Lord Lieutenant of Ireland Instigated by his friends, he was active in opposition to the government, becoming the leader of a faction named after him, the
Bedford Whigs. After Newcastle's resignation in November 1756, Bedford became
Lord Lieutenant of Ireland in the new government led by
William Pitt and the
Duke of Devonshire. He retained this office after Newcastle,
in alliance with Pitt, returned to power in June 1757. In Ireland, he favoured a relaxation of the
penal laws against Roman Catholics, but did not keep his promises to observe neutrality between the rival parties, and to abstain from securing pensions for his friends. His own courtly manners and generosity, and his wife's good qualities, however, seem to have gained for him some popularity, although
Horace Walpole says he disgusted everybody (but the word "disgusting" then had a much wider range of meanings than it has today, and at its mildest meant simply "reserved"). He oversaw the Irish response to the
threatened French invasion in 1759, and the
landing of a small French force in northern Ireland. In March 1761, he resigned from this office.
Peace negotiator Having allied himself with the
Earl of Bute and the party anxious to bring the
Seven Years' War to a close, Bedford was noticed as the strongest opponent of Pitt, and became
Lord Privy Seal under Bute after Pitt resigned in October 1761. The
cabinet of Bute was divided over the policy to be pursued with regard to the war, but the peace faction prevailed, and, in September 1762, Bedford went to France to open formal negotiations for peace. He was considerably annoyed because some of the peace negotiations were conducted through other channels, but he signed the
Peace of Paris in February 1763. Amongst other gains Britain received
Canada from France and
Florida from Spain. Resigning his office as Lord Privy Seal soon afterwards, various causes of estrangement arose between Bute and Bedford, and the subsequent relations between the two men were somewhat virulent. ==Grenville ministry==