Bruen, whose father, the Irish secretary Robert Peel noted in 1816, had ‘represented the county of Carlow’, raised and commanded its militia and ‘died when Bruen was a minor’, continued to sit on his family interest and to expect due attention to his patronage requests in return for his support of government.
uniformly and steadily supported the measures of government, they who have as uniformly and steadily opposed them have to my certain knowledge received greater attention. This unmerited treatment, although as yet but in a trifling degree, cannot have been unproductive of its natural effects [and] it now remains to decide whether one who is well disposed to be a sincere friend shall be so or otherwise.
In reply, 13 Jan. 1821, Grant conceded that he had been forced to ‘return to your letters occasionally answers not so gratifying as I could personally have wished’, but could not ‘see one of them, which consistently with my sense of duty I could alter’.
At the 1826 general election he was returned unopposed with his father-in-law.
At the 1832 general election he stood unsuccessfully for county Carlow as a Conservative. His election in 1835 was declared void and he was defeated in the ensuing contest, but seated on petition. He was beaten in 1837 but returned at the 1840 by-election and thereafter at each election until his death. Public dinners to honour ‘his unceasing and successful exertions in the Conservative cause, and the example set by him as a resident landlord and gentleman’ were held regularly in Belfast and Dublin.
