Lower house Want was a candidate for the
New South Wales Legislative Assembly seat of
Gundagai at the
1884 by-election, but was unsuccessful. Want was successful at the
1885 election, His parliamentary skills were recognised and he became
Attorney-General in the
first ministry of
George Dibbs (October to December 1885) and in the
Patrick Jennings ministry (February 1886 to January 1887). He was a staunch
free-trader and with the emergence of political parties in 1887 stopped working with Dibbs and Jennings who had formed the
Protectionist Party, and
Henry Parkes who led the bulk of free traders. In January 1889 Want moved to adjourn the Assembly, so as to censure the appointment of
William Meeke Fehon as one of the Railway Commissioners, and the motion was carried 37 to 23. The then premier, Sir Henry Parkes, treated this as a
vote of no confidence and resigned. The
Governor,
Lord Carrington accepting his recommendation to call for George Dibbs to form his
second ministry. Dibbs never commanded a majority on the floor of the Assembly and almost immediately parliament was dissolved and an election called. For the
resulting election Want was a candidate for
Paddington, standing as an independent free trader, despite his views on Parkes and his role in moving for the adjournment of the house, and was the first elected of four members. In May 1891 four free traders, Want,
George Reid,
John Haynes and
Jonathan Seaver, voted against the
fifth Parkes Ministry in a motion of no confidence, which was only defeated by the casting vote of the
Speaker. Whilst the government survived the motion, parliament was dissolved on 6 June 1891 and his opposition to Parkes meant that Want reverted to standing as an independent free trade candidate for the
1891 election. He was the second elected of four members. He was not anxious for office and temporarily retired from politics in 1894. He resigned from the ministry in the following April. With no obvious cause, Want was absent from the campaign over the second referendum held in June 1899, when New South Wales voted in favour of federation. Want's abdication of his responsibility and role in the struggle over Federation remains mysterious. ==Later life==