During his second brief stint in the Commons, Peel generally sided with the Conservative party led by his older brother Sir Robert Peel, 2nd baronet. However, in some respects his views departed slightly from the Tory politics of his family, which perhaps accounts for his classification as a ‘moderate Reformer’ in contemporary parliamentary guides.
Uniquely in his family, Peel was a lifelong supporter of Catholic relief, which ultimately precluded his planned candidature for the Tory and Protestant stronghold of Norwich in the 1820s.
Peel was not surprisingly reluctant to offer for Newcastle-under-Lyme again two years later, telling Sir Robert, 29 Dec. 1834, that unless ‘I can be assured that the bribery system is discountenanced by the candidates or by the town I will have no part in the election’.
His withdrawal from public politics was partly due to poor health, as the Staffordshire Tory William Dyott commented after visiting Edmund and his brother William Yates Peel:
The two brothers are miserably afflicted with the gout, neither having a sound leg to stand up on. The riches of the family does not exempt some of them from disease and trouble; these two owe their sufferings in some degree to their partaking to excess the luxuries of the table.
Ibid., 229.
In 1839 Dyott noted that unlike William Yates Peel and Sir Robert, Edmund was not ‘friendly’ to the existing corn laws and favoured an alteration.
