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1936 Ross and Cromarty by-election

UK parliamentary by-election


UK parliamentary by-election

FieldValue
election_name1936 Ross and Cromarty by-election
typepresidential
countryUnited Kingdom
seats_for_electionRoss and Cromarty constituency
ongoingno
previous_election1935 United Kingdom general election
previous_year1935
next_election1945 United Kingdom general election
next_year1945
election_date10 February 1936
candidate1Malcolm MacDonald
image1Malcolmmacdonald.jpg
party1National Labour Organisation
popular_vote1**8,949**
percentage1**49.5%**
candidate2Hector McNeil
image2
party2Labour Party (UK)
popular_vote25,967
percentage233.0%
candidate3Randolph Churchill
image3Randolph Churchill (cropped).jpg
party3Unionist Party (Scotland)
popular_vote32,427
percentage313.4%
map_imageRoss and Cromarty Constituency 1918-1950.svg
map_size150px
map_captionMap showing the Ross and Cromarty Parliamentary constituency within Scotland.
titleMP
posttitleSubsequent MP
before_electionSir Ian Macpherson
before_partyNational Liberal Party (UK, 1931)
after_electionMalcolm MacDonald
after_partyNational Government (United Kingdom)

The 1936 Ross and Cromarty by-election was a parliamentary by-election for the British House of Commons constituency of Ross and Cromarty held on 10 February 1936. The by-election was triggered when Sir Ian Macpherson, a Liberal National was given a peerage. This enabled cabinet minister Malcolm MacDonald to return to Parliament.

Candidates

At the 1935 general election, held a few weeks before, Malcolm MacDonald, son of former Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald, and Dominions Secretary in the National Government, narrowly lost his Bassetlaw seat and was therefore looking for a new seat.

The Liberal National association, which was the dominant Liberal faction in the constituency, approached MacDonald about standing as a National Government candidate, and he agreed. It was later alleged that David Margesson, National Government Chief Whip, and Sir Ian Macpherson had arranged the selection of MacDonald as a National Government candidate to provide a seat for him.

The local Unionist association had previously backed Sir Ian Macpherson, as a supporter of the National Government. However, some members of the association, mainly farmers from the Easter Ross area, objected to the candidacy of MacDonald, believing that as a member of the National Labour Organisation he was still a Socialist at heart, and that he would not represent the interests of farmers. They also regarded MacDonald as having been "foisted" on the constituency.

These Unionists asked Randolph Churchill, son of Winston Churchill, to be their candidate and he consented. This caused divisions in the local Unionists, and the Chairman, Sir William Martineau resigned, declaring his support for Malcolm MacDonald. The association voted by 160 votes to 47 to adopt Churchill. It was alleged that Churchill's supporters had packed the meeting with 60 farm labourers instructed to vote for him, although this number would not have changed the outcome.

The Scottish Liberal Federation, representing the Liberal Party, was also angered by the Ross & Cromarty Liberal Nationals' adoption of an ex-Labour politician, and was determined to contest the seat, despite having great difficulty finding a candidate. At a Liberal meeting in the constituency, three quarters of those attending were opposed to contesting the seat. Nevertheless, Dr. Russell Thomas was adopted as candidate.

The Labour Party had high hopes of winning the seat, and selected as its candidate Hector McNeil, a Glasgow councillor, who had narrowly missed winning the Kelvingrove seat at the recent General Election. The Scottish National Party decided not to contest the seat. Despite rumours the British Union of Fascists would contest the seat, they did not stand either.

Campaign

Being held in the middle of winter, all candidates' campaigns were hindered by bad weather, impassable roads and road accidents. During a snowball fight between National Government supporters and opponents, Malcolm MacDonald was accidentally struck in the face with a snowball which broke his glasses, causing minor damage to one eye. This forced him to take several days off from campaigning. The campaign was also suspended for several days following the death of King George V and only resumed after his funeral.

The campaign was notable for many verbal attacks on MacDonald by Churchill, who said his opponent had a "deplorable record", merely wanted to "get his greedy paws on the high offices of state", and that people resented the constituency being "used as a dumping ground for ministers who have been defeated".

MacDonald ran a strong campaign, focusing on farmers' needs and emphasising a tactical voting message - that a vote for "any other candidate" would in fact be a vote for Labour. A great many National Government MPs came to speak on his behalf, while Churchill was notably lacking in supporters.

All candidates worked hard to cover the vast constituency, MacDonald covered 200 miles in one day and the Labour candidate, driving in the bad weather, crashed his car twice. There was enormous interest in the election, and the weather improved greatly for polling day. The turnout went up from around 50% to 65%. Some voters in the remote areas of Wester Ross faced a journey of up to 22 miles to vote.

Result

MacDonald won the seat with a majority of 2,982 or 16.5%. Labour increased its share of the vote by nearly 10%. Churchill polled poorly, only just saving his deposit, and the Liberal candidate did extremely badly, with just 4% of the vote.

Previous election result

References

References

  1. ''[[The Times]]'' 20 January 1936
  2. ''[[The Times]]'' 30 December 1935
  3. ''[[The Times]]'' 14 January 1936
  4. ''[[The Times]]'' 16 January 1936
  5. ''[[The Times]]'' 31 January 1936
  6. ''[[The Times]]'' 20 January 1936
  7. ''[[The Times]]'' 13 January 1936
  8. ''[[The Times]]'' 10 January 1936
  9. ''[[The Times]]'' 10 February 1936
  10. ''[[The Times]]'' 12 February 1936
Info: Wikipedia Source

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