapproved’, but it did not translate well to the Commons.
The reporters in the gallery could not make out what he meant; members who caught the Speaker’s eye next after him took care, as far as possible, to avoid all reference to his speeches, lest they should trip themselves up over his propositions, and assume him to have said nay when he thought he had said aye.
Ibid., 1.
However, it also conceded that ‘his genuine desire to assist in the improving of things which require amelioration goes some way to the correction of his theoretic mistakes’.
Corrance was particularly keen to see improvements in the system of local rating. His maiden speech was in support of the valuation of property bill, 11 Mar. 1867, when he voiced his hopes that there would be further reform on the broader question of rating. He was an attentive member of the select committee which considered this bill.
Having backed the formation of the East Suffolk Chamber of Agriculture in March 1867, Corrance subsequently presided over its meetings, as well as attending gatherings of the Central Chamber of Agriculture,
Some of such meetings took a gloomy and sinister turn; some were almost jocose. I remember one such eventful scene, when one of the deputation produced a bottle out of his pocket and a glass, and I think a corkscrew as well if I remember right, and the then Chancellor partook of the refreshment and absolutely laughed.
He also took a keen interest in the government’s response to the cattle plague, being unafraid to challenge his party leaders on this issue. He forced them to reconsider clause 45 of the contagious diseases (animals) bill, regarding the regulations on the landing of foreign animals, which was duly amended in line with Corrance’s views, 12, 14 Aug. 1867. He claimed that his lobbying was partly responsible for the government’s introduction of the metropolitan foreign cattle market bill,
Corrance routinely divided with his party on religious questions, objecting to the second reading of the oaths and offices bill, 27 Feb. 1867, and, despite his hustings statements, opposing the church rates abolition bill, 20 Mar. 1867. He voted against Gladstone’s Irish church proposals, 3 Apr. 1868. When the Conservative ministry’s reform bill was debated in 1867, he generally sided with his leaders, although he later claimed that once the measure was extended to encompass household suffrage, ‘from the point of departure, from what was, I thought a Conservative policy, I have never followed my party’.
Away from the chamber, Corrance participated in the government versus opposition pigeon shooting match, winning the cup for the best individual shot in 1867, when he also triumphed in the Lords versus Commons contest.
Corrance’s parliamentary diligence helped to secure his re-election in 1868, when he polled second behind another Conservative, and he continued to pursue his interests in agricultural questions, local taxation and the poor law in the House thereafter.
