A young Liberal MP who strongly supported parliamentary reform, Allen came from mercantile stock. He later wrote of his father, William Allen, a Wesleyan Methodist, that ‘he was the architect of his own fortune’, who through ‘great diligence, untiring industry, and strict economy … became one of the first merchants in Manchester’.
Allen successfully contested Newcastle-under-Lyme as a Liberal at the 1865 general election. He was described by others as an ‘ultra-Liberal’, but few Liberal MPs would have taken exception to his support for peace, retrenchment and reform, as well as the abolition of church rates.
The following year Allen expressed regret that the Liberals had not voted down the Conservative government’s representation of the people bill, so objectionable had he found it, 8 Apr. 1867. In particular, he argued that making the franchise dependent upon the personal payment of rates was problematic for a number of reasons. There could be no uniformity in such a franchise, as different places were subject to different local ratings acts and where such legislation was in force it would enable local authorities to manipulate the electorate ‘at their pleasure’. He quoted statistics from the Staffordshire boroughs to show the highly variable and arbitrary increases in the electorate which would be likely to occur from such a franchise.
In 1867 Allen spoke in favour of a bill which aimed to stabilise joint-stock banks by preventing ‘that rotten and gambling system of buying and selling shares which are not in the market for disposal’, which amounted to ‘speculating for a fall’ in the share price and the company in question.
Although he described himself as a Churchman in the debate on the Irish church, Allen later wrote a number of pamphlets on Wesleyan Methodism.
