1906 Bodmin by-election explained

Election Name:1906 Bodmin by-election
Type:presidential
Country:United Kingdom
Previous Election:Bodmin (UK Parliament constituency)#Elections in the 1900s
Previous Year:1906
Next Election:Bodmin (UK Parliament constituency)#Elections in the 1910s
Next Year:Jan. 1910
Election Date:24 July 1906
Candidate1:Freeman-Thomas
Party1:Liberal Party (UK)
Popular Vote1:4,969
Percentage1:56.2%
Candidate2:Sandys
Party2:Liberal Unionist Party (UK)
Popular Vote2:3,876
Percentage2:43.8%
Map Size:250px
MP
Posttitle:Subsequent MP
Before Election:Thomas Agar-Robartes
Before Party:Liberal Party (UK)
After Election:Freeman-Thomas
After Party:Liberal Party (UK)

The 1906 Bodmin by-election was a by-election held on 24 July 1906 for the British House of Commons constituency of Bodmin in Cornwall.

Vacancy

The by-election was triggered by the unseating of the town's Liberal Member of Parliament (MP) Thomas Agar-Robartes, as a result of an election petition alleging illegal payments to potential voters. The success of the petition was controversial, as the presiding Judge, Justice Grantham, himself a former Conservative MP, was already facing criticism for a decision on an election petition in the Great Yarmouth constituency which had been considered unduly favourable to the Conservatives. A censure motion was outstanding in Parliament at the time of the decision, but the Government decided not to proceed with it. Five years later, he was censured in Parliament by the then Prime Minister, H. H. Asquith, as a consequence of some comments to a jury in a case in Liverpool.[1]

Candidates

The Liberal candidate was Freeman Freeman-Thomas, who had lost his Hastings seat in the recent general election. The Liberal Unionist was George Sandys.

Campaign

The brother of the unseated member toured the constituency, urging voters to avenge the result of the petition by voting Liberal. The Unionists alleged that the Government was planning to make up to 20,000 soldiers unemployed, a claim rejected by the Secretary of War, Richard Haldane.[2]

Result

The Liberal candidate won with a slightly reduced majority (down from 1,172 to 1,093) on a somewhat smaller turnout than at the general election.[3]

Aftermath

Sandys went on to become Conservative MP for Wells from 1910 to 1918, and his son Duncan Sandys later became an MP and cabinet minister.

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. J. B. Atlay, ‘Grantham, Sir William (1835–1911)’, rev. Robert Stevens, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004
  2. [The Times]
  3. [The Times]