Vere, a highly decorated soldier, represented his native Suffolk from 1835 until his death eight years later. Educated at Ipswich School alongside his elder brother Rear-Admiral Sir Philip Bowes Vere Broke, to whom he was especially close, he was commissioned ensign in the 5th Foot in 1796.
By 1830 Vere had established himself as a prominent figure in Suffolk Conservative politics. He seconded Sir Thomas Gooch’s nomination at the 1830 general election, and was mooted as a possible anti-Reform candidate in 1831, though sensing that success was unlikely, he ultimately declined to come forward.
A frequent attender, Vere followed Peel into the division lobby on most major issues. He voted with the Conservative ministry on the speakership, 19 Feb. 1835, the address, 26 Feb. 1835, and against Irish church appropriation, 2 Apr. 1835, the issue which brought down Peel’s short-lived administration. Thereafter he was a consistent opponent of the Whig ministry’s Irish policy. He spoke occasionally and succinctly in his first Parliament, mainly on his twin interests of agriculture and the military. He pressed the government to take into account the burden that local taxation placed on rural workers, 14 Apr. 1835, and intervened briefly to back Chandos’s motion on agricultural distress, 27 Apr. 1836. Extremely wary of any proposed alteration to the corn laws, he questioned the wisdom of George Robinson’s motion to allow the admission of foreign grain to be ground for re-exportation, 21 Mar. 1837, and subsequently poured scorn on Henry Clay’s accusation that Members representing agricultural constituencies repeatedly opposed measures that were advantageous to commercial and shipping interests, 3 May 1837. He attacked proposals to reduce army salaries, 6 Apr. 1837, and drawing on his own first-hand experience, defended the conduct of the British army at Buenos Aires in 1807, 10 May 1837. A staunch churchman, he also opposed the Whig ministry’s Jewish disabilities bill, arguing that the measure was ‘pregnant with danger to the established church’, 15 Aug. 1836. He sat on select committees on the Carlow election petition, privileges and the highway rates bill.
At the 1837 general election Vere underlined his commitment to the established church, declaring that a ‘Christian legislature’ was ‘the only guarantee for the pure spirit of Christianity pervading our religion and laws’, and berated the Whig government for failing the agriculturalists.
Having voted for Peel’s motion of no confidence in the Whig ministry, 4 June 1841, Vere renewed his vitriolic attacks on the government at the subsequent general election, describing Melbourne’s ministry as a ‘disgrace to England’. He also questioned the validity of introducing a fixed duty on corn.
Vere died in harness whilst visiting Bath in April 1843. He was remembered as a diligent parliamentarian and a progressive landlord.
