A London ‘hat manufacturer & fur cutter’ and Reformer, Harris’s time in the Commons was curtailed by his being unseated for bribery less than a year after his election.
In 1841 Harris accepted a requisition from Liberal electors to stand for Newcastle-under-Lyme, the constituency’s staple trade being hat manufacture.
Although he later claimed otherwise, Harris, who appears to have been a silent member, voted against Peel’s revised corn law, 9 Mar. 1842, having earlier supported Villiers’ amendment to end all duties. He was absent from the votes on the reintroduction of the income tax. A petition alleging that Harris did not have the requisite property qualification and had used bribery had been presented, 7 Sept. 1841, and he was unseated by an election committee, 11 May 1842.
