" for
Vanity Fair, 1906 Lytton took his seat in the
House of Lords as a
Conservative in January 1902, where he was an advocate for female suffrage, being influenced by his sister, the suffragette,
Lady Constance Bulwer-Lytton. He chaired the all-party 'Conciliation Committee' that drafted the Parliamentary Franchise (Women) Bill, known as the
Conciliation Bill, in 1910. The
wartime coalition gave Lytton the chance to hold government office, and he started his official career by filling various posts in the
Admiralty between 1916 and 1920, before being appointed
Under-Secretary of State for India, a post which he held between 1920 and 1922. He was made a
Privy Counsellor in 1919. On 16 February 1922 he was posted as
Governor of Bengal, remaining there until 3 March 1927. For a short while, when there was a vacancy caused by change in incumbents in 1926, he functioned as Viceroy, his father's old post. After this he filled miscellaneous positions in various capacities when matters concerning India arose. He wrote two books, the first being a biography of his grandfather
Lord Lytton, while the other book dealt with his experiences in India and was called
Pundits and Elephants, published in 1942. He was made a
Knight Companion of the Garter in 1933. He was chairman of
London Associated Electricity Undertakings Limited from 1937 to 1947. Lytton is best known for his chairmanship of the Lytton Commission, which was sent by the
League of Nations on a fact-finding mission to determine who was to blame in the 1931 war between Japan and China. The commission's
Lytton Report, officially issued on 1 October 1932, blames Japanese aggression. In response Japan withdrew from the League of Nations. ==Personal life==