Described by Denis Le Marchant as a ‘dull Herefordshire baronet’, Price represented both the county and city in two spells after 1832.
Price’s ‘literary and classical attainments were far above the ordinary standard’, but he had ‘no taste for the sports of the field’.
The landed gentlemen must be prepared for a change of system, and prohibitory duties must cease in respect to corn, as they already have ceased on so many other articles of commerce. What is the precise amount of protection to which we are entitled is another question. I shall probably be for a higher duty than you would concede, though I do not carry my pretentions very far.
Robert Price to Lord Milton, 22 May 1826, Northants RO, Fitzwilliam Mss, Box 125/16.
Such a view was increasingly at odds with those of his constituents.
In 1830 the country banker John Biddulph, of Ledbury, had observed of Price and his Tory colleague that ‘they are not popular, or very useful in the House’.
In the first reformed Parliament Price generally voted with Grey’s ministry against radical motions for retrenchment, and defended naval offices paid out of the exchequer as not sinecures but a cheap and advantageous way to reward public service, 25 Mar. 1833. He supported Lord Althorp, Whig leader of the House and chancellor of the exchequer, in resisting proposals from various self-styled champions of the agricultural interest, such as currency reform. Justifying his stance to his constituents on the grounds that such measures would damage the public credit, he also doubted whether ‘in this cider county, such wonderful effects would have flowed from the repeal of malt tax’.
Instead Price welcomed the commutation of tithes, 18 Apr. 1833, as providing practical relief for farmers, although he thought the details of the government plan would cause difficulties. Price was at pains to emphasise the value of such measures, and the Grey ministry’s reduction of taxation, at the 1835 general election, when he was challenged by a ‘farmers’ friend’ candidate, but re-elected in third place.
Price voted with the Whig leadership in the key party divisions of the ensuing session on the speakership, address and the Irish church, 19, 26 Feb., 2 Apr. 1835. He made brief contributions on tithe legislation, 24 Mar. 1835, 24 Mar. 1836, 24, 27 June 1836. After the 1836 select committee on agriculture, on which he had served, failed to produce any recommendations, Price told other MPs that this showed that agriculturists themselves were divided on what measures would provide relief, 21 July 1836.
At the 1837 general election, when he was returned unopposed, Price expressed satisfaction at the ‘steady reform of every remaining abuse in our institutions’, and highlighted his support for Irish church and municipal reform.
In all key party votes, including Baring’s budget and Peel’s motion of no confidence, 18 May, 4 June 1841, Price voted with Whig ministers. His support for Lord John Russell’s proposed fixed duty on corn was consistent with his long criticism of the present corn laws. The suggested measure would be a ‘mode of protection far preferable to the sliding scale’, he told electors. However, he conceded that such a view rendered his continued representation of the county untenable. Unwilling to pledge his total opposition to any alteration in the corn laws, Price retired at the 1841 general election.
Replacing his late friend Edward Bolton Clive as MP for Hereford at a by-election in 1845, Price declared his support for the Maynooth grant at the nomination, when he was returned unopposed.
It was no great surprise when Price divided in favour of the repeal of corn laws the following year and was in the majority that voted Peel out of office over the Irish coercion bill, 25 June 1846. He was returned unopposed at the 1847 general election, and when nominating the Liberal candidate for the county, could not resist telling his audience that he had been right about protection all along.
there is no family in the British dominions which has a greater claim upon our sympathies - our love - our respect - than that to which the noble lord belongs. He is himself worthy of that distinguished race who have given the best blood of the greatest of their name as an offering at the shrine of liberty.
Ibid.
Price voted with Russell’s ministry in all key divisions, dividing in favour of repeal of the navigation laws in 1849, against Disraeli’s motions on agricultural distress and opposing radical pressure for retrenchment and political reforms. Responding to one of Joseph Hume’s amendments for a reduction in the ordnance estimates, Price wearily declared that ‘he deprecated these fruitless divisions’, 12 July 1849. Most of Price’s other interventions were similarly brief. In the same year he admitted that holding quarter-sessions in public houses was unsatisfactory, but that it was difficult to find alternative venues, 2 Mar. 1849. He repeated his defence of the powers of the poor law commission, 27 May 1850. He supported a fellow MP’s complaint that more Welshmen should have been appointed to the select committee on ‘Kaffir’ (Xhosa) tribes, due to the apparent similarity between the Welsh language and Xhosa, 9 May 1851.
Although representing the city freed Price of the need to genuflect to protectionist farmers, at the 1852 general election he was put under pressure to pledge to political reforms in the form of the ballot. While he was prepared to concede extending the franchise and was not against shorter parliaments, he drew the line at the ballot, which would remove ‘all responsibility from the elector’.
After topping the poll, Price divided in favour of Villiers’ free trade motion and opposed Disraeli’s budget, 26 Nov., 16 Dec. 1852. He called for Gladstone to reconsider the levy on timber proposed in the succession duty bill, 20 June 1853. He showed characteristic loyalty to the Aberdeen coalition, even supporting it in the vote on Roebuck’s motion that led to its downfall, 29 Jan. 1855. He was equally undeviating in his backing for the successor government led by Palmerston, opposing the critical motions proposed by Disraeli and Roebuck, 25 May, 19 July 1855.
In December 1855 the parlous state of Price’s financial position was publicly exposed. His family’s Foxley estate had been heavily encumbered when he inherited it in 1829.
