A ‘thorough-going Tory’,
Entwisle first sought election in 1830, standing at Knaresborough in opposition to the duke of Devonshire’s nominee, Lord Waterpark. He declared for ‘economy and retrenchment’, but remained silent on the question of Reform.
Entwisle’s defeat at Rochdale in 1832 by the Whig John Fenton (with the Radical James Taylor withdrawing at the close of the first day’s poll) was blamed on his opposition to the Reform Act.
At the 1835 contest, the positions were reversed, with Entwisle defeating Fenton. Described by The Times as ‘very popular… much respected by the working class’, Entwisle’s opponents ascribed his victory to ‘Tory corruption, intimidation, and cunning’, particularly in plying Rochdale’s inhabitants with drink.
Entwisle played a leading part in Conservative party organisation in Lancashire. He was fêted by Lord Delamere at a Conservative dinner in Cheshire in 1835 as ‘the founder of the largest and most consequential Conservative association in the kingdom’, the South Lancashire Conservative Association, of which he was first president (1833-4). Entwisle advised the Cheshire Conservatives to field two candidates in each division, which had proved successful in South Lancashire.
In the House Entwisle was a silent member, who is not known to have served on any select committees. He divided for Sir Charles Manners Sutton as speaker, 19 Feb. 1835, and against Morpeth’s amendment to the address, 26 Feb. 1835. His subsequent votes on questions such as the Irish church and the Irish municipal corporations bill also followed party lines. He voted against the repeal of the malt tax, 10 Mar. 1835. At Rochdale’s annual Conservative dinner in 1837 he declared that he would oppose the new poor law as long as he lived, but when the poor law commissioner visited Rochdale that year, he ‘did not even dare to ask the commissioner a single question, but immediately slunk out of the room’.
Entwisle’s brief parliamentary tenure was dogged by rumours of impending retirement. In May 1835 it was said that another local Conservative, Clement Royds, was to be brought forward in his place.
