His direct ancestors having sat in Parliament since the seventeenth century, Howard was born into a family with an immense political pedigree. His father George Howard, the sixth earl of Carlisle, had sat for the family borough of Morpeth, Northumberland, from 1795-1806, and his elder brother, George, styled viscount Morpeth, to whom he was close, was chief secretary for Ireland in Melbourne’s second ministry.
In July 1840 Howard came forward as a Liberal at the East Cumberland by-election, necessitated by the death of the sitting member. Following a difficult nomination, when persistent anti-ministerial chanting by the public prevented him from speaking, he was returned unopposed.
An infrequent speaker, Howard’s first two known contributions concerned the corn laws.
Returned unopposed at the 1847 general election, Howard attended steadily and gave his silent support to Russell’s ministry on most major issues.
At the 1857 general election Howard vociferously backed Palmerston, praising the premier for ‘having concluded an honourable peace with Russia, ... avoided a war with America, and [brought about] the pacific termination of the Persian difficulty’.
Returned unopposed at the 1865 general election, Howard backed the Liberal ministry’s reform bill, 27 Apr. 1866, and was in the ministerial minority over the Adullamites’ motion of no confidence, 18 June 1866. He subsequently followed Gladstone into the division lobbies on all the major clauses of the Derby ministry’s representation of the people bill, and voted for his resolutions on the Irish church, 3 Apr. 1868.
Re-elected in second place at the 1868 general election and at the top of the poll in 1874, Howard continued to give his unwavering but largely silent support to the Liberal party. He died from heart failure while staying at Holker House, the Lancashire seat of his brother-in-law, the duke of Devonshire, in April 1879.
