Local politics Pearce entered politics through local service. He was first elected as a member of the
London School Board representing the
Tower Hamlets Division at the elections of 1876 and served on the School Board for many years. In 1892 he was adopted as
Progressive candidate for the
London County Council (LCC) elections in the Tower Hamlets (Limehouse) division. He won his seat, topping the poll, gaining more votes than the sitting Progressive Party member, Arthur Leon. He represented Limehouse until 1901 during which time he sat on the Technical Education Board (1895–99). He was also a chairman of the Main Drainage Committee. He stood again in Limehouse at the
1906 general election. This was the year of the Liberal landslide and Pearce gained the seat from Samuel in another straight fight by a majority of 974 votes. In the general elections of
January and
December 1910 Pearce retained his seat, each time by the same majority, 431 votes. At the next general election in
1918, Pearce was in receipt of the
Coalition Coupon and was therefore not opposed by the Unionists who were supporters of the
Coalition government of
David Lloyd George. He did face
Labour Party and
National Party opposition but won comfortably by a majority of 3,390 and 60% of the poll. In
1922 Pearce fought as a
National Liberal, i.e. a continuing supporter of the Lloyd George wing of the Liberal Party. However he tried to keep the vexed question of Liberal Party internal politics out of the campaign. In the East End he said, it was less a matter of party politics than but how to recover commercial and industrial prosperity. He did however concede he was against 'Soviet style experiments'. At this election he was opposed in Limehouse by the Labour Party whose candidate was future Prime Minister
Clement Attlee. Attlee insisted the real issue was Capital against Labour, a system based on exploitation or cooperative Commonwealth. In a straight fight Attlee gained the seat with a majority of 1,899 votes. Attlee held the seat until
1950 when it was abolished in boundary changes. Pearce, who was by now almost 70 years old, did not stand at any further parliamentary elections. ==Other appointments and honours==