James, an outspoken radical whose opinions were ‘the steady results of fearless inquiry and upright conviction’, was born in Liverpool, where his paternal grandfather William James (1735-98) had made his fortune as a West India merchant.
Aged four when his father died, in 1798 he had become heir to the Jamaican estate and mercantile fortune of his grandfather, which was entrusted to his maternal grandfather and uncles until he reached the age of 26.
A popular figure in Carlisle, James topped the poll at the 1832 general election and seconded the address in the ensuing Parliament. An occasional speaker whose attendance was far from reliable, he generally confined his contributions to issues of slavery and constitutional reform. He gave his qualified support to the ministerial plan for the abolition of slavery, but insisted that it would be a mistake to pay wages to emancipated slaves in lieu of an allowance, 29 July 1833. Attacking the ‘exaggerations and falsehoods’ of the Anti-Slavery Society, he restated his belief that ‘the slaves in the West Indies were better off than the labourers’ in Britain, 31 July 1833. He ultimately backed the government’s proposal to award £20 million in compensation to planters, 31 July 1833, although he later claimed that ‘it was a great mistake to suppose that it would afford anything like an adequate compensation to the owners of slaves’ given their loss of property.
At the 1835 general election James made way for another Liberal at Carlisle, but was returned unopposed at Cumberland East on a vacancy in September 1836.
Although James remained a trenchant advocate of extensive parliamentary reform, he was noticeably equivocal on the corn laws. An outspoken supporter of total repeal in the pre-Reform parliament, his views had modified by the end of the 1830s. After calling for the free admission of corn at a moderate fixed duty, he backed Villiers’ motion for the House to go into committee to consider the corn laws, 18 Mar. 1839, but the following year he insisted that this had not been ‘a vote in favour of ... unqualified repeal’ which he considered ‘tantamount to giving a vote in favour of the immediate and total injury and ruin of a vast number of persons’, 26 May 1840. He nevertheless continued the dual strategy of supporting Villiers’ annual motion while insisting that the landed interest were ‘honestly entitled’ to protection’, 26 May 1840, but in 1843 he abstained from the vote, explaining that while he opposed the Peel ministry’s sliding scale, he was no longer prepared to be seen as supporting the ‘extremity’ of total repeal, 12 May 1843. After further abstentions, though, he finally voted for repeal, 15 May 1846.
At the 1841 general election James was returned in second place and thereafter devoted his energies to opposing the equalization of the sugar duties. For James, the proposed removal of duties on slave-grown produce would ruin the competitiveness of the West Indian planters’ produce, and therefore ‘the question of the consumption of slave-grown sugars was one which should be deemed an exception to the general principles of free trade’, 22 June 1843. In one particularly revealing speech, he declared that ‘the West India proprietors had been most cruelly and unjustly treated – they had been treated worse than ever the slaves had been treated by the West India planters in the worst times of slavery’, 10 June 1844. This self-righteous sense of injustice coloured his subsequent contributions to debate, as he pressed the government to exempt the West Indian proprietors from the establishment of a free trade system until ‘the disabilities under which they laboured’ had been removed, 22 June, 28 July 1846. His efforts, however, were ultimately frustrated, and his amendment to ensure that a significant differential duty was maintained between colonial and slave-grown sugar came to nothing, 31 July 1846.
James retired from Parliament at the 1847 general election, unable to sustain the cost of a contest.
