Clinton was a member of one of Nottinghamshire’s most illustrious but controversial political dynasties. He was the youngest son of the fourth duke of Newcastle under Lyne, a manic-depressive, ultra tory who had been the most notorious opponent of the reform bill.
Clinton came forward for Nottinghamshire North at the 1852 general election. His father having died the previous year, he was backed by his Peelite eldest brother, now the fifth duke of Newcastle, though he was careful to insist that he was not his brother’s ‘nominee’.
Dogged by ill-health throughout his Parliamentary career, Clinton was an infrequent attender and made no known speeches.
At the 1857 general election Clinton insisted that his vote on the China question was not influenced by ‘any idea or wish ... to overthrow the existing government, to whom I have always given an independent but steady support’.
At the 1859 general election Clinton admitted that, due to continuing ill-health, his attendance in the Commons ‘had not been so constant as he could have wished’, but insisted that he had not ‘wilfully neglected’ his duties.
Clinton died whilst staying at Earlswood, near Reigate, in Surrey, in July 1867, as a result of his ‘protracted illness’.
