Robinson, an ‘opulent’ East India proprietor, shipowner and prominent Newfoundland merchant, with a ‘sallow’ complexion and ‘tendency to corpulency’, had sat for Worcester as an ‘independent’ since 1826, quickly acquiring a reputation for laborious speeches on taxes and tariffs, colonial affairs and maritime issues. A general supporter of the Grey ministry’s reform bill (though not of their foreign or commercial policy), at the 1832 general election he stood for re-election, citing his support for the campaign to preserve the electoral rights of freemen and prevent alterations to the historic boundaries of ancient boroughs. Attempts to get up a Tory challenge foundered and he was returned unopposed.
The reformed House proved increasingly intolerant of his prolixity, particularly on his annual motion for replacing all taxes with a property tax. To Raikes’s surprise this ‘still found 155 adherents’, 26 Mar. 1833, but in subsequent years it invariably emptied the chamber, rendering any division inquorate.
He is not an attractive speaker; his matter is heavy, and his manner wants animation. He does not command much attention in the House. When he brings forward the question of a property tax, he has generally to address himself to empty benches ... His speeches on these occasions usually last two or three hours in the delivery [and] ... are never regaled with the sweet music of a cheer.
Grant, Random Recollections, 163-4.
In a slightly more generous vein the Tory diarist Lord Ellenborough, after hearing him criticise the government’s ambiguous ‘neutrality’ towards Dom Miguel’s Portugal, 6 June 1833, noted, ‘Robinson made a good speech, if he had known when to stop and had only said a thing once’.
Most contemporary accounts list Robinson as a Liberal in 1832 and a Conservative (or Liberal-Conservative) fifteen years later.
At the 1835 general election Robinson offered again for Worcester as a supporter of ‘church and corporation reforms’, promising to support the incoming Peel ministry ‘when their measures are good, and oppose them when they are otherwise’, although its membership gave him ‘no confidence in them as an administration’.
Throughout 1836 Robinson steadily supported the Whig government’s attempts to improve coastal lighthouses and Trinity docks, as well as their proposals to reform the Irish church and corporations. But he continued to sit ‘on the opposition side of the House’ and remained scathing about the operation of the New Poor Law, especially the ‘revolting’ principle ‘of separating the pauper wife from the husband’ in the workhouse.
At the ensuing election Robinson offered again for Worcester and was widely expected to be re-elected without trouble. However, his Tory colleague and the former Liberal Member stole a march on him with their early and ‘active’ canvassing, forcing him to retire before the poll, much to the delight of the Morning Chronicle, which declared:
Mr. Robinson, who has evinced during the last two sessions such an eccentric versatility of voting, and who of late has been recognised as one of the regular passengers in the “Derby Dilly”, has just met with his deserts at Worcester, having been unceremoniously kicked out ... by Colonel Davis, whose Liberal principles are well known. The prospects of the ‘Dilly Men’ in all quarters are equally discouraging.
Leeds Mercury, 1, 22 July 1837; Morning Chron.,. 24 July 1837.
The ‘trimmer’, observed another Liberal paper, ‘has given place to the staunch Liberal’.
Robinson was less active in his final Parliament, but when present resumed his old habits. After an initial flurry of support for the Russell ministry, he voted with the Derbyites in a number of key divisions, although on religious issues, such as the removal of Jewish disabilities, he remained a reformer.
