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1874 United Kingdom general election
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| Field | Value | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| election_name | 1874 United Kingdom general election | ||
| country | United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland | ||
| type | parliamentary | ||
| ongoing | no | ||
| previous_election | 1868 United Kingdom general election | ||
| previous_year | 1868 | ||
| previous_mps | List of MPs elected in the United Kingdom general election, 1868 | ||
| next_election | 1880 United Kingdom general election | ||
| next_year | 1880 | ||
| turnout | 2,466,037 | ||
| seats_for_election | All 652 seats in the House of Commons | ||
| majority_seats | 327 | ||
| election_date | |||
| elected_mps | List of MPs elected in the United Kingdom general election, 1874 | ||
| <!-- Conservative --> | image1 | [[File:Benjamin Disraeli, 1878 (cropped).jpg | 150x150px]] |
| leader1 | Benjamin Disraeli | ||
| leader_since1 | 27 February 1868 | ||
| party1 | Conservative Party (UK) | ||
| leaders_seat1 | Buckinghamshire | ||
| last_election1 | 271 seats, 38.7% | ||
| seats1 | **350** | ||
| seat_change1 | 79 | ||
| popular_vote1 | 1,091,708 | ||
| percentage1 | 44.3% | ||
| swing1 | 5.6 pp | ||
| <!-- Liberal --> | image2 | [[File:William Ewart Gladstone by Elliott & Fry - March 1879.jpg | 150x150px]] |
| leader2 | William Ewart Gladstone | ||
| leader_since2 | 3 December 1868 | ||
| party2 | Liberal Party (UK) | ||
| leaders_seat2 | Greenwich | ||
| last_election2 | 387 seats, 61.2% | ||
| seats2 | 242 | ||
| seat_change2 | 145 | ||
| popular_vote2 | **1,281,159** | ||
| percentage2 | **52.0%** | ||
| swing2 | 9.2 pp | ||
| <!-- Home Rule --> | image3 | [[File:Portrait of Isaac Butt.jpg | 150x150px]] |
| leader3 | Isaac Butt | ||
| leader_since3 | November 1873 | ||
| party3 | Home Rule League | ||
| leaders_seat3 | Limerick City | ||
| last_election3 | *Did not contest* | ||
| seats3 | 60 | ||
| seat_change3 | 60 | ||
| popular_vote3 | 90,234 | ||
| percentage3 | 3.7% | ||
| swing3 | *New party* | ||
| map_image | United Kingdom general election 1874.svg | ||
| map_size | 380px | ||
| map_caption | Colours denote the winning party | ||
| title | Prime Minister | ||
| posttitle | Prime Minister after election | ||
| before_election | William Gladstone | ||
| before_party | Liberal Party (UK) | ||
| after_election | Benjamin Disraeli | ||
| after_party | Conservative Party (UK) | ||
| map2_image | File:1874 UK GE Composition diagram.svg | ||
| map2_caption | Composition of the House of Commons after the election |
The 1874 United Kingdom general election was held between 31 January and 17 February 1874. Although the Liberals won the majority of the votes, Benjamin Disraeli's Conservative Party managed to win a majority, largely caused by the number of uncontested seats held by the Conservatives. Although there had been minority Conservative governments in the intervening years, this was the first outright Conservative election victory since Robert Peel's victory in 1841 over thirty years earlier.
The election saw the Irish of the Home Rule League become a significant third party in Parliament, with 60 of 101 of the seats for Ireland. This was the first UK election to use a secret ballot following the 1872 Secret Ballot Act. The Irish Nationalist gains are often attributed to the effects of the Secret Ballot Act, as tenants faced less of a threat of eviction if they voted against the wishes of their landlords. However, the Home Rule League had already won 8 by-elections before the passage of the act, diminishing its often emphasised importance. Also in this election, the first two working-class MPs were elected: Alexander MacDonald and Thomas Burt, both members of the Miners' Union, were elected as Liberal-Labour (Lib–Lab) MPs in Stafford and Morpeth, respectively. The 1867 Reform Act eroded the legislative power of the rural gentry. The 1874 election, especially in Ireland, saw great landowners losing their county seats to tenant farmers.
This is the only time, since the introduction of the secret ballot, that a UK party has been defeated despite receiving an absolute majority of the popular vote. This was primarily because over 100 Conservative candidates were elected unopposed. This meant no votes were cast in those 100 places where the Conservative candidates were anticipated to be popular; in the seats where Liberal candidates did stand, they polled a high proportion of the vote on average.
The election saw 652 MPs elected, six fewer than at the previous election. Following allegations of corruption, the Conservative-held constituencies of Beverley and Sligo Borough, and the Liberal-held constituencies of Bridgwater and Cashel, had been abolished.
Results
|votes % = 51.95 |seats % = 37.12 |plus/minus = −9.5 |votes % = 44.27 |seats % = 53.68 |plus/minus = +5.9 |votes % = 3.66 |seats % = 9.20 |plus/minus = N/A |votes % = 0.12 |seats % =0 |plus/minus = 0.0 |}
Voting summary
Seats summary
Regional results
Great Britain
| Party | Seats | Seats change | Votes | % | % change | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 319 | 85 | 1,000,006 | 44.6 | |||
| 230 | 93 | 1,241,381 | 55.4 | |||
| 2 | 2 | |||||
| 0 | 2 | 0.0 | ||||
| 551 | 4 | 2,241,389 | 100 |
England
| Party | Seats | Seats change | Votes | % | % change | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 280 | 69 | 905,239 | 46.2 | |||
| 171 | 75 | 1,035,268 | 53.8 | |||
| 2 | 2 | |||||
| 0 | 2 | 0.0 | ||||
| 451 | 4 | 1,940,509 | 100 |
Scotland
| Party | Seats | Seats change | Votes | % | % change | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 40 | 11 | 148,345 | 68.4 | |||
| 18 | 11 | 63,193 | 31.6 | |||
| 58 | 211,538 | 100 |
Wales
| Party | Seats | Seats change | Votes | % | % change | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 19 | 4 | 57,768 | 60.9 | |||
| 14 | 4 | 31,574 | 39.1 | |||
| 33 | 89,342 | 100 |
Ireland
Main article: United Kingdom general election, 1874 (Ireland)
| Party | Seats | Seats change | Votes | % | % change | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 60 | 60 | 90,234 | 39.6 | |||
| 31 | 6 | 91,702 | 40.8 | −1.1% | ||
| 10 | 56 | 39,778 | 18.4 | −39.5% | ||
| 0 | 2,934 | 1.2 | ||||
| 101 | 2 | 224,648 | 100 |
Universities
| Party | Seats | Seats change | Votes | % | % change | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7 | 1 | |||||
| 2 | 1 | |||||
| 9 | 100 |
Notes
References
References
- William Henry Maehl, "Gladstone, the Liberals, and the Election of 1874", ''Historical Research'' (1963), 36#93: 53–69.
- (1982). "The Ballot Question in Nineteenth-Century English Politics". Garland.
- (1987). "Reactions to Irish Nationalism". Bloomsbury Publishing.
- (2001). "The Extension of the Franchise, 1832-1931". Heinemann.
- David F. Krein, "The Great Landowners in the House of Commons, 1833–85." ''Parliamentary History'' 32.3 (2013): 460-476.
- "Others" include the [[Catholic Union]].
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