A country gentlemen, Foley was a rather inactive Liberal county MP for the Staffordshire Black Country. He was notably inattentive to local issues, once remarking that the rating of mines question was ‘so local a question that he would leave it with his friends to consider’.
Foley hailed from a junior branch of the Foleys, barons Foley, of Witley Court, Worcestershire, who were Foxite Whigs in politics. His father John Hodgetts Hodgetts Foley, represented Droitwich, 1822-35, and East Worcestershire from 1847 until his death in 1861, in both constituencies benefiting from the influence of his noble kinsmen.
Unlike his father, Foley sought election in Staffordshire rather than Worcestershire, offering for the southern division of the former county at the 1857 general election. He was selected ahead of an absent (but more impressive) rival at a party meeting, after declaring his support for extension of the franchise and the ballot.
Foley fulfilled his pledge by supporting the ballot, 30 June 1857. The following year he backed Palmerston’s government in the divisions on the conspiracy to murder and government of India bills. He opposed triennial parliaments, but backed Locke King’s county franchise bill, 20 Apr., 10 June 1858. He favoured Jewish relief and cast votes against the anti-Maynooth campaign of Richard Spooner and other anti-Catholics, 22 Mar., 29 Apr. 1858. After voting against Derby’s 1859 reform bill, Foley was re-elected without opposition after describing the Conservative government as full ‘of mediocrities’. He reaffirmed his support for the ballot, and argued that the Italian question was pitting the ‘despotic powers’ against the ‘liberal governments of Europe’. Given this context it was important that the country maintained its ‘alliances with the only other great free country in the world – America’.
In the succeeding parliament, Foley offered general support to Palmerston’s government. Although he continued to back county franchise reform, he opposed Baines’ 1865 borough franchise bill. As he explained at the 1865 general election, when he was again returned unopposed, he ‘was opposed to any project of reform which would have the effect of doubling the constituency and swamping that middle class who elected the Parliament by which so many useful legislative enactments had been passed’.
Foley backed Gladstone’s Irish church resolutions, 3 Apr. 1868, and stood for the new division of West Staffordshire at the general election later that year. His and his colleague’s votes on reform had ‘cooled the ardour of some of their former supporters’, however, and they were defeated by two Conservatives.
