At the general election of 1790, Lord Worcester stood for Bristol, where the ministerialist Steadfast Society had adopted his father’s leadership. Beaufort took the precaution of returning him again for the family boroughs of Monmouth, but he was successful at Bristol after a token contest. He continued to support Pitt, but made no mark in the House. In 1791 he was listed hostile to repeal of the Test Act in Scotland. In 1793 he solicited a place, unsuccessfully, at the Treasury board.
He never held political office and twice declined the lord lieutenancy of Ireland; but the electoral influence which he commanded as Duke of Beaufort won him the garter in 1805 and the lord lieutenancy of Gloucestershire in 1810.
