Then, from 31 August 1854 to 2 September 1854, there was another four-person cabinet led by Thomas Forsaith, with James Macandrew, William Travers, and Jerningham Wakefield.
Jerningham Wakefield (1820–1879), the only son of Edward Gibbon Wakefield
Wakefield | Charles Wakefield Cadman | Wakefield Trinity Wildcats | Jerningham Wakefield | Battle of Wakefield | Edward Gibbon Wakefield | Queen Elizabeth Grammar School, Wakefield | Buddy Wakefield | Wakefield, Virginia | Wakefield, Rhode Island | Wakefield, Nebraska | Wakefield, Massachusetts | Tim Wakefield | Wakefield Poole | Wakefield-Peacedale, Rhode Island | Wakefield Cathedral | The Vicar of Wakefield | Wakefield School | Wakefield, Quebec | Wakefield, New Zealand | Wakefield High School | Port Wakefield | Jessica Wakefield | Elizabeth Wakefield | Dan Wakefield | Cushman & Wakefield | William Wakefield Baum | William Turner (minister at Wakefield) | Wavell Wakefield, 1st Baron Wakefield of Kendal | Wavell Wakefield |
Wilson was some 20 votes ahead of Luck; the other unsuccessful candidates were the working-class representative Samuel Paull Andrews and Jerningham Wakefield, who had represented Christchurch Country electorate in the 1st New Zealand Parliament.
On 31 August he appointed Thomas Forsaith, Jerningham Wakefield and James Macandrew to the Executive Council, but when Parliament met again it moved a motion of no confidence in the members.