Wrixon Becher (as he seems to have been known throughout this period) had been returned unopposed for Mallow on the independent Catholic interest in 1818, ousting his anti-Catholic cousin James Lawrence Cotter, and had joined Brooks’s, sponsored by Lord George Cavendish* and Lord Duncannon*, 19 May 1819. At the 1820 general election he offered again, refuting charges of absenteeism brought against him by his opponent Charles Jephson*, whom he accused of trying to ‘close the borough’, and stressing his independence from party, for although ‘he generally voted in opposition’ to the Liverpool ministry, it ‘was when he considered them wrong’. Daniel O’Connell*, who had agreed to be his agent, considered his election speech ‘one of the best I ever heard ... full of excellent principle and admirably well delivered’, and recorded ‘going out to his house to dinner ... principally to see’ Wrixon Becher’s wife, the celebrated actress Elizabeth O’Neill, ‘on a new stage’. Wrixon Becher was returned after a four-day contest.
At the 1826 general election Wrixon Becher retired from Mallow in favour of Jephson after an ‘unsuccessful canvass’, hoping that he had ‘proved useful’ in securing the independence of the borough and ‘in defeating the hopes of any candidate not pledged to support’ emancipation. Meetings of the independents paid tribute to his talents and efficiency.
