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1929 North Lanarkshire by-election

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1929 North Lanarkshire by-election

← 1924 21 March 1929 1929 →
 
Candidate Lee Scone Mitchell
Party Labour Unionist Liberal
Popular vote 15,711 9,133 2,488
Percentage 57.5% 33.4% 9.1%

MP before election

Sir Alexander Sprot
Unionist

Subsequent MP

Jennie Lee
Labour

The 1929 North Lanarkshire by-election was a parliamentary by-election held in the United Kingdom on 21 March 1929 for the House of Commons constituency of North Lanarkshire in Scotland.

Vacancy

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The by-election was caused by the death on 8 February of the constituency's Unionist Member of Parliament, Sir Alexander Sprot, who had gained the seat from Labour at the 1924 general election.

History

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General election, 29 October 1924: North Lanarkshire
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Unionist Alexander Sprot 13,880 53.9 +19.6
Labour Joseph Sullivan 11,852 46.1 −4.4
Majority 2,028 7.8 N/A
Turnout 25,732 79.9 +14.6
Unionist gain from Labour Swing +12.0

Candidates

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  • The Unionists selected 29-year-old Mungo Murray (later Lord Scone) to defend the seat. He was the son of Lord Mansfield. A graduate of the University of Oxford, he had served in the Black Watch and stood for parliament for the first time.
  • The Labour Party needed to select a new candidate as their last candidate, the former MP, Joseph Sullivan, had been elected at the 1926 Bothwell by-election. Sullivan had been a prominent figure in the Lanarkshire Miners Association and local Labour Party would have liked to have chosen another miners' representative. However, they settled on Jennie Lee, a teacher from Fife and a graduate of Edinburgh University, who stood for parliament for the first time.
Elizabeth Mitchell
  • The local Liberal Association selected 49-year-old Elizabeth Mitchell as their candidate. She had contested Lanark at the 1924 general election, and was the daughter of Andrew Mitchell, a former sheriff of Lanarkshire and a member of Lanarkshire Education Authority.[1] She had been educated at St. George's School for Girls, Edinburgh, Edinburgh University, and Oxford University, and taught at the Royal Holloway College, University of London. She was honorary secretary to the Committee on Women in Agriculture in Scotland, convener of Continuation classes at the County of Lanark, and vice-president of the Scottish Liberal Federation.[2]

Campaign

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On 1 March, nationally, Liberal leader, David Lloyd George launched the Liberal programme for the upcoming General Election, titled We Can Conquer Unemployment.

Result

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The Labour Party gained the seat.

North Lanarkshire by-election, 1929
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Jennie Lee 15,711 57.5 +11.4
Unionist Lord Scone 9,133 33.4 −20.5
Liberal Elizabeth Buchanan Mitchell 2,488 9.1 New
Majority 6,578 24.1 N/A
Turnout 27,332 82.3 +2.4
Labour gain from Unionist Swing +16.0

Aftermath

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General election, 30 May 1929: North Lanarkshire
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Jennie Lee 19,884 55.9 +9.8
Unionist Mungo Murray 15,680 44.1 −9.8
Majority 4,204 11.8 N/A
Turnout 35,564 78.6 −1.3
Labour hold Swing +9.8

References

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  1. ^ Jennie Lee: A Life By Patricia Hollis
  2. ^ The Liberal Yearbook, 1926
  • British Parliamentary Election Results 1918-1949, compiled and edited by F.W.S. Craig (The Macmillan Press 1979)