Wednesday, 5 February 2014
409 Sir Edward Dering
Constituency : Wexford Borough 1830, 1831, New Romney 1831-2 (Tory ) , Kent East 1852-7, 1863-8
After a bad year in 1862 where they lost 6 seats and gained none the Liberals got an early fillip in the new year when Sir Edward regained the Kent East seat.
Sir Edward was a baronet and most of his immediate predecessors had been MPs called Edward Dering which doesn't make it easy to research him. He started political life as a Tory and was elected for Wexford Boroughs when the original Tory victor was unseated. He lost it in the 1830 election then regained it on petition only to lose it to the Whigs in the 1831 election. He found a seat at New Romney and his maiden speech was against the Reform Bill. By 1852 he was a Whig in favour of parliamentary reform although he sought to delay it in 1854 until after the Crimean War. He retained his seat in the 1857 election but resigned it later in the year.
Edward was a middle of the road Liberal representing an agricultural constituency. He favoured the abolition of church rates.
Sir Edward failed to amend the 1867 Reform Act in Kent's favour which might have prolonged his political career. He lost in 1868 possibly due to the intervention of a "Protestant Liberal" candidate, Henry Tufton
He died in 1896 aged 88.
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