Described by Sir James Graham of Netherby as ‘a genuine old Tory of the long-horned kind’, Lowther, ‘a tall man with a white beard and remarkably red face’, represented Westmorland for over half a century and was Father of the House when he died.
At the 1832 general election Lowther directed the Conservatives’ canvass of the Cumberland and Westmorland constituencies on his father’s behalf, as his brother was abroad, and was returned in second place for Westmorland.
Lowther remained dismissive of the Reform Act, asking at the 1835 general election ‘what earthly good it had ever done’. He also attacked the late Melbourne ministry for ‘creating useless places and still more useless commissions’, a theme he would return to in later nomination speeches when he relentlessly attacked ‘Whig jobbing’.
Although he was described as ‘short of speech’, Lowther, when addressing his constituents, was not afraid of using inflammatory rhetoric, and at the 1841 general election he declared that ‘as soon as parliament is reassembled, we shall get rid not only of Whigs and radicals, but papists and socialists also, with all the tag-rag and bob-tail of the set’.
At the 1847 general election he staunchly defended the navigation laws, claiming that ‘it does not require much knowledge of the matter to see the disadvantages of repealing those laws’. Reflecting his distaste for government-appointed commissioners, he also attacked the health of towns bill.
Lowther was in the minority for the Derby ministry’s reform bill, 31 Mar. 1859, and at the 1859 general election he declared that ‘I should be as ready as anyone to promote measures for the real benefit of the working classes, but I do not believe they would be made happier by becoming electors of Members of Parliament’.
Lowther was Father of the House when he died at Barleythorpe Hall, Rutland, in December 1867. He had been ill for a few months and ‘under the labours of the Commons his goodly frame first broke down’.
