The son of a leading figure in Lyme Regis’s unreformed Tory corporation, Hussey was seated for the borough in 1842 as a result of a petition paid for by the notorious Tory borough-monger John Attwood MP, on the understanding that he would make way for a nominee if required. Surprisingly active in the lobbies, he backed the Conservatives on most issues but broke with Peel over the Maynooth grant and the repeal of the corn laws, becoming one of the leading Protectionist Lord George Bentinck’s ‘most zealous followers’.
Hussey’s father John (1788-1848) was a great-nephew of William Hussey MP (1724-1813), who had made a fortune as a Salisbury clothier and became one of Georgian England’s longest-serving MPs.
The ‘Husseys of Lyme’ were the first port of call for the town’s local Conservatives when their candidate bolted on the eve of the 1841 general election.
Given that he was effectively a ‘seat warmer’ during most of his time in the Commons, Hussey was a surprisingly assiduous attender. He is not known to have spoken in debate, but he cast an above average number of votes each session, giving regular support to the Conservative ministry on most issues before 1845. He took opposite sides to the premier on matters of electoral corruption, however, voting against motions to summon witnesses and to suspend elections in places implicated in bribery, including Belfast, 14 June 1842, Nottingham, 23 Mar. 1843, and the infamous borough of Sudbury, 1 Aug. 1843. He also opposed the ministry’s Dissenters’ chapels bill, 28 June 1844. He is not known to have served on any committees, but in 1844 he was appointed as an additional land tax commissioner in Dorset.
Hussey broke with Peel over the Maynooth grant, which he opposed, 28 Apr., 21 May 1845, and the following year became a ‘strenuous opponent’ of his free trade policies, in later years ‘boasting that throughout the corn law debates he had never missed a division’.
Hussey retired without explanation at the 1847 general election and is not known to have sought a seat elsewhere.
