Bennet, who described himself as ‘born and bred’ in Conservative principles, represented Suffolk West for fourteen years, earning a reputation as a zealous defender of the agricultural interest.
In July 1845 Bennet was put up for a vacancy at Suffolk West, created by the death of the sitting member, Robert Rushbrooke. At the meeting of the local Conservative party to select a candidate, there had been some concern about Bennet’s lack of oratorical skills, but his commitment to agricultural protection was unquestionable and a requisition was subsequently got up for his candidature.
Although Bennet, in the words of one national newspaper, had ‘wisely’ claimed ‘no pretensions to oratory’, he used his maiden speech, on the subject of the corn laws, to deliver a visceral attack on Peel, whose ‘desertion of principle menaced the country at large’, 20 Feb. 1846.
At the 1847 general election Bennet condemned Conservative MPs who had broken their promises on the corn laws, calling them ‘a disgrace on the representation of this kingdom’, and pledged that he would remain implacably opposed to the endowment of the Roman Catholic church.
Returned unopposed at the 1852 general election, Bennet declined to respond to his seconder’s assertion that there ‘was no hope of their being able to return to protection’, choosing instead to speak in general terms about the need for ‘preservation over destruction’.
Bennet’s parliamentary career ended in farce at the 1859 general election. The retirement of his long-time colleague Harry Waddington heralded the arrival of two fresh Conservative candidates for Suffolk West: the earl of Jermyn, eldest son of the marquess of Bristol, whose family’s vast wealth and estates in the region made him a formidable candidate, and Windsor Parker, a prominent member of the local party. Put on the defensive, Bennet accepted Parker’s invitation to form a coalition, but, when this proved unpopular with his supporters, he withdrew from the contest, announcing that his candidature might ‘endanger the cordial union of the great Conservative party’.
Bennet died at Rougham Hall, Suffolk, in August 1866.
