Under George I Stirling Burghs, one of the most venal constituencies in Scotland, was represented by Henry Cunningham, a Walpole Whig, who inherited an interest in Stirling. He built up another interest in Inverkeithing by purchasing tenements there from the 1st Earl of Rosebery, whom he succeeded as provost in 1720.
In 1747 Halkett was recommended as the government candidate by Ilay, now Duke of Argyll, with the approbation of Henry Pelham. But Patrick Haldane put up his son George, for whom he had been making an interest in the burghs, with the support of the Cochranes. Excusing himself on the ground that he had not learned of Argyll’s recommendation till too late, he assured Pelham that Halkett’s chances were ‘hopeless’ because of the circumstances in which he had been returned in 1734, since when he had ‘never visited nor kept the least correspondence with’ any of the burghs.
Culross (1715, ’47), Perthshire; Queensferry (1722), Linlithgowshire; Stirling (1727); Inverkeithing (1734), Dunfermline (1741), Fife
Number of voters: 98
