Paul Docminique (1643–1735), of Spitalfields, London, and Chipstead, Surrey, was a British merchant and Tory politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1705 to 1735.
[1] Docminique was director of the Company of Scotland from 1695 to 1696 and became Commissioner for taking subscriptions to the land bank in1696.
[1] Docminique was returned unopposed as Tory Member of Parliament for Gatton at the 1705 English general election.
[1] Docminique was returned as MP for Gatton again at the 1715 general election and voted with the Administration in all recorded divisions.
He was returned again in 1722 and in the following parliament made his only reported speeches which were on the allowances to be made to the South Sea directors and officials from their confiscated estates on 21 June 1721, on the army estimates on 22 January 1724, and on a petition from the victims of one of the 1720 bubbles on 21 February 1724.