Having succeeded to the peerage in 1702, Sunderland was one of the commissioners for the union between
England and
Scotland, and in 1705, he was sent to
Vienna as envoy extraordinary. Although he was tinged with republican ideas and had made himself obnoxious to
Queen Anne by opposing the grant to her husband,
Prince George, through the influence of Marlborough he was foisted into the ministry as
Secretary of State for the Southern Department, taking office in December 1706. From 1708 to 1710, he was one of the five
Whigs collectively called the
Junto, who dominated the government, but he had many enemies, the Queen still disliked him, and in June 1710, he was dismissed. Anne offered him a pension of £3000 a year, but this he refused, saying "if he could not have the honour to serve his country he would not plunder it." Sunderland continued to take part in public life, and was active in communicating with the court of
Hanover about the steps to be taken in view of the approaching death of the queen. He made the acquaintance of
George I in 1706, but when the
elector became king, Sunderland only secured the comparatively unimportant position of
Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. In August 1715, he joined the cabinet as
Lord Privy Seal. After a visit to George I in Hanover, he secured, in April 1717, the position of
Secretary of State for the Northern Department. This he retained until March 1718, when he became
First Lord of the Treasury, holding also the post of
Lord President of the Council. He was now effectively the
prime minister. Sunderland was especially interested in the proposed
Peerage Bill, a measure designed to limit the number of members of the
House of Lords, but this was defeated owing partly to the opposition of Sir
Robert Walpole. The bursting of the
South Sea Bubble led to his political ruin. He had taken some part in launching the scheme of 1720, therefore public opinion was roused against him and it was only through the efforts of Walpole that he was acquitted by the
House of Commons, when the matter was investigated. In April 1721, he resigned his offices, but he retained his influence with George I until his own death on 19 April 1722. The town of
Sunderland, Massachusetts, was named in his honour in November 1718, just after he became Lord President of the Council. ==Marriages and children==