Paull, having been disappointed in his expectation of obtaining a seat for one of the prince's boroughs, stood for
Westminster against
Sheridan and
Sir Samuel Hood (November). The contest was animated.
Sir Francis Burdett had met him at Cobbett's, and had introduced him to
John Horne Tooke. Burdett had himself been asked to stand for Westminster, but declined in favour of Paull, supporting him with all his influence and subscribing £1,000 towards the expenses of the contest. , Hood to the left, Sheridan to the right. The poll lasted fifteen days, when Hood and Sheridan were elected. On one occasion, when the candidates were on the
hustings, a stage was brought from Drury Lane, with four tailors seated at work, a live goose, and several cabbages.
James Gillray brought out several caricatures, including (1) a view of the hustings in
Covent Garden; (2) "the high-flying candidate, little Paull goose, mounting from a blanket" held by Hood and Sheridan; (3) "the triumphal procession of little Paull, the tailor, upon his new goose". The defeated candidate, who polled 4,481 votes, petitioned against the return, and the matter came before the House of Commons on 5 and 18 March 1807, when the allegations were voted "false and scandalous". A duel between Paull and a Westminster politician, called Elliot, was stopped by the authorities at the close of 1806. ==1807 election==