align="left">Described by Robert Peel as an ‘indefatigable public servant’, Blamire represented his native county of Cumberland for five years before his appointment as chief tithe commissioner, the role for which he is best known.
At the 1832 general election Blamire offered as a Reformer for the newly-created constituency of Cumberland East. He called for ‘as cheap a government as is consistent with national strategy’, reform of ‘every department of church and state’, a fixed duty on corn, and attacked the ‘present odious system of tithes’.
An occasional speaker, Blamire’s contributions reflected his unwavering defence of Cumbrian concerns and his belief in the primacy of local knowledge. He objected to the Grey ministry’s bank of England charter bill, criticising the plan to diminish the circulation of county notes which were preferred by the northern counties, 1 July, 10 Aug. 1833, and pressed the government to introduce measures to mitigate the effects of the 1832 Tenterden Act which, by introducing a one-year period in which dormant tithe claims could be pursued, had led to a rash of tithe suits, particularly in Cumberland, 14 Aug. 1833. He subsequently introduced his stay of tithe suits bill, 15 Aug. 1833, which proposed to ‘stay all proceedings begun since the commencement of Lord Tenterden’s Act to the end of next session’. It was roundly supported in the Commons, 20 Aug., 24 Aug. 1833, and following a delay in the Lords, the bill became law in 1834 (4 & 5 Wm., c. 83).
At the 1835 general election Blamire restated his support for church reform, full relief for dissenters and the removal of the malt tax.
Blamire’s speech on the Melbourne ministry’s commutation of tithes bill marked a high point of his parliamentary career. Speaking as ‘a practical man’ who had ‘ample opportunity of observing the working of the tithing system in its various ramifications’, he stated that he had no objection ‘to the general principles contained in the bill’, but ‘their application to particular and individual cases’ caused him to offer his ‘most strenuous and decided resistance’, 25 Mar. 1836. Displaying a mastery of the tithe question, he insisted that parties needed time to come to voluntary agreements, arguing that the imposition of compulsory tithe awards would ignore relevant local circumstances.
The unanimous choice of the cabinet, in August 1836 Blamire was appointed chief tithe commissioner under the new Commutation Act, which necessitated his resignation from Parliament.
Blamire’s success as an administrator reflected the new era of bureaucracy inaugurated by the rise of government commissions and regulation in the 1830s and 1840s.
