Described in 1865 as the ‘scion of a Conservative family which had spent thousands of pounds in the cause’, Fleming’s inability to trade on his family’s formidable political reputation in Hampshire was striking, even to contemporaries.
Fleming was the second son of John Fleming, the county’s long-serving Tory MP and spendthrift election organiser, whose bribes to voters precipitated his fall from grace and retirement from the Commons in 1842.
Fleming first tried to enter parliament in 1847 for the Isle of Wight, where his family held substantial estates.
What prompted Fleming’s ill-considered political volte face at the 1857 general election is unclear. Explaining that he had ‘now shaken off his old Tory politics and become as liberal as his opponent’, he offered again for the Isle of Wight as ‘neither a Radical Liberal or a Tory Conservative’, but as ‘a Liberal in opinion as well as Conservative’, who would consider voting for the ballot and the abolition of church rates. This was too much for both sides, who combined to give him a ‘sound thrashing’. Amidst uproar at the hustings, he berated the ‘crowd below’ for refusing him a hearing, denouncing the ‘amalgamation of Tories, Whigs, Radicals, Churchmen, Dissenters, and Papists who had formed a cabal ... to insult him’.
Offering again at the general election two years later, Fleming appeared to revert to type, citing his ‘general support’ for the Derby ministry and its recent reform bill, but reserving his right to differ from it ‘upon matters of detail’. Three days after publishing his address, however, his elder brother John, who headed the family interest, publicly withdrew his support, forcing Fleming to quit the field. ‘It is not from any personal feeling’, Fleming’s brother explained in the press, but on account of ‘a conversation I had with him some years ago’, which ‘my brother will not have forgotten’.
An apparently silent member during his brief stint in the Commons, Fleming nevertheless attended regularly and gave loyal support to the Conservatives in the lobbies. He voted steadily against the abolition of university tests, radical motions to extend the borough and county franchises, and the secret ballot, and was in Disraeli’s minority for censuring the Palmerston ministry over its handling of the Danish-Prussian war, 8 July 1864. He was appointed to the select committee on salmon fisheries, 19 May 1865. At that year’s general election he stood for re-election at Winchester, denying that he was a ‘bigotted old Tory’ and citing his belief in free trade and support for extending the franchise to ‘fully educated men’. After a ‘fierce contest’ between Fleming and another Tory, who both demanded plumpers and refused to coalesce, he was narrowly defeated in one of the city’s ‘strangest’ elections, which was decided by the second votes of Liberal voters.
Fleming is not known to have sought a return to the Commons, but in 1868 proposed the abortive candidature of a ‘Mr. Spooner’, an ‘agriculturalist’, at the 1868 South Hampshire election.
