The scion of a family that had been active in the politics of Waterford since the mid-seventeenth century, Christmas was an indefatigable campaigner for the Conservative cause in his native city.
Christmas’s family originated in Guildford, Surrey but since 1666 had resided at Whitfield, about four miles from Waterford.
Christmas prided himself on being a resident proprietor of his native county, and was regarded as ‘not an unkind landlord’.
Christmas was, however, quick to present himself again at the 1832 general election as an avowed enemy of the Whigs.
Although some Liberals remained hopeful that Christmas would prove to be ‘a strong supporter of the general policy of the Government’, he spoke frequently against Whig policies and proved a robust defender of the Union.
In the following session Christmas voted against both a scrutiny of the pensions list, 18 Feb. 1834, and Hume’s motion for a fixed low duty on corn, 7 Mar. 1834. He divided in favour of Lord Althorp motion that church rates be replaced by a grant raised from a land tax, 21 Apr. 1834, and backed Lord Chandos’s motion for the relief of taxation on the agricultural interest, 7 July. That month he found himself in the unusual position of voting with a small minority of radicals and repealers against the renewal of the Irish Coercion Act, but only because he believed that too many clauses of the original measure had been dropped from the renewal bill.
Although Christmas was prepared to support ‘gradual and cautious’ reform, he complained that ‘the people of Ireland were always inclined to jump to conclusions’, and ‘seemed to think that systems, the growth of centuries, were to be removed … at a blow’. While he did not believe that the House ‘ought to be independent of public opinion, when that opinion was steadily impressed by a majority of the thinking portion of the community’, he warned O’Connell in February 1834 that he ‘might find at last the fierce democracy he had roused turn round upon him and refuse to submit longer to his control’.
Christmas believed that the Commons had demonstrated a willingness ‘to pay every attention to Irish affairs’, and so discounted any need to repeal the Union.
Faced by a reunited Liberal party at Waterford and the consequent opposition of the Catholic clergy, Christmas was pushed into third place by two Liberals at the 1835 general election.
During his second Parliament Christmas provided consistent support for the administration of Sir Robert Peel. Having voted in the minority for Henry George Ward’s amendment for a select committee on burdens on the landed interest, 14 Mar. 1842, he backed the second and third readings of the ministry’s corn importation bill, 9 Mar., 7 Apr. 1842, and divided in favour of the reintroduction of income tax. In April 1842 he sat on the select committee on the Irish drainage bill. That June he was unseated on petition after a committee scrutinised the return.
Having turned his attention to local affairs, Christmas was in April 1846 appointed chairman of the relief committee for two baronies in county Waterford.
Christmas does not appear to have taken a prominent part in subsequent elections at Waterford, and by 1865 had reached the conclusion ‘that free trade was the best thing for any country’.
Christmas was remembered as a man ‘of more than ordinary ability’ who was respected by even his political adversaries.
