An active Liberal MP, Wise’s preoccupations were retrenchment and reform in the diplomatic and consular services, areas in which he had expertise, having been educated in Paris, Germany and Italy ‘with a view to entering the diplomatic service’.
The Wise family had resided in Devon since the thirteenth century and his father Ayshford Wise had been MP for Totnes, 1812-18, before selling off the family’s estates in the 1820s.
At Westminster, Wise, as he had predicted, was generally to be found voting with those ‘who were anxious to reduce the expenditure of the country to the lowest possible amount’.
Wise, who later dismissed the Aberdeen coalition as a ‘complete failure’, divided in favour of Roebuck’s motion that brought down the government, 29 Jan. 1855.
Wise urged the reform of the British consular service, 14 Apr. 1856, and in other debates complained of the wasteful expenditure on British embassies.
Wise secured a pledge from Palmerston to establish a committee on the consular service, 3 July 1857, and he was a member of the ensuing inquiry.
Wise had been in the majority that had rejected the conspiracy to murder bill, 19 Feb. 1858, prompting Palmerston’s resignation. That autumn, much to Hatherton’s horror, he ‘spoke in the borough [of Stafford] for equalising poor rates throughout the kingdom. [He] … found it [to be] a popular topic’.
At the beginning of the 1860 session, he successfully moved for an annually appointed select committee on miscellaneous civil service expenditure and payments charged on the consolidated fund.
Wise recovered sufficiently to contest Newcastle-under-Lyme at the 1865 general election, but was easily beaten. At the nomination he had complained that ‘there was a great deal of sham and humbug over Parliamentary matters; but he had never lent himself to any clap-trap measures’.
