Born in Brayton, near Carlisle, Lawson, who in his own words was ‘a fanatic, a faddist, and an extreme man’, was a leading temperance campaigner and the first parliamentary spokesman for the United Kingdom Alliance.
Lawson’s father, whose political convictions left an indelible mark upon him, persuaded him to enter Parliament at the earliest opportunity.
Appearing in Parliament for the first time as ‘a good looking young man, smartly dressed with “Dundreary whiskers” and peg-top trousers’, Lawson joined the radical wing of the Liberal party, and his zealous advocacy of parliamentary reform and non-intervention in foreign affairs saw him frequently clash with Palmerston’s ministry.
A ‘most unusual combination of humanitarian and humorist’, who ‘possessed a great facility for versification’, Lawson’s speeches were ‘no less reasoned than wittily conceived’.
Lawson dedicated the majority of his speeches to the temperance issue. Although, according to one historian, he was one of the very few ‘really reliable intermediaries between the pressure groups and the Liberal party’, Lawson, in his speeches, did not explicitly identify the prohibitionist position as a Liberal one, and he pressed for support from members of both political parties.
On 8 June 1864 Lawson brought forward his intoxicating liquors bill, also known as the ‘Permissive bill’, which proposed that drink-shops should be suppressed in any neighbourhood where a two-thirds majority of the inhabitants voted against their continuance. Aware that the proposal, which had been originally authored by the United Kingdom Alliance and was supported by 2,549 petitions bearing 482,413 signatures, was unpopular in the Commons, he insisted that ‘whatever might be the feeling of the House with regard to the bill ... there was undoubtedly out of doors, among a large portion of the community, a strong desire that the measure should pass’ and because many of the petitioners ‘belonged to the poorer classes of the community’ who could not vote, ‘the House should pay some attention to their prayer’.
At the 1865 general election Lawson stood again for Carlisle, but following a campaign marked by violence he was defeated in third place.
Returned at the head of the poll for Carlisle at the 1868 general election, Lawson continued to champion the ‘Permissive bill’, introducing it annually, with varying degrees of failure, until 1879 when he switched to bringing forward a ‘local option’ resolution, which was carried for the first time the following year.
Lawson sat for Carlisle until 1885, when he sought election for the Cockermouth division of Cumberland, where he was narrowly defeated. Returned for Cockermouth as a Liberal in 1886, he represented the division until 1900 when his pro-Boer sympathies cost him his seat. He sat briefly for the Camborne division of Cornwall before his re-election at Cockermouth in 1906. Seventy-six years of age, he was now one of the longest serving members, but with his health declining, he made little impact in the Commons.
