A Conservative ‘of strong Protectionist feeling’, known for his ‘stinginess’, Broadley sat for Yorkshire’s East Riding from 1837 until his death in 1851.
The Broadleys had settled in the seventeenth century in Hull, where they developed a ‘thriving’ business as merchants and became Hull’s ‘most voracious land buyers’.
Broadley emulated earlier generations of his family with significant property dealings.
Alongside his business activities, Broadley played a prominent part in the political life of Hull and the East Riding, as well as contributing to local charitable institutions.
In June 1835 Broadley was invited to contest Hull at a by-election, but declined, instead proposing another Conservative on the hustings.
Sir Walter James, elected in 1837 for Hull, observed that he ‘never saw any man more anxious about a seat’ in Parliament than Broadley.
Broadley was generally a loyal (but almost silent) Conservative supporter at Westminster. A regular presence in the division lobbies, he voted in 79 out of 109 divisions in the 1841 session.
Despite his diligence, Broadley did not find universal favour among the East Riding’s Conservatives, and there were moves in 1839 to secure an alternative candidate, Lord Hotham. Robert Denison, a leading local Conservative, claimed that Broadley’s unpopularity was such ‘in all parts, particularly in Hull and Beverley … that it would be a dangerous nuisance fighting with him’. Although Broadley owned substantial landed property and declared his interests to be ‘wholly agricultural’, his connections with Hull’s commerce and railways led Denison to warn him that ‘the farmers in general were anxious to have a man more associated with agricultural interests ... he had never gone among them to gain goodwill’.
Broadley’s election address in 1841 expressed his hope that the ‘reckless and imbecile’ Melbourne ministry would be removed.
Broadley was again a fairly regular attender, and served on several committees on private bills.
Seeking re-election in 1847 Broadley asserted in his election address that he had ‘no change of views to propound – and no votes in the House of Commons to excuse or explain away’, and would go to Westminster ‘unfettered by pledges’.
Broadley was less assiduous in his third Parliament, voting in 43 out of 219 divisions (20%) in the 1849 session,
In March 1851, when the Russell ministry found itself ‘in constant minorities’, Broadley privately informed two of his leading supporters, Pease and Denison, that he would not offer again at the next dissolution, as ‘his health was so shattered’, and this decision was reported in the press. Pease believed that Broadley was also ‘afraid of a contest and his purse’, as funds might be forthcoming for a Liberal opponent. He was persuaded to rescind his withdrawal after the Conservatives’ preferred successor, Hon. Arthur Duncombe, declined to leave his East Retford seat, and the Hull Packet recorded in April that he had ‘in a great measure rallied from his indisposition’.
Broadley died that August at his London lodgings in Charles Street, St. James’s Square, a few days after suffering a stroke.
