An enthusiast of the Turf, Lowther followed in his uncle’s footsteps as Conservative MP for York, where he was elected in 1865. He made an impression in the Commons with his opposition to parliamentary reform, whether proposed from the Liberal or Conservative benches. Appointed to office by Disraeli in August 1868 (and again in 1874-80), he never quite lived up to this early promise, but remained in Parliament until his death in 1904, when he was remembered by one parliamentary correspondent as
‘a politician of the good old-fashioned type – loyal to his leaders, faithful to his coadjutors, upright in his dealings with all men, but never subservient, ever ready to form his own conclusions and to act accordingly, and a sportsman to the backbone’.
The Times, 13 Sept. 1904.
Born at Swillington House, near Leeds,
Lowther entered the Commons ‘at an early age’, securing election for York aged 24.
Lowther’s election speeches proved the truth of his admission that ‘he could not bring age, experience, or oratory into their service’.
Lowther’s ‘early reputation’ in the Commons was ‘more social than political’, and he ‘distinguished himself as one of the most zealous and vigorous applauders of his own side, and a most severe critic and foe of the Liberals, so far as that could be evinced by cries and expressions of dissent’.
His reservations about reform were confirmed by Lowther’s response to the Conservative ministry’s bill. While four-fifths of those who attended a meeting of Conservative backbenchers, 28 Feb. 1867, were prepared to support household suffrage, albeit with safeguards such as personal payment of rates, Lowther was in the smaller group who advocated a £6 borough franchise.
Lowther made further speeches on the details of the reform bill. He took a particular interest in the question of whether individuals occupying college rooms in Oxford and Cambridge should be able to vote in those boroughs. (This had been prohibited by the 1832 Reform Act on the grounds that the universities had their own MPs.) His first attempt to prevent a similar prohibition being added to the 1867 measure was defeated by 200 votes to 179, 24 June 1867. Feeling it unfair that these individuals should be denied their ‘local representation’ alongside their ‘academical representation’, he revisited the issue, 12 July 1867, when he successfully reversed the previous decision, by 145 votes to 84. The Lords’ amendments to the bill went a step further, defining the lodger franchise so as to include college rooms, an amendment which was rejected by the Commons, despite Lowther’s speech in its support, 8 Aug. 1867. Lowther again found himself at odds with the Conservative leadership over the Scotch reform bill, 25 May 1868, when he complained about Scotland’s over-representation at the expense of England, but was countered by Disraeli. He criticised proposals to divide Glasgow into three wards, hoping that they would ‘hear no more of novel experiments’, 28 May 1868. Lowther also made several contributions on the details of the election petitions and corrupt practices at elections bill, but his proposal that the costs of holding election trials (such as judges’ expenses) should be borne by the constituency involved, rather than the national purse, was defeated by 134 votes to 67, 14 July 1868. Equally unsuccessful were his attempts to make it a misdemeanour for any agent found guilty of bribery to take employment as an agent or canvasser, 17 and 23 July 1868. Alongside parliamentary reform, Lowther took an interest in the public schools bill, particularly its effects on Westminster school, where he had been a pupil, 16 and 23 June 1868. He joined a deputation from Cambridge University members to the archbishop of Canterbury against the abolition of religious tests at universities.
Lowther was not particularly active in the committee rooms, serving on private bill committees and the committee on the metropolitan foreign cattle market bill.
Lowther was re-elected at York in 1868, when he again topped the poll after making a staunch defence of the Irish church, having voted against Gladstone’s resolutions, 3 Apr. 1868.
Alongside his political career, Lowther took ‘the keenest possible interest in the welfare and good repute of the Turf’,
In February 1904 Lowther announced that he would not seek re-election at the dissolution.
