- James Andrew Seddon
James Andrew Seddon (
7 May 1868 -31 May 1939 ) was a Britishtrades union ist and politician."Obituary: Mr J. A. Seddon", The Times, June 1, 1939] Originally a member of the Labour Party, he subsequently moved to theNational Democratic and Labour Party .cite web |url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/2637769 |title=The National Democratic Party and the British Workers' League
accessdate=2008-09-01 |author=Roy Douglas |date=September 1972 |work=The Historical Journal, Vol. 15, No. 3 |publisher=Cambridge University Press]Seddon was born in Prescot, Lancashire in 1868. Having served an
apprentice ship as a grocer, he spent ten years working as a commercial traveller."Biographies of New Members", The Times, February 17, 1906, p.14] He subsequently became the delegate of the St Helens branch of the National Amalgamated Union of Shop Assistants, Warehousemen and Clerks. He was elected as vice-president and then president of the union in 1901 and 1902. ["National Union of Shop Assistants", The Times, April 9, 1901, p.5]In 1906 he was elected Labour MP for Newton, Lancashire. He held the seat at the subsequent general election in January, 1910, but was defeated by 144 votes in the December 1910 poll."Last Night's Returns - The Unionist Gains", The Times, December 8, 1910, p.10] Seddon continued his work with the union movement, was reselected as Labour candidate for Newton and elected a member of the parliamentary committee of the
Trades Union Congress in 1911. ["Trades Union Congress", The Times, September 11, 1911, p.5] In 1915 he was elected President of the TUC. [cite web |url=http://www.tuc.org.uk/extras/Congresspresidents.pdf |title=Details of Past Congresses |accessdate=2008-09-01 |author= |date= |work= |publisher=Trades Union Congress]In 1915 Seddon became a founding member of the
Socialist National Defence Committee . The SNDC was short-lived, becoming part of theBritish Workers League in 1916. In 1917 he resigned from the Labour Party, citing a "change of view" caused by theFirst World War . ["Labour Candidate's Change of View", The Times, March 27, 1917, p.5]In late spring 1918 the British Worker's League resolved to become a parliamentary party. The National Democratic and Labour Party (British Workers League) or NDP was duly formed as a "patriotic working-class party".
At the 1918 general election Seddon successfully contested the Hanley constituency for the NDP, becoming one of the new party's ten MPs. He had the support of the coalition government, and therefore did not face opposition from either the Conservative or Liberal Parties. He was vice-chairman of the party in the Commons from 1918, before becoming chairman in 1920. he was made a
Companion of Honour in 1918. Seddon's parliamentary career came to an end in 1922: along with the other NDP MPs he lost his seat at the October general election, despite campaigning as a "National Liberal".Seddon continued his interest in politics outside of parliament. In 1925 he helped found the Steel House Constructors Union, claiming a programme of building steel houses could employ 150,000 men. ["Case for Dilution in Building Industry", the Times, Mrach 26, 1925, p.18] He became a member of the
Industrial Peace Union of the British Empire formed after the General Strike of 1926. ["Industrial Peace Union", The Times, February 9, 1928, p.2]J. A. Seddon died of a
heart attack at his home inNew Barnet ,Middlesex on May 31, 1939, aged 71.References
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