An ‘ardent votary of the turf’, Maidstone sat as a Conservative for Northamptonshire North between 1837 and 1841, and made several unsuccessful attempts to re-enter the Commons between 1852 and 1854.
Son of the outspoken peer, the 10th earl of Winchelsea (who had fought a duel with the duke of Wellington over the issue of Catholic emancipation in 1829), and styled Viscount Maidstone from 1826, Finch-Hatton was elected to parliament aged 22 after a customary aristocratic education at Eton and Christ Church, Oxford, where he gained a second class degree in classics.
Later that year, Maidstone announced his intention to stand for Northamptonshire North, home to his father’s Kirby Hall estate.
Maidstone’s attendance in the division lobbies was well below average during his short, four-year parliamentary career, and he later admitted that he had ‘thought more of amusement than attention to his duties’.
Maidstone’s major parliamentary intervention came in February 1838, when he successfully moved to charge O’Connell with a breach of privilege, following the latter’s public complaint about ‘foul perjury in the Tory committees of the House of Commons’.
As well as being his first full year in parliament, 1838 had been Maidstone’s first season on the turf and his captivation with every aspect of the sport was evident to a young Disraeli.
With a minority Conservative administration seeking to put forward as many candidates as possible ahead of the 1852 election, Maidstone made several unsuccessful bids to re-enter the Commons at the behest of Derby and Disraeli. In March 1852 he met Derby at Downing Street, following which he came forward for Newark. His address announced his opposition to the Maynooth grant and called for ‘reasonable protection for all the great interests’, but he retired following an unsuccessful canvass.
After losing at Westminster it was rumoured that Maidstone would stand for Middlesex in 1852, but this never transpired.
In early 1855 Maidstone became embroiled in the controversy surrounding his friend, the MP for Rochester, Francis Villiers, who it transpired, had circulated several forged gambling bills of £1,000 under Maidstone’s and several others names before fleeing the country.
