‘A Whig of rather a decided stamp’, Townshend, perhaps best known for his rancorous electoral rivalry with Sir Robert Peel in Tamworth, shared the Foxite principles of his father, Lord John Townshend, MP for Cambridge University 1780-4, Westminster 1788-90, and Knaresborough 1793-1818.
one of the greatest and most consistent statesmen this country had ever produced; and he believed him to be a faithful and consistent exponent of the principles advocated and espoused by the greatest of English statesmen – Fox.
Daily News, 20 Dec. 1847.
He was generally silent in the House, although his rare speeches displayed the same immoderate tone which characterised his out-of-doors orations. A ‘popular officer,’ one newspaper later regretted that Townshend had not ‘taken an active part’ in naval debates.
A former classmate of Townshend’s recalled that as a boy he had ‘a highly eccentric and unbending turn of mind’. He was also precocious and possessed ‘a daring and undaunted spirit, which never deserted him’.
Townshend came in unopposed for Tamworth at a by-election in December 1847, his path smoothed by a split among local Conservatives. The outcome was not to the taste of Peel’s brother Edmund, who sniped that Townshend was ‘a violent party man, & not possessing much property in the district’.
Townshend was, however, a firm free trader, supporting the repeal of the navigation laws in 1849, while opposing Disraeli’s motions to relieve agriculture. His only other recorded parliamentary speech, 14 May 1852, against the Derby government’s militia bill, was notable for its personal attack on Disraeli. After dredging up Disraeli’s relentless derision of Peel in 1846, Townshend defended his late colleague for ‘abrogating an odious and an unjust law, giving cheap bread to the poorer classes, and adding to the few comforts that fall to their lot’. Until Disraeli adopted ‘a different line of policy to that which he has hitherto advocated, neither he nor the Government to which he belongs will have my confidence, my support, or my respect’, Townshend concluded. In the same speech Townshend argued forcefully that the country ought not to look to militias for protection, but the navy, the ‘“wooden walls” of old England, which the country has ever regarded as its great bulwark and safeguard’.
Townshend was returned unopposed at the 1852 general election, when he expressed support for free trade, the Ecclesiastical Titles Act and a £5 rental franchise. He described Disraeli as a ‘man without a particle of political integrity’, had an equally low opinion of Lord Derby, but again spoke warmly of Russell.
