The
Local Government Act 1888 created
County Councils in England, and Verney became a councillor in the first elections, in 1889. He was a
Buckinghamshire County Councillor for 18 years to 1907) and a
Progressive Party member of the
London County Council (LCC) from 1898 to 1907, for Peckham. He had unsuccessfully contested the 1895 LCC elections in Norwood. He stood for Parliament four times before winning a seat. in
Bath at the
1886 general election, in
Norwich at the
1895 general election, and in
Liverpool Exchange at the
1900 general election. He was elected at the
1906 general election as MP for
Buckingham (or Northern) division of Buckinghamshire. The seat had been held from 1885 to 1886 and from 1889 to 1891 by his older brother
Sir Edmund Hope Verney, who was expelled from the
House of Commons in 1891, and at various times between 1832 and 1885 by their father
Sir Harry. Frederick's main interest in Parliament was agriculture, and in particular supporting the creation of
smallholdings. which reported in July 1910. The commission's recommendations included the appointment of local committees which would monitor the effectiveness of magistrates and report of whether more magistrates were needed, and proposals to remove political bias from the selection process. but at the
December 1910 general election he stood aside from Buckingham to allow his nephew
Sir Harry Verney, 4th Baronet to contest the seat. Sir Harry held the Buckingham seat, but Frederick was unsuccessful in
Christchurch. On 26 April 1913, Verney died aged 67 at his London residence of 12
Connaught Place, after a short illness. == Family ==