Mordaunt, ‘a young moderate Tory’, boasted an impressive parliamentary pedigree.
Although Mordaunt, who faced no further opposition, is not known to have spoken in the Commons, his regular speeches at local party meetings, together with his votes, show him to be a ‘firm Conservative’.
Mordaunt resisted a fixed duty on corn, 16 Mar. 1837, and when the Whigs adopted the policy he told constituents at the 1841 general election that ‘he did not consider cheapness of provisions as any criterion of the prosperity of the country’.
Other issues seem to have been of less interest to Mordaunt. Despite being chairman of the Stratford board of guardians, and overseeing the construction of the workhouse, he seldom voted on the poor laws at Westminster, although he did support longer terms for commissioners, 12 July 1844.
Whilst out hunting, 2 Sept. 1845, Mordaunt’s companion, who had been trying to uncock his gun whilst climbing over a fence, accidently discharged the shot into the baronet, who wrote in his diary later that day ‘shot in both legs’.
