A very occasional speaker, Clifford, who represented Hereford for nearly twenty years, was more active in the committee rooms, and was described as a ‘man experienced in habits of business’.
Clifford’s grandfather had inherited land in Herefordshire, and also acquired the Llantilio estate in Monmouthshire.
Never a very assiduous attender, Clifford voted in 20% of divisions in the 1849 session, 15% in 1852-3 and less than 10% in 1856.
When first elected, Clifford had been described by his colleague Sir Robert Price as ‘one of the good old Whig sort’.
After his re-election in second place, Clifford co-sponsored a bill to make the appointment of superintending constables compulsory in rural counties. As he explained to the 1853 committee on the bill, the introduction of such constables had proved to be effective in reducing crime in Herefordshire, and also far cheaper than establishing rural police forces.
He was in the majority that voted the Aberdeen coalition out of office over the appointment of a committee on Sebastopol, 29 Jan. 1855, but missed the divisions on administration reform that were subsequently proposed, although he later claimed to have supported such measures. On 23 Mar. 1855 he broke his silence in the House to ask for clarification regarding the provisions of the recently passed Militia Act. A longstanding advocate of retrenchment, Clifford later told constituents that ‘I am not ashamed to confess that I have frequently followed Mr. Cobden into the lobby, and that with very few companions’, particularly in divisions on the army estimates.
At the ensuing general election, Clifford declared that he belonged to the ‘more advanced section of the Liberal party’. He complained that the recently dissolved parliament had contained too many men who advocated reform on the hustings but pleaded that the time was not yet ripe when those issues were brought up at Westminster. Impatient with such obstruction, Clifford asserted that their baneful influence was to be blamed for the ‘changeable decisions, the inconclusive legislation, and, I may add, the general inefficiency which characterised it, perhaps beyond any Parliament of the present century’.
Absent from the division on the conspiracy to murder bill that ousted Palmerston’s ministry, 19 Feb. 1858, Clifford clashed with its Conservative successor, 15 Apr. 1859, over the appointment of six new magistrates (all Conservatives) for Hereford. The accessions to the bench were unnecessary and had been made for partisan reasons, he alleged, protesting that the ‘whole affair was one of the grossest political jobs on record’. He opposed Derby’s 1859 reform bill, justifying his conduct at the subsequent general election, when he was again unchallenged. He objected to disenfranchising urban freeholders in the counties, and added that the bill did not expand the borough franchise or include the ballot.
An unpaid commissioner of lunacy since 1852, Clifford served on the inquiry that sat during the 1859 and 1860 sessions on the treatment of those in public and private asylums, the criminally insane and those certified as insane by the court of chancery. He was an active member of the committee, which rejected abolishing private asylums, as lobbied for by Lord Shaftesbury, but instead proposed greater supervision and oversight. It also recommended that commissioners, aided with additional resources, should visit workhouses and private asylums more frequently. Most of Clifford’s amendments to the report were rejected.
Clifford loyally supported the Liberal leadership in all key party divisions, such as the repeal of the paper duties in 1860. He continued to cast votes in favour of the borough and county franchise bills proposed by Liberal backbenchers, and made a handful of speeches in what proved to be his final parliament. He spoke against the abolition of pilotage charges, which shipowners had long demanded, 15 May 1862. He defended Lord Llanover, the lord lieutentant of Monmouthshire, when the maverick MP John Arthur Roebuck (wrongly) alleged that the peer had blocked a gentleman’s appointment to the county militia on account of his assuming a new name without a royal licence, 5 June 1862, 17 Mar. 1863. Finally, he backed a proposal to introduce electric illumination to lighthouses, arguing that the cost would be ‘very slight’, 17 Apr. 1863.
Defeated for Hereford at the 1865 general election, when he praised the Liberal government’s financial stewardship in particular, Clifford was again beaten when he stood instead for Monmouthshire at the 1868 general election.
