Talbot was elected member of parliament for
Chichester in 1894, a seat he held until 1921. In 1899 he was appointed, by
Redvers Buller, as the military censor of telegraph communications in Cape Town, South Africa, on the outbreak of the
Boer War. He later served briefly under
Arthur Balfour as a
Lord of the Treasury in 1905 and under
H. H. Asquith and later
David Lloyd George as
Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasury from 1915 to 1921 (jointly from December 1916 onwards). In 1918 he was sworn of the
Privy Council. That provision provided that no British subject would be disqualified from holding the position on account of his religious belief. Concerning the announcement of his impending appointment, the
Daily Chronicle observed that "the concillatory motive of his appointment [being a Roman Catholic] is obvious...it is an olive branch in place of a dictatorship." However, his tenure as Lord Lieutenant lasted only a year and a half. The post was abolished with the coming into existence of the
Irish Free State and its
constitution in 1922. The position was replaced by the offices of the
Governor-General of the Irish Free State and the
Governor of Northern Ireland. The day after his appointment as Lord Lieutenant he was raised to the
Peerage as
Viscount FitzAlan of Derwent, of
Derwent in the
County of Derby. In addition, during the minority of his nephew the
16th Duke of Norfolk, who succeeded to the dukedom in 1917, he served as Deputy
Earl Marshal. ==Personal life==