After entering
Middle Temple as a student in 1865, Finlay was
called to the bar two years later and built up a successful practice, becoming a
Queen's Counsel in 1882. Three years later he was elected
Liberal Member of Parliament for the
Inverness Burghs, but broke with
William Ewart Gladstone over
Irish Home Rule and joined the
Liberal Unionists in 1886. He lost his seat in 1892 but regained it three years later, the same year he was appointed
Solicitor General and
knighted. In 1900, Finlay became
Attorney General for England and Wales and also became President of the Edinburgh Sir Walter Scott Club, and gave the Toast to Sir Walter at the club's annual dinner. In November 1902 he was elected
Lord Rector of Edinburgh University for three years, and the same month he was elected Treasurer of the
Middle Temple for the ensuing year. For his services in representing the
British Empire in a number of international legal arbitrations he was appointed
GCMG in 1904, and the following year became a
Privy Counsellor. However, in the
1906 general election he again lost his seat, and it was four years before he returned to
Parliament as member for
Edinburgh and St Andrews Universities. One of his last official acts as Attorney General was to appoint his son,
William Finlay, as the junior counsel to the
Board of Inland Revenue, an appointment which provoked much negative comment. == Judicial career ==