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1995 North Down by-election

UK parliamentary by-election


UK parliamentary by-election

FieldValue
election_name1995 North Down by-election
countryUnited Kingdom
typeparliamentary
ongoingno
previous_election1992 United Kingdom general election
previous_year1992
next_election1997 United Kingdom general election
next_year1997
election_date15 June 1995
candidate1**Robert McCartney**
image1**UKUP**
party1UK Unionist Party
popular_vote1**10,124**
percentage1**37.0%**
swing1*New*
candidate2Alan McFarland
image2[[File:Alan McFarland (3x4 crop).pngx160px]]
party2Ulster Unionist Party
popular_vote27,232
percentage226.4%
swing2*New*
candidate4Oliver Napier
image4**APNI**
party4Alliance Party of Northern Ireland
popular_vote46,970
percentage425.4%
swing410.7%
candidate5Alan Chambers
image5[[File:Alan Chambers 2021 (3x4 crop).jpgx160px]]
party5Independent Unionist
popular_vote52,170
percentage57.9%
swing5*New*
titleMP
before_electionJames Kilfedder
after_electionRobert McCartney
before_partyUlster Popular Unionist Party
after_partyUK Unionist Party
turnout38.6% ( 26.9%)

The 1995 North Down by-election, in the North Down constituency, was held on 15 June 1995, following the death of James Kilfedder, who had represented the constituency since the 1970 general election. Kilfedder had formed the Ulster Popular Unionist Party in 1980, but the party disintegrated on his death.

History

The North Down constituency was created in 1950, and had consistently returned Unionist MPs with large majorities. It had also seen some of the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland's strongest results, peaking at 22.1% of the vote in the 1983 general election, and in the 1992 general election, it had seen the Conservative Party's best result in Northern Ireland, picking up 32.0% of the vote.

In 1995, North Down was the wealthiest constituency in the province, and had one of the lowest Catholic populations. As a result, neither the Social Democratic and Labour Party nor Sinn Féin, the two parties most closely associated with the Catholic community in Northern Ireland, had regularly stood candidates in the constituency, and neither chose to stand in the by-election.

Candidates

Bob McCartney had stood in the constituency for the Ulster Unionist Party in 1983, when he had come third with 20.3% of the vote. In 1987 he fell out with the party when he refused to withdraw and give Kilfedder a free run on a joint platform of opposition to the Anglo-Irish Agreement, instead running as a "Real Unionist". McCartney now announced his intention to stand in the election, as a UK Unionist. Despite their differences, he gained the tacit backing of the Democratic Unionist Party, who had won only 9.8% of the vote in 1992 and chose not to stand their own candidate.

The Ulster Unionist Party had not run a candidate in North Down since Bob McCartney in 1983, but they believed they were best placed to take Kilfedder's personal vote. They chose to run Alan McFarland, a former Army officer and then Parliamentary secretary to some of their MPs, in preference to Reg Empey, one of their most prominent members. The Alliance Party selected Oliver Napier, their former party leader, hoping his experience and notability would regain some of the votes which they had lost in the 1992 election. The Conservative Party had suffered a dramatic loss of votes in the local elections, and their candidate in the 1992 election had moved away, but they chose Stuart Sexton, a member from Croydon in South London.

Four other candidates stood. Alan Chambers, a local councillor, ran as an independent Unionist. The Natural Law Party stood James Anderson, their leader in Northern Ireland, Michael Brooks who had previously stood as an "Ulster Protestant" candidate in the 1987 Irish general election in Donegal North-East, stood on a platform to "Free Para Lee Clegg Now", and Christopher Carter stood as Ulster's Independent Voice.

The big story of the campaign was from The Guardian, who announced that if McCartney was elected, he would apply for the Labour Party whip, an unusual move for a unionist, who were more usually associated with the Conservatives.

Result

The results gave McCartney a win, which he claimed was a victory for left-right politics, as opposed to sectarian politics, with the Ulster Unionists a disappointed distant second. Shortly after the election, James Molyneaux retired as their leader, and was replaced by David Trimble.

The Alliance came third, with their best ever share of the vote in the constituency. Chambers also saved his deposit, but the Conservatives received what was their worst vote in any UK Parliamentary election since 1918.

The by-election was the first since the Fermanagh and South Tyrone by-election of April 1981 where a seat transferred between two candidates from outside the major parties, and the first since the North Down by-election of 1986 won by a minor party.

|reg. electors = 70,872

Previous election

|reg. electors = 68,662

References

References

  1. Whyte, Nicholas. (13 March 2000). "The 1995 North Down by-election - A personal account".
  2. Boothroyd, David. "Results of Byelections in the 1992-97 Parliament".
  3. "Election Data 1992". [[Electoral Calculus]].
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