At the general election of 1820, Villiers, whose brother held the revived earldom of Clarendon and had an estate at The Grove, Watford, Hertfordshire, resumed a parliamentary career which had begun in the first weeks of Pitt’s minority administration by securing (after a break of eight years) his second return for the government borough of Queenborough. Armed with two sinecures worth almost £5,000 a year, he was ‘one of the treasury phalanx’.
After succeeding his brother as earl of Clarendon in early 1824 he took little active part in politics, though he continued to exercise control over the corporation and one parliamentary seat at Wootton Bassett. He supported the Whigs in power from 1830, but in 1835 urged Sir Robert Peel* to defy the odds against his ministry in the Commons, as Pitt had done in 1784.
