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1922 London County Council election

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1922 London County Council election

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FieldValue
election_name1922 London County Council election
countryUnited Kingdom
flag_imageLCC arms 1914.png
typeparliamentary
ongoingno
party_colouryes
previous_election1919 London County Council election
previous_year1919
next_election1925 London County Council election
next_year1925
seats_for_election124 Council Seats
63 seats needed for a majority
election_date2 March 1922
1blankCouncillors
2blankAldermen
3blankSeats +/–
image_size130x130px
image1George Hopwood Hume.jpg
leader1George Hume
leader_since11918
leaders_seat1Greenwich
party1Municipal Reform Party
last_election168 seats
seats182
seat_change114
popular_vote1557,210
percentage149.2%
swing110.2%
image2Scott_Lidgett.jpg
leader2Scott Lidgett
leader_since21918
leaders_seat2Rotherhithe
party2Progressive Party (London)
last_election240 seats
seats226
seat_change214
popular_vote2182,512
percentage216.1%
swing27.3%
image31918 Harry Gosling.jpg
leader3Harry Gosling
leader_since31920
leaders_seat3Kennington
party3Labour Party (UK)
last_election315 seats
seats316
seat_change31
popular_vote3385,292
percentage334.1%
swing30.6%
map_image1922 London County Council elections.png
map_size300px
map_captionColours denote the winning party.

63 seats needed for a majority

An election to the County Council of London took place on 2 March 1922. It was the eleventh triennial election of the whole council. There were sixty dual member constituencies and one four member constituency, making a total of 124 seats. The council was elected by First Past the Post with each elector having two votes in the dual member seats.

National government background

The Prime Minister of the day was the Liberal David Lloyd George who led a Coalition Government that included the Unionist Party and those Liberals and Socialists who had broken from the main Liberal and Labour parties who sat in opposition. The Coalition was numerically dominated by the Unionists who were still 7 months away from overthrowing Lloyd George. The Coalition had been losing parliamentary seats in by-elections to both opposition parties including two in London to Labour; at 1921 Southwark South East by-election and during the council election campaign at 1922 Camberwell North by-election where one of the incumbent London Labour councillors Charles Ammon was elected to parliament on 20 February 1922. Ten days later, the electors of Camberwell North re-elected him to the County Council.

London Council background

Although the Municipal Reform Party had an overall majority, in line with national politics, they decided late in 1917 to form a war-time coalition to mirror the national government. Some Progressive Party members were offered chairmanships of committees. This coalition had continued after the war ended, but both parties, along with the Labour Party, fought the 1922 elections on separate platforms.

Candidates

The leader of the Municipal Reform Party did not defend his seat, but was expected to remain a member when the new council appointed its new aldermen. There was no county wide electoral agreements between any of the parties, though clearly there had been some locally agreed situations. There were very few constituencies where all three parties stood two candidates. In the past, the Progressive Party had encompassed the Labour Party, with candidates running in harness. That situation had recently ended when former Progressive Party councillor Harry Gosling became leader of the Labour Party. In its place there were a few Progressive candidates running in harness with Municipal Reform candidates. Among Labour's candidates were members of the recently formed Communist Party, such as Albert Inkpin.

Outcome

Labour suffered a setback when their Leader, Harry Gosling was defeated at Kennington, thanks to an electoral arrangement between the Progressives and the Municipal Reformers, although he regained the seat at a by-election a month later. The big winners were the Municipal Reform Party, who made a number of gains at the expense of the Progressives.

London County Council election, 1922PartySeatsSeats %+/-VotesVotes %+/-Candidates
8266.1%****557,21049.2%****98
2621.0%182,51216.1%50
1612.9%385,29234.1%96
00.0%6,3960.6%5

Constituency results

  • Incumbent Councillors shown in bold.

Battersea

Battersea North
Battersea South

Bermondsey

Rotherhithe
Bermondsey West

Bethnal Green

Bethnal Green N E
Headlam

Camberwell

Dulwich
Camberwell North
Camberwell North West
Peckham

Chelsea

Chelsea

City of London

Deptford

Deptford

Finsbury

Finsbury

Fulham

Fulham East
Fulham West

Greenwich

Greenwich

Hackney

Adler
Hackney North
Hackney South

Hammersmith

Hammersmith North
Hammersmith South

Hampstead

Hampstead

Holborn

Holborn

Islington

Islington East
  • Naylor had contested the seat in 1919 as a Municipal Reform candidate.
Islington North
Islington South
Islington West

