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1908 Dundee by-election

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1908 Dundee by-election

← 1906 9 May 1908 Jan. 1910 →
 
Lib
Candidate Winston Churchill George Washington Baxter
Party Liberal Liberal Unionist
Popular vote 7,099 4,370
Percentage 43.9% 27.1%

 
Candidate G. H. Stuart-Bunning Edwin Scrymgeour
Party Labour Scottish Prohibition
Popular vote 4,014 655
Percentage 24.9% 4.1%

MP before election

Edmund Robertson
Liberal

Subsequent MP

Winston Churchill
Liberal

The 1908 Dundee by-election was a Parliamentary by-election held on 9 May 1908 for the constituency of Dundee.[1] The constituency returned two Members of Parliament (MP) to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom, elected by the first past the post voting system.

Vacancy

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The by-election was triggered by the incumbent Liberal MP, Edmund Robertson, vacating the seat upon being elevated to the peerage as 1st Baron Lochee.

Previous election

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Robertson
General election 1906: Dundee (2 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Edmund Robertson 9,276 31.7 +1.5
Labour Repr. Cmte. Alexander Wilkie 6,833 23.3 New
Liberal Henry Robson 6,122 20.9 −6.4
Liberal Unionist Ernest Shackleton 3,865 13.2 −6.8
Conservative A. Duncan Smith 3,183 10.9 −9.2
Majority 5,411 18.5 +8.9
Majority 711 2.4 N/A
Turnout 29,279 81.9 +12.4
Liberal hold Swing
Labour gain from Liberal Swing

Candidates

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Thirty-four-year-old Winston Churchill was selected by the local Liberal Association to be their candidate. Churchill had been elected Liberal MP for Manchester North West at the 1906 general election but had lost his seat at the 1908 Manchester North West by-election on 24 April. Churchill had been appointed to the Cabinet by H. H. Asquith as President of the Board of Trade. Under the law at the time, a newly appointed Cabinet Minister was obliged to seek re-election at a by-election; hence, he sought an opportunity to return to parliament.

Sir George Baxter, a 55-year-old local man, was chosen by the Unionists in Dundee. He was a linen and jute manufacturer, and had been Chairman of Dundee and District Liberal Unionist Association ever since its creation in 1886. He had contested Montrose Burghs in 1895. Baxter was the son of the former Liberal MP for Montrose Burghs, William Edward Baxter, and a great-nephew of the philanthropists Sir David Baxter and Mary Ann Baxter.[2]

Stuart-Bunning

The local Labour Party selected 38-year-old G. H. Stuart as their candidate. He was born in Oldham, and became a postman and an activist in the Postmen's Federation.[3] He also became active in the Labour Party, and stood unsuccessfully in York at the 1906 general election,[4] His candidature was endorsed by the Scottish section of the party, but the National Executive refused to back him, as the party already held the other Dundee seat, and was concerned that it would over-reach itself.

Forty-two-year-old Edwin Scrymgeour stood as a Scottish Prohibition Party candidate. He was a native of Dundee and a pioneer of the Scottish temperance movement, and established his party in 1901 to further this aim. He had previously been a member of the Independent Labour Party. He was elected to Dundee Town Council in 1905. He had not previously stood for parliament.

Campaign

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Raw jute

The issue of free trade v protectionism featured prominently in the campaign. This was because the jute industry was significant in Dundee, and it relied on importing raw jute, mainly from India. The Unionist, Sir George Baxter, stood on a protectionist platform, focusing his protectionist demands on Germany rather than India. However, James Caird, a prominent local jute proprietor, actively supported the free-trader Churchill by funding his pro-free trade propaganda.

On 14 May (after the poll), Churchill gave a significant speech at Kinnaird Hall [see external links, below].

Despite Stuart not being officially endorsed by the Labour Party, the party leader, Keir Hardie, sent him a letter of support in which condemned Churchill for "shameless prevarication" over the Right to Work Bill. He also spoke on Stuart's platform, and the Dundee Courier enthusiastically reported his criticisms of the Liberal Party candidate, Winston Churchill.[5] Stuart was criticised for speaking too little about socialism and for not holding membership of the Independent Labour Party.

Scrymgeour described himself as a "Prohibition and Labour" candidate. As a strict Wesleyan, he urged electors to "vote how you pray".

The Women's Social and Political Union was active in the campaign, with Mary Gawthorpe, Emmeline Pankhurst and Christabel Pankhurst holding meetings in the town. However, they were upstaged by the non-violent Women's Freedom League member Mary Maloney who came up from London for the campaign. Whenever Churchill spoke, Maloney produced a swinging dinner bell which drowned out what he was saying. The ding-dong exchanges were taken in fun initially, but some meetings had to be cancelled because of the uproar.[6]

Result

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Churchill
Dundee by-election, 1908[7]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Winston Churchill 7,079 43.9 −8.7
Liberal Unionist George Washington Baxter 4,370 27.1 −3.0
Labour G. H. Stuart-Bunning 4,014 24.9 +1.6
Scottish Prohibition Edwin Scrymgeour 655 4.1 New
Majority 2,709 16.8 −1.7
Turnout 16,138 84.6 +2.7
Liberal hold Swing -2.9

Following election

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General election Jan 1910: Dundee (2 seats) [8]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Winston Churchill 10,747 34.1 −18.5
Labour Alexander Wilkie 10,365 32.9 +1.6
Conservative John Hall Seymour Lloyd 4,552 14.4 +3.5
Liberal Unionist James Glass 4,339 13.8 +0.6
Scottish Prohibition Edwin Scrymgeour 1,512 4.8 N/A
Turnout 31,515 86.1 +4.2
Majority 6,195 19.7 +1.2
Liberal hold Swing
Majority 5,813 18.5 +16.1
Labour hold Swing

Churchill continued to represent Dundee until 1922. Baxter re-appeared as candidate here at the December 1910 general election, his last electoral contest. Stuart made one further unsuccessful attempt to enter parliament, otherwise he concentrated on his Trade Union career. Scrymgeour continued to contest elections in Dundee and was eventually elected to the seat in 1922.

See also

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[edit]

Churchill's Kinnaird Hall speech is in: Churchill, Winston S.; Churchill, Winston (2007). Liberalism and the Social Problem: A Collection of Early Speeches as a Member of Parliament. Arc Manor. ISBN 9780978653644.

References

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  1. ^ Craig, F.W.S. (1987). Chronology of British Parliamentary By-elections 1833–1987. Chichester: Parliamentary Research Services. p. 102.
  2. ^ "MS 369 Baxter family wills and related papers". Archive Services Online Catalogue. University of Dundee. Retrieved 10 May 2016.
  3. ^ The Labour Who's Who: 1927, p.210
  4. ^ K. D. Brown, The First Labour Party, 1906-1914, p.108
  5. ^ K. D. Brown, The First Labour Party, 1906-1914, pp. 50–51
  6. ^ Dundee: a short history - Page 140
  7. ^ "Winston Churchill heads the poll for Dundee", The Evening Post, 20 January 1910
  8. ^ Debrett's House of Commons and the Judicial Bench, 1916