Barkly, who was known in the Commons as ‘sugar plum’ due to his unwavering defence of the West Indian sugar-planting interest, sat briefly for Leominster before embarking on a career as a colonial governor, in which he earned a reputation as a skilled mediator.
In April 1845 Barkly offered as a Conservative for a vacancy at Leominster created by the resignation of the sitting member, Charles Greenaway.
In the Commons Barkly quickly established himself as an authority on imperial issues who was not afraid to criticise the colonial office. In an assertive maiden speech, he gave his staunch backing to the New Zealand Company, and attacked Peel’s government for being ‘as totally destitute as any of [its] predecessors of a comprehensive system of Colonial policy’, 18 June 1845. His contribution won him the acclaim of his fellow MPs Charles Buller and Sir William Molesworth, who were also prominent members of the New Zealand Company.
Barkly moderated his free trade instincts when it came to the controversial issue of the equalisation of the sugar duties. Following the formation of Russell’s ministry in July 1846, Barkly pressed the new premier to ensure that, in reforming the sugar duties, the legislation was made ‘a little more palatable to those who had been well nigh ruined by the attempts to suppress slavery’, 20 July 1846. Although he insisted that he supported free trade in sugar, he was adamant that planters should not be immediately ‘exposed to free competition with all the world’, 28 July 1846, and described the government’s proposals to delay the introduction of the legislation until 1851 as a ‘rag of protection’ that was a ‘mockery to the producer, and a robbery of the consumer’, 31 July 1846. As a planter whose estates were failing, Barkly felt that the government had abolished slavery ‘badly, unadvisedly, by impulse, not according to reason’, and this, coupled with the equalisation of the sugar duties, was ruining the Caribbean economies.
Returned unopposed at the 1847 general election, Barkly dedicated his energies to defending the West Indian planter interest.
His financial and politics prospects seemingly moribund, in December 1848 Barkly readily accepted from the Liberal ministry an offer of the governorship of British Guiana. In private correspondence with Peel, he admitted to his ‘own want of experience’, but stated that he felt it ‘impossible to decline the appointment’. He then suggested that Peel’s son be brought forward for the vacancy at Leominster, though nothing came of the idea.
Given the exacting tasks he faced in a variety of colonies, it is not surprising that Barkly’s record as a governor was mixed. In British Guiana, his sensitivity to the economic problems facing the planters won him crucial local support, and displaying, in Earl Grey’s words, ‘remarkable skill and ability’, Barkly widened the franchise of the electoral college, and promoted the introduction of indentured labourers from Asia.
Though his skills as a statesman were arguably limited, as a colonial administrator with an ability to smooth a colony’s transition towards responsible government, Barkly was invaluable to successive British ministries, and he was one of the more successful former MPs who became colonial governors in this period.
Barkly died from heart failure at his London residence at Bina Gardens, South Kensington, in October 1898.