Kensington

Kensington North
Kensington South

Lambeth

Brixton
Kennington
Lambeth North
Norwood

Lewisham

Lewisham East
Lewisham West

Paddington

Paddington North
Paddington South

Poplar

Bow and Bromley
Poplar South

St Marylebone

St Marylebone

St Pancras

St Pancras North
St Pancras South East
St Pancras South West

Shoreditch

Shoreditch

Southwark

Southwark North
Southwark South East

Stepney

Limehouse
Mile End
Whitechapel & St George's

Stoke Newington

Stoke Newington

Wandsworth

Balham and Tooting
Wandsworth Central
Clapham constituency
Putney
Streatham

Westminster

Abbey
St George's

Woolwich

Woolwich East
Woolwich West

Aldermen

The council also appointed 20 aldermen, to serve for a 6-year term. After the elections, there were eleven aldermanic vacancies and the following alderman were appointed by the newly elected council;

  • John Jacob Astor, Municipal Reform
  • Alfred Ordway Goodrich, Municipal Reform (retiring councillor for Mile End)
  • George Hopwood Hume, Municipal Reform (retiring councillor for Greenwich)
  • Dr Florence Barrie Lambert, Municipal Reform (retiring councillor for Brixton)
  • Ronald Collet Norman, Municipal Reform (retiring councillor for Chelsea)
  • Jessie Wilton Phipps, Municipal Reform
  • Sir Harry Lushington Stephen, Municipal Reform
  • Herbert Arthur Baker, Progressive (retiring councillor for Camberwell North)
  • Dr John Scott Lidgett, Progressive (retiring councillor for Rotherhithe)
  • George Masterman Gillett, Labour (retiring Progressive councillor for Finsbury)
  • Albert Emil Davies, Labour (re-appointed)

By-elections 1922-1925

There was one by-election to a fill casual vacancy during the term of the twelfth London County Council.

Lambeth, Kennington, 29 April 1922

  • Cause: death of Sir John Williams Benn, 10 April 1922

Aldermanic vacancies filled 1922-1925

There were six casual vacancies among the aldermen in the term of the eleventh London County Council, which were filled as follows:

  • 24 October 1922: Arthur Acland Allen (Progressive) to serve until 1925 in place of Henry Evan Auguste Cotton, resigned 17 October 1922. Allen had previously sat as a councillor from 1899 to 1913.
  • 30 January 1923: Mrs Anna Maria Mathew (Labour) to serve until 1925 in place of her husband Charles James Mathew, died 8 January 1923.
  • 23 October 1923: Maj. Harry Barnes (Progressive) to serve until 1925 in place of Henry de Rosenbach Walker, died 31 July 1923.
  • 5 February 1924: Henry Thomas McAuliffe (Municipal Reform) to serve until 1925 in place of Viscount Hill, died 19 December 1923.
  • 18 March 1924: Alfred Baker (Labour) to serve until 1925 in place of George Masterman Gillett resigned 11 March 1924. Baker had previously sat as a councillor from 1919 to 1922.
  • 25 November 1924: Hon. Gilbert Johnstone (Municipal Reform) to serve until 1925 in place of Sir Cyril Jackson died 3 September 1924. Johnstone had previously sat as a councillor from 1907 to 1910 and 1911–1917.

References

References

  1. (8 March 1919). "L.C.C. Elections". [[The Times]].
  2. (3 March 1922). "LCC Elections". [[The Times]].
  3. London Municipal Notes - Volumes 18-23, London Municipal Society
  4. (11 April 1922). ""Father" Of The L.C.C. Death Of Sir John Benn". [[The Times]].
  5. (1 May 1922). "L.C.C. Labour Gain. Mr. Gosling Returned For Kennington". [[The Times]].
  6. Jackson, W Eric. (1965). "Achievement: A short History of the LCC". [[Longmans]].
  7. (25 October 1922). "News in Brief". [[The Times]].
  8. (10 January 1923). "Obituary. Mr. C. J. Mathew, K.C., M.P". [[The Times]].
  9. (31 January 1923). ""Loud Speaker" In The County Hall. The L.C.C. And Film Censorship". [[The Times]].
  10. (24 October 1923). "Future Of Deptford Market. L.C.C. And The Unemployed". [[The Times]].
  11. (6 February 1924). "Later Dancing In Hotels. Proposal Approved By L.C.C.". [[The Times]].
  12. (19 March 1924). "Coroners' Law. Government Considering Amendment". [[The Times]].
  13. (26 November 1924). "News". [[The Times]].
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