Clifton, whose maternal grandfather had sat for county Armagh, 1753-94, was descended from the Blighs of Rathmore, county Meath, several of whom sat for the family borough of Athboy in the Irish Parliament during the eighteenth century. His father’s father, who was Member for Athboy, 1739-47, also sat for Maidstone, 1741-7, reflecting the influence of the Kentish estate inherited, via an elder brother, from his mother, the suo jure Baroness Clifton, wife of the 1st earl of Darnley. This Member’s father, the 4th earl, who sat in the Lords as Baron Clifton, lived mostly at Cobham Hall and was a leading Whig in Kentish politics. He also had a substantial electoral interest in Meath, where his eccentric relative Thomas Cherburgh Bligh, its Member from 1802 to 1812, continued to embroil him in vexatious legal proceedings.
He voted with opposition on the civil list, 5, 8 May, the appointment of an additional baron of exchequer in Scotland, 15 May, the aliens bill, 1 June, and economies in revenue collection, 4 July 1820. On the Queen Caroline affair, he voted against Wilberforce’s compromise resolution, 22 June, and for adjournment of the secret committee, 26 June. He refused to present her with a laudatory address from Canterbury in late July, arguing that any involvement might prejudice the issue, should it come before Parliament.
Clifton divided for parliamentary reform, 20 Feb., 24 Apr., 2 June, and retrenchment and reduced taxation, 28 Feb., 14, 16 Apr., 19 June 1823. He joined Lushington in hoping the treasury would lift the duty on seaborne coal, 25 Apr.
For some time rumours had circulated that a Whig candidate would be put up against Clifton at the next election: in December 1824, for instance, it had been stated that Robert Townsend Farquhar* intended to oppose him.
Clifton presented a petition from Kildalkey, Meath, for Catholic relief, 14 Feb., and voted for this, 6 Mar. 1827.
Having consulted Lord Holland as part of his preparations for mustering peers and magistrates to counter the ‘ignorance and consequent prejudice’ prevalent in the county, he attended (but, unlike his father, did not speak at) the angry and riotous Kent county meeting at Penenden Heath, near Maidstone, which narrowly agreed an anti-Catholic petition, 24 Oct. 1828.
when he first appeared, 11 years ago, as a candidate for the representation ... zealous as his friends then were and since had been for his success, the subject of Catholic emancipation was one which neither they nor he cared to talk about ... But what would be the case now? Would he be afraid to mention it on the hustings, after seeing the body that supported it on Penenden Heath and the spirit that actuated them on all occasions in favour of civil and religious liberty?
Kentish Gazette, 5 Dec.; Kentish Chron. 9, 30 Dec. 1828, 17 Feb. 1829.
He afterwards reported to Holland that ‘our liberals showed a most determined zeal in the good cause’ on that occasion, and confided that he was optimistic about developments in Ireland, ‘notwithstanding the increasing vehemence of both parties’.
On 12 Feb. 1829 he presented and endorsed the Kent pro-Catholic petition, although he acknowledged that it was ‘contrary to his usual practice in this House’ to do so. He stated that the petition stressed the need for emancipation to remove the grievances of Ireland and save the Protestant church. He admitted that a narrow majority at Penenden Heath had been against relief, but argued that the numbers had been nearly equal, that the Brunswick Club had orchestrated the disruption of the meeting and that the government had since been using its influence to gain signatures for the anti-Catholic petition even though official policy had been changed to emancipation. Lord Howick found this speech so ‘tiresome’ that he was driven from the chamber.
As in 1826, there were growing criticisms of Clifton’s tenure in the approach to the 1830 general election. The London voters were again active in attempting to put up a third candidate, objecting to the fact that Clifton had not voted on several occasions, especially on the reduction of grants for useless places and pensions.
as since I first appeared among you the violence of party feeling, which then deprived me of the assistance of many, has happily subsided, I hope I am not too sanguine in the expectation that to the civility and attention which I have always experienced in private, may now be added their political support.
Kentish Chron. 6 July; Kentish Gazette, 6 July 1830.
But within a few days he decided to withdraw in the face of a protracted and expensive contest, relinquishing his pretensions in favour of his fellow Whig, Lord Fordwich*, whom he nominated on the hustings.
I will tell you gentlemen my motive fairly for declining. When I was entered on my canvass, promises I asked were not made as I had hoped they would have been. I was hurt that I was not taken more avowedly by the hand by my fellow citizens. I felt a mistake had been made; persons had committed a suicidal act and it required time to set it right.
Ibid. 27 July 1830; Canterbury Pollbook (1830), 1-12.
The Kentish Gazette recorded another aspect of Clifton’s decision to withdraw, which acknowledged his neglect, and that
under the circumstances of his distant residence from this city, and his consequent inability to attend to its local concerns as he could wish, he had determined more than four years ago that, unless he was supported by a very large majority of all parties of the freemen, he should consider it his sacred and bounden duty to retire from the field.
Kentish Gazette, 27 July 1830.
According to his father, Clifton was ‘very near obtaining [a return] at three different places’.
In late 1830 Clifton was active in supporting the Union and measures to suppress violent attempts to disrupt the government of Ireland.
