- Glasgow Bridgeton by-election, 1946
The Glasgow Bridgeton by-election was held on
29 August 1946 , following the death ofIndependent Labour Party (ILP)Member of Parliament for Glasgow Bridgeton,James Maxton .The constituency had been held by Maxton since the
1922 UK general election . Until 1931, he had contested the seat as a member of the Labour Party, and although the two parties had then split, Maxton had not had to contest his seat against a Labour candidate. Maxton also had a considerablepersonal vote as the most prominent member of the ILP.The ILP had been in a gradual decline since leaving the Labour Party, and the death of Maxton opened the potential of a rupture in the ILP, many members of which were keen to rejoin Labour. The ILP had only two other
Members of Parliament , so it attached a high importance to holding the seat. The party eventually nominated their Scottish Organising SecretaryJames Carmichael , a member ofGlasgow City Council , for the seat.Labour hoped to gain the seat and stood John Wheatley, a local lawyer who had served during
World War II - in contrast, the ILP had opposed the war.The Unionist Party had little chance of taking the seat, a strongly
working class area, but the possibility of a split left vote could perhaps improve their hopes. TheScottish National Party , with little background in the constituency, stood a candidate.Guy Aldred , a well-known localanarcho-communist standing on anabstentionist platform, completed the candidates.The Liberal Party were particularly weak in Glasgow, and opted not to contest the by-election.
Results
The ILP narrowly held the seat, but suffered a collapse in their majority. In this era of many two- and three-party by-elections, to win with only 34.3% of the votes cast was exceptional - the lowest winning percentage share since the
Bromley by-election, 1930 . Much of the ILP vote transferred to the Labour candidate, who came a close second. With the left vote split, the Unionists were able to place a strong third with 21.6%, while the Scottish National Party also picked up votes in fourth place, collecting 13.9%. Even Aldred was able to claim one of his best results, taking 2.2% and last position.The ILP victory only briefly delayed the party's decline. The following year, Carmichael followed the party's two other MPs into the Labour Party, and by the
1950 UK general election , the ILP was able to take only 5.8% of the vote in Bridgeton. Carmichael held the seat in his new party colours until his retirement in 1961, while Wheatley was elected in Edinburgh East the following year.Election box candidate with party link
party = Independent Labour Party
candidate =James Carmichael
votes = 6,351
percentage = 34.3
change = - 32.1Election box candidate with party link
party = Labour Party (UK)
candidate = John Wheatley
votes = 5,180
percentage = 28.0
change = "N/A"Election box candidate with party link
party = Unionist Party (Scotland)
candidate = V. Warren
votes = 3,987
percentage = 21.6
change = Election box candidate with party link
party = Scottish National Party
candidate = M. Wood
votes = 2,575
percentage = 13.9
change = "N/A"Election box candidate
party =United Socialist Movement
candidate =Guy Aldred
votes = 405
percentage = 2.2
change = "N/A"Election box majority
votes = 1,171
percentage = 6.3
change = Election box turnout
votes = 18,498
percentage =
change = Election box hold with party link
winner = Independent Labour Party
swing = "N/A"References
* [http://www.alba.org.uk/nextwe/g09.html Candidates and Constituency Assessments: Glasgow Shettleston]
* [http://www.geocities.com/by_elections/46.html 1946 By Elections]
* [http://www.psr.keele.ac.uk/area/uk/ge50/i09.htm UK General Election Results: February 1950]
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