Aside from being a local resident, Lees ‘had nothing particular to recommend him as a politician’, according to one contemporary.
Lees owed his brief stint as Oldham’s first Conservative MP to divisions among Oldham’s radicals at the 1835 by-election that followed the death of William Cobbett, which allowed him to gain the seat with a majority of just 13 votes. At the first annual dinner of Oldham’s Operative Conservative Association in 1836, he made clear his admiration for Peel, describing him as ‘the man prepared to use the pruning knife judiciously, to lop off the rotten branches, and leave the healthy and strong parts to flourish’, and in the Commons, Lees was usually found in the opposite lobby from his fellow Oldham MP, John Fielden, who refused to associate with him.
Faced with a unified radical opposition at the 1837 general election, Lees and his fellow Conservative candidate withdrew after only three hours of polling. He is not known to have sought re-election and does not appear to have taken an active role in Oldham’s parliamentary politics thereafter. In 1845, he served on the provisional committee for the Oldham District Railway Company.
