Lord Sudeley was a member of the
House of Lords for 39 years. He inherited his peerage aged 2, and finally took his seat in the House at the age of 21. He was a regular attender and introduced several measures, most notably the Bill to prevent the unlicensed export of historical manuscripts and, in 1981, a Bill to uphold the
Book of Common Prayer. From the early 1970s, Sudeley was active in the
Conservative Monday Club of which he became President in February 1991. In 1985 he was elected a Vice-Chancellor of the reactionary
International Monarchist League. 'El Salvador' Dinner, London, 25 September 1989. L to R:
Denis Walker, Sudeley, José Manuel Pacas Castro (
El Salvador's Foreign Minister), Andrew Smith (yellow tie), Dr.
Harvey Ward Lord Sudeley was also a vice-president of the now-defunct Western Goals Institute. Lord Sudeley was also Patron of the Bankruptcy Association (
Lloyds Bank had foreclosed upon
Charles Hanbury-Tracy, 4th Baron Sudeley in 1893, when his debt was covered twice over by large assets) and Convenor of the Forum for Stable Currencies. He was also Lay Patron of the Prayer Book Society and a past President of the
Powysland Club.
Expulsion from the House of Lords Sudeley was one of the unelected
hereditary peers expelled from the Upper House by the
House of Lords Act 1999. Faced with losing his hereditary position, Sudeley opposed reforms to the House of Lords. Sudeley believed that the House of Lords should be left unreformed, declaring that "If it isn't broken why mend it?" He also said that since he believed inherited titles were "inextricably" tied to the monarchy that it was "odd that they just want to touch one institution and not the other". He also claimed that the House of Lords had developed a "wealth of experience".
Racism and praise of Hitler Sudelely's reputation was possibly affected by racist comments he made in speeches and reports. On 2 June 2006,
The Times quoted him as stating, in a report of the Monday Club's Annual General Meeting, that "
Hitler did well to get everyone back to work". It also reported him saying that "True though the fact may be that some races are superior to others", and it was suggested that such comments may have interfered with the Monday Club's hopes of being accepted back into
Conservative Party circles. In September 2001, the
Conservative Party leadership candidate Iain Duncan Smith said the Monday Club was a "viable organisation… in a sense what the party is about". he also indicated that no Conservative MPs should contribute to
Right Now!, a quarterly magazine of which Lord Sudeley was a Patron, after an article in it described
Nelson Mandela as a "terrorist". ==Hobbies==