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1932 Wednesbury by-election

UK parliamentary by-election


Summary

UK parliamentary by-election

FieldValue
election_name1932 Wednesbury by-election
typeparliamentary
countryUnited Kingdom
previous_election1931 United Kingdom general election
previous_year1931
next_election1935 United Kingdom general election
next_year1935
election_date26 July 1932
candidate1William Banfield
image1[[File:William Banfield MP (3x4 crop).jpgx160px]]
party1Labour Party (UK)
popular_vote121,977
percentage154.7%
candidate2Rex Davis
image2Con
party2Conservative Party (UK)
popular_vote218,198
percentage245.3%
titleMP
posttitleSubsequent MP
before_electionWilliam Ward
before_partyConservative Party (UK)
after_electionWilliam Banfield
after_partyLabour Party (UK)
votes_for_electionConstituency of Wednesbury
turnout78.0% (11.0%)
swing19.2%
swing29.2%
registered51,498

The 1932 Wednesbury by-election was a by-election held on 26 July 1932 for the British House of Commons constituency of Wednesbury in Staffordshire. The by-election was triggered by the elevation to the peerage of the sitting Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) Viscount Ednam.

The seat had been held by Labour since 1918, but had fallen to the Conservatives with a majority of over 4,000 as part of the 1931 election landslide less than a year earlier. The election was dominated by the continuing effects of the Great Depression. Labour, whose candidate was William Banfield, General Secretary of the Amalgamated Union of Operative Bakers and Confectioners, fought on the issue of the means test for unemployment benefit. The Conservative candidate was Captain Rex G. Davis, whose election address focused on the economy, employment and the Empire.

The Labour Party had every reason to hope to regain the seat, normally a safe one for the party. 'There will be acute surprise and disappointment if Mr Banfield is not elected,' according to a report in The Times, which pointed out that the constituency had 12,000 unemployed and several factories had closed down. The newspaper felt that Davis had the better of the argument, but the contest 'had resolved itself into a fight between the Socialist and Conservative machines'.

The result was a victory for Labour, as expected, with a majority of well over 3,000. Captain Davis accused the party of misrepresenting the facts about the means test and complained that in the three weeks of the campaign he 'had not had the time to dispel the fears created in the minds of the local unemployed'. The seat continued in Labour hands until its abolition in 1974.

Result

Electorate 51,498

References

References

  1. 'The Wednesbury Election: Labour Appeal to Discontent', ''The Times'', 18 July 1932
  2. 'The Wednesbury Election: Polling To-Day', ''The Times'', 26 July 1932
  3. 'The Wednesbury Election: Seat Won By Labour', ''The Times'', 28 July 1932
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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