Percy, whose active naval career ended under a slight cloud in 1815, continued to sit for Stamford on the interest of his kinsman Lord Exeter. At the 1820 general election he was again returned unopposed. ‘By way of thanks’, the local press mocked, ‘he mumbled over his address in the week’s Mercury, adding, satirically enough, that his re-election was a proof of the satisfaction his previous conduct had given to his constituents’.
What a fine thing it is to have a representative who can shoot coots! and what a vast stock of useful information must the gallant captain have brought from the coot-pond to the great council of the nation.Drakard’s Stamford News, 3 Feb. 1826.
He voted against condemning the Jamaican slave trials, 2 Mar., and for maintaining the president of the board of trade’s salary, 10 Apr. 1826. At that year’s dissolution he gave up Parliament for an excise place, worth £1,200 a year, which had long been his object.
