An ‘able but exceedingly reserved man’, Lawson stood six times for Knaresborough, but was returned only twice.
Lawson could trace his family’s Yorkshire ancestry back to the sixteenth century.
Lawson canvassed for a vacancy in June 1832 at Knaresborough, where he was well-known as a magistrate, but abandoned his candidature.
Dod’s Parliamentary Companion erroneously listed Lawson in 1835 as ‘a moderate Reformer’, but corrected this in 1836 to ‘a moderate Conservative; in favour of the ballot’.
Lawson spoke, in a fairly perfunctory manner, on just a handful of occasions in his first Parliament, where his only committee service appears to have been on the 1837 county rates bill.
Seeking re-election in 1837 Lawson gave what the Liberal press dismissed as ‘a long and tedious harangue’ on the hustings, largely in defence of his parliamentary conduct.
A staunch defender of the corn laws, on which he presented constituency petitions, Lawson routinely opposed Villiers’ anti-corn law motions.
Aside from protection, Lawson intervened most often on the poor law. He divided against the second reading of the poor law amendment bill, 7 June 1842. Noting that he had protested against the law’s implementation in his neighbourhood, he attacked the poor law commissioners, ‘who seemed to consider themselves infallible’, 20 June 1842. However, he abandoned his attempt to split the bill into two parts, 24 June 1842. He denied that his hostility to the measure was ‘factious’ and regretted having to oppose Peel on the question, but nonetheless voted in the minority for Duncombe’s amendment calling for a temporary rather than a permanent measure, 27 June 1842. Although he did not speak again on the issue, he was added to the committee on Gilbert Unions, 3 Mar. 1845. However, his effort to amend its report so that it favoured the retention of these unions was defeated on the chairman’s casting vote.
He continued to oppose further electoral reform, dividing against William Sharman Crawford’s motions in the 1842 and 1843 sessions. Unsurprisingly for a vicar’s son, Lawson was strongly committed to maintaining the privileged position of the Anglican Church.
Lawson sought re-election as a Protectionist Conservative at the 1847 general election.
Addressing the York school of design in 1848, Lawson appeared glad to be free of political strife, observing that ‘there is no meeting to me so agreeable as one where all those discordant feelings are hushed, and where all parties meet together for the common good of their countrymen’.
Lawson stood again at Knaresborough in curious circumstances for the vacancy created by the death of William Lascelles in July 1851. When Thomas Collins offered for the Conservatives, opposed by William Watson for the Liberals, Lawson promised not to oppose him, to avoid splitting the Conservative vote.
Lawson died ‘very suddenly’ at Aldborough Manor, where he had moved from Aldborough Lodge, in February 1853.
