In 1710
Richard Freeman, the popular and respected Lord Chancellor of Ireland died of brain disease, and Phipps was chosen to succeed him. He arrived in Ireland in December and quickly became embroiled in the political controversies which were rife in Dublin at the time. He was also appointed
Lord Justice of Ireland, together with
Richard Ingoldsby, and was a key member of the Dublin administration. As a convinced Tory, he sought to "pack" local councils with politically reliable
sheriffs and
justices of the peace. In Dublin itself the results were disastrous: a
Whig Lord Mayor of Dublin, Sir John Eccles, was elected but the Crown refused to recognise his election, and for two years the capital had no effective Government. Other lesser incidents added to Phipps' unpopularity: although his good intentions need not be doubted, he showed very poor political judgment on several occasions, especially in the Dudley Moore case. For several years it had been the custom to celebrate King William III's landing at
Torbay on 5 November 1688 with a performance of the play
Tamerlane by
Nicholas Rowe on the anniversary of the landing. In 1712 however, the Government ordered that the
prologue, which was considered to be politically inflammatory, be omitted. When a young gentleman called Dudley Moore went on stage to read it a scuffle broke out and he was charged with
riot. This struck many people as an overreaction: the prosecution lagged and was seemingly about to be withdrawn when Phipps made a speech to
Dublin Corporation on the disorder in the city, and specifically referred to the Moore case. It is unlikely that he intended to influence the result of the trial, but the speech was widely seen as an interference with the course of justice. Moore's case was contrasted with that of Edward Lloyd, a
bookseller who published the
Memoirs of the Chevalier St. George, better known as the
Old Pretender. He was prosecuted for publishing
seditious matter, but Phipps intervened to end the proceedings by
nolle prosequi. His reasons were entirely humane – Lloyd was a relatively poor man and the publication was purely a commercial venture, without any political motive- but it was widely seen as further evidence of his involvement in a Jacobite conspiracy. Phipps' well-meant efforts to ban the annual procession round the statue of William III in
College Green (once more on the grounds that it was inflammatory) increased his unpopularity. In 1713 it was rumoured, wrongly, that the new
Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, the
Duke of Shrewsbury, had made it a condition of taking up office that Phipps be dismissed, together with his main ally on the Bench,
Richard Nutley. In the 1713 general election, Phipps undertook to secure a Tory majority: but in fact, the new
House of Commons was deeply hostile to him. He was also blamed for the
Dublin election riot by Tory supporters. By the spring of 1714 he was described as "the pivot on which all debate turned": yet any of his actions which were denounced by the Commons found support in the
House of Lords. A petition from the Commons to the Queen demanding his removal was followed by a counter-petition from the Lords in his defence, which stressed his loyalty to the Queen and to the
Established Church. The Queen's death at the beginning of August resolved the problem since her successor
George I simply dismissed her Irish judges
en bloc. == Last years==