A Whig soldier, Chetwynd’s otherwise unremarkable parliamentary career was distinguished by his isolated defence of the notoriously venal constituency of Stafford against repeated attempts to disenfranchise it in the 1830s. Having accomplished much to preserve the corrupt borough’s parliamentary representation, it was ironic that Chetwynd was forced to retire due to the electorate’s ever-escalating demands for bribes.
The Chetwynds had long been closely connected with Stafford. Chetwynd’s elder brother George, later 2nd baronet, had represented the borough in the unreformed Parliament, 1820-26.
An abortive election petition against the result led to the introduction and passing of a bill to indemnify witnesses who gave evidence to the parliamentary investigation into the election. Chetwynd attacked the bill as unprecedented and full of sweeping and unproven allegations against Stafford.
The following session, Chetwynd opposed a low fixed duty on corn and backed Althorp’s proposed settlement of the church rates issue, 7 Mar. 1834, 21 Apr. 1834. He later claimed that he could ‘never [have] had supported’ the ‘tyrannical’ 1834 new poor law, which was unpopular in Stafford, but said as it ‘was certain to be carried by great majorities, he had not divided against the bill’.
On his return to Parliament, Chetwynd backed Abercromby for the speakership, divided against the address, 19, 26 Feb. 1835, but opposed Russell’s motion on the Irish church, 2 Apr. 1835, which has led Josiah C. Wedgwood to classify him as one of the ‘cave’ of Staffordshire Reformers who gravitated towards Conservatism in 1834-5.
Despite Conservative attempts to deny him any credit for saving the borough, Chetwynd topped the poll at the 1837 general election.
Chetwynd retired at the 1841 general election after telling the Whig grandee Lord Hatherton that ‘less than £4000 will not now win the seat so much more corrupt are the burgesses become, and so much more excessive are the agencies requisite to deal with them’.
