Into opposition Chatham, Rockingham and Grenville were expected to combine to bring down Grafton, when it was expected that Lord Camden would return to the woolsack. However, though Grafton resigned,
Lord North managed to form a successor administration and Camden was left to the opposition, continuing to sit in the Lords. From 1770 onwards, Chatham neglected parliamentary attendance and left leadership of the house to
Lord Shelburne with whom Camden could manage only the coolest of relationships.
The American crisis of 1774 The year 1774 brought a renewed crisis over America. The
Boston Tea Party in 1773 led Lord North to seek a
blockade of the city through the
Boston Port Bill. Camden roundly criticised the taxes that had led to the American protests, as he had opposed them in Cabinet from 1767 to 1769, but was reminded that he was Lord Chancellor when they were imposed. The Chathamite faction went on to support the Bill and further to support the
Massachusetts Government Act, Camden's inherent
patriotism bringing him into line. However, by May, fears that the Bill would focus and strengthen American resistance led Camden to oppose the measure. On 16 February 1775, Camden made his major speech on the crisis, opposing public opinion and the
New England Trade and Fishery Bill, a speech often believed to have been drafted in collaboration with
Benjamin Franklin for an American audience. Camden invoked
John Locke's dictum that resistance to tyranny was justified and called the Bill:
Thomas Hutchinson observed: How Camden voted on the
Quebec Act is unknown but in May 1775, and in response to a
petition from a small number of settlers, he unsuccessfully moved its
repeal. However, he seems to have been in the grip of a
conspiracy theory that the Act's ulterior objective was to create an army of militant
Roman Catholics in
Canada to suppress the
Protestant British colonists.
American War of Independence The
American War of Independence broke out in 1775 and Chatham's faction were dismayed. Their official line was to advocate mediation, refusing to think of either American independence or continued English hegemony. Camden continued to speak on the dilemma in parliament. He continued steadfastly to oppose the taxation of the American colonists, and signed, in 1778, the protest of the
Lords in favour of an address to the King on the subject of the manifesto of the commissioners to America. In 1782 he was appointed
Lord President of the Council under the Rockingham-Shelburne administration, supporting the government economic programme and anti-corruption drive, and championing repeal of the
Declaratory Act 1720 in
Ireland. Once Rockingham died in July, the Chathamite residue could only lose the Commons vote over the
American peace terms the following February. Camden resigned and persuaded Shelburne to do the same.
The Younger Pitt Camden was a leading opponent of the ensuing
Fox-North Coalition, denouncing it for
patronage and leading the opposition to
Fox's East India Bill that brought down the administration on 9 December 1783.
William Pitt the Younger, the son of his former patron, came to power and within a few months, Camden was reinstated as Lord President, holding the post until his death. He was created
Earl Camden on 13 May 1786 and granted a further
peerage as
Viscount Bayham to lend his son a
courtesy title. Camden took an animated part in the debates on important public matters until within two years of his death, in particular supporting Pitt's 1785 Parliamentary Reform Bill and the
Irish trade proposals that same year. Camden continued to attend cabinet meetings and, after he moved to Hill Street,
Berkeley Square on account of his ill health, cabinet meetings were sometimes held at his home.
Regency crisis of 1788 In November 1788,
King George III fell ill and
insanity was feared. Lord Chancellor
Thurlow hesitated over what action to take, thereby precipitating the
regency crisis of 1788. As Lord President, Camden led the
Privy Council examination of the King's doctors' opinions. With Thurlow unwilling to lead the legislature, Camden grasped the challenge of inviting parliament to appoint a
regent, in the face of the opposition's support for the automatic appointment of their ally the
Prince of Wales. Camden's resolution that appointment rested with parliament was carried in the Lords by 99 votes to 66 on 23 December 1788. Moreover, on 22 January 1789, Camden's motion to appoint the Prince of Wales, but with restrictions in case of the King's recovery, was carried by 94 to 68 votes. The King recovered the following month before the Regency Bill contained the force of law.
Fox's Libel Act To the last, Camden zealously defended his early views on the functions of juries, especially of their right to decide on all questions of libel. In the Lords debate on the
second reading of the
Libel Act 1792 (
32 Geo. 3. c. 60) on 16 May, Camden contended that
intention was an essential element of libel and should be decided by the jury as in
murder cases. Broadening the legal argument to the constitutional and political Camden charged
press freedom to the hands of the jury as the representatives of the people. The judges he held were too prone to government pressure to guarantee essential freedoms. Despite the unanimous opposition of the
Law Lords, Camden's speech helped secure a majority of 57 to 32. ==Reputation and legacy==