Suttie figured thus in the electoral survey of his county in 1788: ‘A good fortune. Connected with the Countess of Hyndford, and Mr Dundas, and will go with him.’
In the following year he retained his seat by a single vote against Lord John Hay, a Whig who had threatened an opposition to Suttie in 1818. In July 1818 he had complained of local patronage being awarded to his opponents, ‘an insult to me and all my friends in the county’, which made him wonder whether it was true that ‘the best way to obtain favours from the present government was to act in opposition to them’. Melville rebuked him, indicating that the complaint was both petty and, as burgh patronage was in question, irrelevant.
