A young Conservative landed gentleman, Russell’s endorsement of Sir Robert Peel’s abolition of the corn laws in 1846 led to his repudiation by his protectionist constituency, terminating his brief parliamentary career. His support for free trade was surprising in view of his earlier votes and defiance of Peel on other economic and social issues.
Russell’s father, Jesse Watts Russell (1786-1876), was the son of a London soap manufacturer and later acquired estates in Northamptonshire and Staffordshire through marriage and purchase respectively. He represented the rotten borough of Gatton in the unreformed Parliament.
In January 1841 Russell the younger was announced by the local Conservative Association as one of their candidates for North Staffordshire and he was returned unopposed at the general election that June.
A silent member, Russell was in the majority that voted Melbourne’s government out of office, 27 Aug. 1841, and he supported Peel’s revision of the corn laws and reintroduction of income tax the following year. Despite his protestations on the hustings, Russell proved to be a reliable supporter of the new poor law in the division lobbies. In 1844 his voting behaviour became more rebellious. He was among the paternalist Conservatives who voted for a 10 hour day for factory workers in defiance of their party leader, 22 Mar., 13 May 1844. In June he was among the protectionists who backed William Miles’s amendment to lower the duty on colonial sugar, and he repeated his vote when Peel attempted to reverse the result of the division. On religious issues, Russell’s votes were more predictable, opposing inquiry into Irish church temporalities and the Dissenters’ chapels bill. In 1845 he supported the introduction of Peel’s Maynooth college bill but was absent from the divisions on the second and third readings.
Before the 1846 session Russell attended a public meeting at Stafford to explain to the electors that he supported Peel’s proposed repeal of the corn laws. Russell declared that ‘he had come to the conclusion that the measures of Sir Robert Peel were … calculated to benefit the country’ and felt ‘conscientiously compelled’ to support them. However, he admitted that his constituents had a right to express their opinions on the subject and if his supporters were overwhelmingly opposed to Peel’s policy he would resign.
Russell retired at the 1847 general election as his ‘altered opinions were no longer in harmony with the great bulk’ of his supporters. However, he defended his support for free trade which, he asserted, promoted ‘the welfare of the community’.
