In 1761 Tudway was returned unopposed at Wells on his father’s interest. In Bute’s parliamentary list for December 1761 he was classed as ‘Fox’ and early in December 1762 was included by Fox among Members favourable to the peace preliminaries. On 2 Oct. 1763 Fox told Sandwich to ‘look upon Tudway as a Tory’;
Tudway’s only reported speeches during his 29 years in the House before 1790, were on the second reading of the Protestant Dissenters’ relief bill. He said, 10 Mar. 1773:
Unused as I am to speak in this assembly, I shall offer a few words against the bill now before you ... I have no scruple to say this bill is big with mischief, that the object of it is to undermine and overthrow some of the fundamental doctrines of Christianity.
He also spoke against the bill on 17 and 25 Mar. Tudway voted with Opposition on Grenville’s Election Act, 25 Feb. 1774, but was marked in the King’s list as a friend; was classed by Robinson in September 1774 as a Government supporter, and at the general election was returned for Midhurst apparently as a Government candidate. He elected to continue representative of Wells where he was returned unopposed. He does not appear in any of the minority lists 1775-February 1778, but voted with Opposition on the conciliatory proposals, 4 Dec. 1778. The Public Ledger wrote of him in 1779: ‘Appears an independent man, although he votes constantly with the ministry’, and he was classed by Robinson as ‘pro, absent’ on the contractors bill, 12 Feb. 1779. But during 1780 all his recorded votes were with the Opposition, and though Robinson in his electoral survey of July 1780 classed him as ‘hopeful’, Tudway continued to vote steadily with Opposition till the fall of North. He did not vote on Shelburne’s peace preliminaries, 18 Feb. 1783, but in Robinson’s list of March 1783 was classed as a follower of Shelburne. He voted for parliamentary reform, 7 May 1783; in the division list on Fox’s East India bill, 27 Nov. 1783, is reported to have voted with Opposition, but according to Sir John Sinclair did not vote.
Tudway died 7 June 1815.
