Gordon, a distinguished lawyer who was appointed lord advocate of Scotland in 1867, came in for Thetford with the sole intention of steering the Conservative ministry’s 1868 Scottish representation of the people bill through the Commons. The only child of John Gordon, a major in the 2nd Queen’s regiment, he was named after the family’s military patron, Prince Edward, the duke of Kent and Strathearn.
In July 1866 Gordon was appointed solicitor-general for Scotland by the new Derby ministry, and in February the following year was promoted to lord advocate. Gordon backed the ministry’s representation of the people bill, and at the annual government whitebait dinner at Greenwich, held shortly after the bill became law in August 1867, he sang a ‘jovial Scotch song’ to celebrate the Conservatives’ ‘dishing’ of the Liberals.
With the Conservative government planning to introduce its Scottish representation of the people bill in the 1868 session, Gordon was anxious to enter the Commons and in December 1867 he contested a vacancy at Thetford, created by the retirement of the sitting member, Alexander Hugh Baring, who had stepped down in protest at the Derby ministry’s handling of the 1867 representation of the people bill.
On 17 February 1868 Gordon introduced the representation of the people (Scotland) bill and thereafter devoted his energies to pushing the legislation through the Commons.
With Thetford now disenfranchised, Gordon offered for Glasgow and Aberdeen Universities at the 1868 general election, but was defeated.
In July 1879 Gordon, suffering from heart disease, was advised to visit Homburg for his health, but was taken ill at Brussels, where he died on 21 August 1879.
