Wrottesley continued to sit for the pocket borough of Brackley as the nominee of the 2nd marquess of Stafford, whom he had followed into supporting the Liverpool ministry by 1817. A regular attender, he was described as one of the ‘treasury phalanx’ by a radical commentary of 1823, though he occasionally took an independent line, notably on legal issues.
Wrottesley died unmarried in February 1825. ‘He was a easy and fluent speaker’, observed the family historian, but ‘confined himself to speaking only on questions with which he was well acquainted, such as legal matters’.
