Lambert, though holding no military commission, is…
May 1659 CE
Lambert, though holding no military commission, is the most popular of the old Cromwellian generals with the rank and file of the army, and it is very generally believed that he will install himself in Oliver Cromwell's seat of power.
Richard Cromwell's adherents try to conciliate him, and the royalist leaders make overtures to him, even proposing that Charles II should marry Lambert's daughter.
Lambert at first gives a lukewarm support to Richard Cromwell, and takes no part in the intrigues of the officers at Fleetwood's residence, Wallingford House.
He had been a member of the Third Protectorate Parliament which met in January 1659, and when it was dissolved in April under compulsion of Fleetwood and Desborough, he had been restored to his commands.
He heads the deputation to Lenthall in May 1659 inviting the return of the Rump Parliament, which leads to the tame retirement of Richard Cromwell; and he is appointed a member of the Committee of Safety and of the Council of State.