A veteran Reformer who possessed a ‘plain, straightforward manner’, Clive lent silent support to the Whig leadership after 1832.
At the 1832 general election, Clive emphasised his support for the abolition of slavery and the Grey ministry’s reduction of taxes by £2.8 million. He hailed the Reform Act as a vindication of his long-held views, noting that he was among the signatories of Grey’s 1792 petition for reform.
With parliamentary reform passed, Clive had little time for further, more radical reforms such as the ballot. Despite the popularity of that measure among his local supporters, Clive preferred to draw attention to his long record of support for parliamentary reform at the 1835 general election.
At the 1837 general election Clive conceded that he would vote for the ballot if a majority of his constituents wished it.
Clive honoured his hustings speech by dividing in favour of the ballot, 15 Feb. 1838. He continued to support Melbourne’s ministry in all key party votes, including Irish church reform, and the government’s education scheme, 24 June 1839. He opposed the motions of no confidence in the government, 31 Jan. 1840, 4 June 1841. Having cast votes in favour of Villiers’s 1839 and 1840 motions for a committee of the whole House on the corn laws, Clive was open to the alteration of protective duties. At the 1841 general election, he recommended the fixed duty proposed by the government, saying that it would ‘improve trade and give a steady and remunerating price to the agriculturist’.
Clive opposed Peel’s revised sliding scale on corn and reintroduction of income tax in 1842. His endorsement of the abolition of church rates, 16 June 1842, was a rare example of him voting in advance of the Whig leadership. His support for the new poor law and the poor law commission remained undeviating. Along with most of the Liberal parliamentary party he backed William Miles’s amendment to lower the duty on colonial sugar, 14, 17 June 1844, in opposition to Peel. His division in favour of Russell’s motion to equalise foreign and colonial sugar duties, 26 Feb. 1845, was his last major vote, as age and increasing ill health meant he was absent from the divisions on the Maynooth college bill introduced later in the session.
On his death in April 1845, the Conservative Hereford Journal, which had often been a critic of Clive’s political opinions, observed that ‘his decisions were inflexibly impartial and upright’. The Liberal Hereford Times declared that he ‘was no ordinary man. He possessed a manly and vigorous intellect, and was distinguished for his stern and inflexible integrity’.
