Owen Buckingham (1674–1720)

Owen Buckingham (16 December 1674 – 5 March 1720) of Moulsford, Berkshire, was a British Whig politician who sat in the House of Commons between 1708 and 1720.

[1] Buckingham was returned as Whig Member of Parliament (MP) in a contest for Reading at the 1708 British general election in succession to his father.

He again acted as a teller and was an active opponent of the ministry's trade policy, voting against the French commerce bill in 1713.

He voted with the Administration on the repeal of the Occasional Conformity and Schism Acts and on the Peerage Bill in 1719.

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