- Middleton and Prestwich by-election, 1940
-
The Middleton and Prestwich by-election, 1940 was held for the Middleton and Prestwich constituency on 22 May 1940.
The by-election was held during World War II, and the five largest political parties – Conservative, Labour, Liberal, National Labour and National Liberal – were all members of the Coalition Government. As such, they maintained an electoral pact and agreed not to contest any by-elections in seats held by any other party in the Government.
The British Union of Fascists had contested several recent by-elections, receiving very small votes. During the mid-1930s, the group had been able to organise sizeable demonstrations, but anti-fascist activity and the banning of political uniforms by the Public Order Act 1936 had hit the group hard. The BUF's main message was to call for immediate peace and a pact with the Axis powers; during the 'phoney war' period this message had been received calmly. However, by the time that the Middleton and Prestwich campaign started, the British Army was fighting the Germans in Norway; on 9 May, the Germans invaded France through the low countries. The sudden escalation in the war made the BU seem like fifth columnists, and the seizure of power in Norway by Vidkun Quisling was a matter of extreme concern because Quisling's career was superficially reminiscent of that of Oswald Mosley. When Mosley spoke in Middleton and Prestwich, he was subjected to missile throwing and attempts to hit him. The British government was also preparing to make the British Union of Fascists illegal under wartime powers, and arrested several Fascist activists in the run-up to the election.
Nairne Stewart Sandeman had held the seat for the Conservative Party since the 1923 general election, and had won more than 60% of the vote in the 1935 general election against a Labour Party challenge. The party chose Ernest Everard Gates to contest the by-election. With only Fascist opposition, the election was expected to be an easy win for Gates.
The result gave Gates a resounding victory, with 98.7% of the votes cast and a 97.4% majority; an all-time record for any parliamentary by-election in the United Kingdom, and the largest majority in any parliamentary election since East Kerry in the 1885 general election.
The British Union of Fascists was banned the day after the election, and its remaining leaders interned.[citation needed]
Result
Middleton and Prestwich by-election, 1940 Party Candidate Votes % ±% Conservative Ernest Everard Gates 32,036 98.7 +37.6 British Union of Fascists F. Haslam 418 1.3 N/A Majority 31,618 97.4 +75.2 Turnout 32,454 49.0 –25.5 Conservative hold Swing N/A References
- F. W. S. Craig, Chronology of British Parliamentary By-elections, 1833-1987
- Z. Yaakov Wise, Fascism in Manchester (Centre for Jewish Studies)
« 1931-1935 Parliament « By-elections to the 1935-1945 Parliament of the United Kingdom » 1945-1950 Parliament » 1936 January: Combined Scottish Universities • February: Ross and Cromarty • March: Dunbartonshire • Llanelli • May: Peckham • June: Lewes • July: Derby • Balham and Tooting • East Grinstead • October: Birmingham Erdington • November: Clay Cross • Preston • Greenock1937 February: St Pancras North • Manchester Gorton • Oxford University • Richmond-upon-Thames • March: Combined English Universities • Tonbridge • Farnham • April: Stalybridge and Hyde • Wandsworth Central • Birmingham West • May: York • June: Glasgow Hillhead • Buckingham • Plymouth Drake • Cheltenham • Hemel Hempstead • Holland with Boston • Bewdley • Ilford • St Ives • July: Kingston-upon-Thames • Chertsey • North Dorset • September: Glasgow Springburn • October: Islington North • November: Hastings1938 January: Farnworth • February: Pontypridd • Ipswich • Combined Scottish Universities • April: City of London • Fulham West • May: Lichfield • Aylesbury • June: West Derbyshire • Stafford • Barnsley • July: Willesden East • October: Oxford • November: Dartford • Walsall • Bridgwater • Doncaster • Lewisham West • Fylde • December: Kinross-shire and Perthshire1939 January: East Norfolk • February: Holderness • Ripon • March: Batley and Morley • Kincardineshire and West Aberdeenshire • April: South Ayrshire • May: Down • Sheffield Hallam • Westminster Abbey • Birmingham Aston • Southwark North • Kennington • July: Caerphilly • Portsmouth South • North Cornwall • Hythe • Monmouth • Colne Valley • August: Brecon and Radnor • October: Fareham • High Peak • Clackmannanshire and East Stirlingshire • Ormskirk • Ashton-under-Lyne • November: Macclesfield • December: Streatham • Manchester Stretford • Wells1940 February: Southampton • City of London • Swansea East • Belfast East • Southwark Central • Silvertown • Cambridge University • March: Kettering • City of Chester • Leeds North East • April: Argyll • Lonsdale • Battersea North • Glasgow Pollok • May: Brighton • East Renfrewshire • Middleton and Prestwich • June: Spen Valley • Newcastle North • Newcastle West • Bow and Bromley • Croydon North • Wandsworth Central • Bournemouth • July: Montrose Burghs • Nottingham Central • Rochdale • Wansbeck • August: Middlesbrough West • Mitcham • Heywood and Radcliffe • September: Bolton • Manchester Exchange • Preston • November: Queen's University Belfast • Aldershot • Southampton • December: Northampton • Birmingham Erdington1941 February: Doncaster • South Dorset • Petersfield • Dunbartonshire • March: Hitchin • Bodmin • Carmarthen • April: Great Yarmouth • West Bromwich • Mansfield • May: King's Norton • Hornsey • June: West Dorset • July: Greenock • Edinburgh West • Dudley • Pontefract • August: Berwick-upon-Tweed • September: Scarborough and Whitby • The Wrekin • October: Lancaster • November: Brighton • Hampstead • December: Harrow • Edinburgh Central1942 February: North East Derbyshire • Keighley • March: Nuneaton • Manchester Gorton • Newcastle-under-Lyme • Wigan • Grantham • April: Tavistock • Cardiff East • Glasgow Cathcart • Wallasey • Rugby • May: Putney • Chichester • June: Llandaff and Barry • Maldon • Windsor • July: Salisbury • Spennymoor • August: Rothwell • Whitechapel and St Georges • Poplar South • Sheffield Park • October: Manchester Clayton • Ince1943 January: Hamilton • University of Wales • February: Belfast West • Ashford • Antrim • Midlothian and Peebles • King's Lynn • Portsmouth North • Bristol Central • Watford • April: Buckingham • Eddisbury • Daventry • June: The Hartlepools • Newark • Birmingham Aston • July: Burton-on-Trent • August: Chippenham • October: St Albans • Peterborough • November: Woolwich West • December: Consett • Darwen • Acton1944 January: Skipton • February: Brighton • West Derbyshire • Kirkcaldy Burghs • Sheffield Attercliffe • Bury St Edmunds • March: Camberwell North • April: Clay Cross • July: Manchester Rusholme • September: Bilston • October: Chelsea • Berwick-upon-Tweed1945 April: Motherwell • Combined Scottish Universities • Chelmsford • Caernarvon Boroughs • May: Middlesbrough West • Neath • NewportLists of UK by-elections: 1868–1885 • 1885–1900 • 1900–1918 • 1918–1931 • 1931–1950 • 1950–1979 • 1979–present Categories:- By-elections to the United Kingdom Parliament in North West England constituencies
- 1940 in England
- 1940 elections in the United Kingdom
- Elections in Greater Manchester
- Elections in Lancashire
- Politics of Rochdale
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.