Bective was the eldest son of Thomas Taylour, earl of Bective, who had represented county Meath from 1812 until he succeeded to the Irish marquessate of Headfort in 1829. In 1831 the Grey ministry had given him a United Kingdom peerage as Baron Kenlis.
In April 1854 Bective was brought forward by the Lowther interest for the vacancy at Westmorland created by Thompson’s death. Believing that ‘religion and loyalty are identical with the best interests of the people’, he declared that he would ‘to the best of my ability support Conservative policy’, but he was ‘not anxious to pledge [himself] in any way’.
Bective, who ‘did not profess to be a speaker in the House of Commons’, made no known contributions to debate and attended only infrequently.
Bective was in the majority against Palmerston’s conspiracy to murder bill, 19 Feb. 1858, which caused the collapse of the Liberal government, and backed the short-lived Derby ministry’s reform bill, 31 Mar. 1859. At the subsequent general election, he argued that as any franchise extension should include only those whose intelligence was a ‘fair presumption’, the Conservative government’s bill was the only measure ‘which could meet the present difficulties, and it was one which all men ought to have approved of’.
Justifying his votes at the 1865 general election, Bective claimed that Baines’s bill would have led to the ‘degrading’ position of ‘universal suffrage’ and that church rate abolition was ‘the first step to attack the root of the established church in this country’.
Re-elected in 1868, Bective continued to oppose the disestablishment of the Irish church, considering it ‘the first step towards the subversion and the overthrow of the Church of England’.
Bective died at his London residence in Belgrave Square in July 1894, having been ill for three months, ‘suffering from an affection of the heart and lungs’.
