Bedford as Parliamentarian, 1640–1642 In April 1640, Russell was elected Member of Parliament (MP) for
Tavistock in the
Short Parliament. He was re-elected MP for Tavistock in the
Long Parliament in November 1640 and sat until 1641.
John Pym was the other MP for Tavistock. Russell followed his father's lead and sided with
Parliament in its emerging conflict with
Charles I which would shortly lead to the
English Civil War. In May 1641, Russell's father died unexpectedly of
smallpox and he succeeded him as 5th
Earl of Bedford. Although he was only 24 at the time, Parliament gave Bedford considerable responsibilities, naming him a commissioner to treat with the king in 1641 and naming him
Lord Lieutenant of Devon and
Lord Lieutenant of Somerset in 1642. He was made General of
the Horse in the Parliamentary Service on 14 July 1642 and in September he led an expedition in western England against
royalist forces under the command of the
Marquess of Hertford. Although Bedford's forces outnumbered Hertford's, Bedford's troops were poorly trained and many deserted and, upon his return to London, Bedford was criticised for his performance. The next month, he joined
Robert Devereux, 3rd Earl of Essex and fought with the
Parliamentarians in the
Battle of Edgehill on 23 October 1642.
Bedford as Royalist, 1643 By the summer of 1643, Bedford had aligned himself with the parliamentary "peace party" headed by
Henry Rich, 1st Earl of Holland and
John Holles, 2nd Earl of Clare, which advocated a settlement with Charles I. When Essex rejected the peace party's advice, Bedford became one of the "peace lords" who abandoned the Parliamentary cause and joined Charles I at
Oxford: the king pardoned Bedford for his previous position in the conflict. Bedford returned to battle, this time on the side of the Royalists, with his participation in the
Siege of Gloucester (3 August – 5 September 1643) and the
first Battle of Newbury (20 September 1643). On 16 June 1644, the eve of the
Second Battle of Newbury, the King's daughter
Princess Henrietta was born in
Bedford House, Exeter, the Earl's
town house in the South-West.
Bedford attempts to return to the Parliamentary side, 1643–44 Although Charles I fully pardoned Bedford, Charles' inner circle remained wary of Bedford and was therefore reluctant to give him anything but minor responsibilities. Disillusioned, Bedford returned to the Parliamentary side in December 1643, claiming that he had only been attempting to negotiate a settlement with the king and had never intended to abandon the Parliamentary cause. Parliament, however, remained wary of a man who had abandoned them and refused to allow Bedford to retake his seat in the
House of Lords. ==Withdrawal from public life, 1644–1660==