Born at Bury St. Edmunds, Waddington was the eldest son of George Waddington, barrister, of Ely, who had served as high sheriff of Suffolk in 1784.
At the 1832 general election Waddington accepted, with ‘considerable reluctance’, a requisition from local Conservative electors to stand for Suffolk West, explaining that his ‘habits and mode of life’ were at odds with those of a politician. In his address he committed himself to defending agricultural protection, while insisting that he would be ‘directed by no party views’.
A frequent attender, who is not known to have spoken in debate in his first Parliament, Waddington voted with the Conservative opposition on most major issues and opposed the continuance of the Maynooth grant, 23 June 1840. He backed Peel’s motion of no confidence in the Whig ministry, 4 June 1841. At the subsequent general election he zealously defended the corn laws, and announced that ‘I am a Conservative still, and always will be’.
Waddington’s voting record during Peel’s second administration demonstrated an oppositional streak. Although he backed the premier’s sliding scale on corn duties, 9 Mar. 1842, and voted with him on the major clauses of the 1844 factories bill, he had a record of hostility on commercial and religious legislation. He divided against Peel on the ecclesiastical courts bill, 28 Apr. 1843, the sugar duties bill, 14 June 1844, and on the permanent endowment of Maynooth College, 18 Apr. 1845. He was one of a hardcore group of 46 MPs who voted to postpone the Maynooth bill, 2 June 1845. There is no evidence, however, of Waddington following the lead of the ultra Protestant campaigners led by Charles Newdegate, who left the Carlton Club to establish the National Club. His zealous commitment to agricultural protection undimmed, he voted against repeal of the corn laws at the critical third reading, 15 May 1846, and opposed Peel’s Irish coercion bill, 25 June 1846, the defeat of which brought down the beleaguered ministry. In March 1847 he moved the second reading of the rating of tenements bill, which aimed to relieve magistrates of the duty of issuing summons to those unable to pay their rates, but it was defeated by 87 votes to 39. This was his last known contribution to debate.
A frequent attender in his third Parliament, Waddington’s votes reflected his commitment to agricultural relief and his suspicion of extending religious liberties.
Re-elected without opposition at the 1852 general election, when illness prevented him from appearing in person, he voted against Villiers’s motion praising corn law repeal but backed Palmerston’s subsequent motion praising free trade, 26 Nov. 1852. Thereafter he followed Disraeli into the division lobby on most major issues, supporting his motion criticising the Crimean war, 25 May 1855, and Roebuck’s censure of the cabinet, 19 July 1855. He was present for 84 out of 257 divisions in the 1853 session, but with his health slowly declining, his attendance became less regular, and he voted in only 35 out of a possible 198 divisions in 1856.
Waddington, now in his late seventies, had planned to retire at the 1857 general election, but he acquiesced to the feelings of his closest supporters, who insisted that he stood again. In his address he condemned Palmerston’s ministry for the ‘cruel attack on China’.
Waddington, whose health continued to decline, largely withdrew from public life after he left the Commons. He died at Cavenham Hall in February 1864 and was remembered as a ‘fine old English gentleman’.
