Election Name: | 1906 Dulwich by-election |
Type: | presidential |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Previous Election: | Dulwich (UK Parliament constituency)#Elections in the 1900s |
Previous Year: | 1906 |
Next Election: | Dulwich (UK Parliament constituency)#Elections in the 1910s |
Next Year: | 1910 |
Election Date: | 15 May 1906 |
Candidate1: | Bonar Law |
Party1: | Conservative Party (UK) |
Popular Vote1: | 6,709 |
Percentage1: | 55.3% |
Candidate2: | Williamson |
Party2: | Liberal Party (UK) |
Popular Vote2: | 5,430 |
Percentage2: | 44.7% |
Map Size: | 250px |
MP | |
Posttitle: | Subsequent MP |
Before Election: | Harris |
Before Party: | Conservative Party (UK) |
After Election: | Bonar Law |
After Party: | Conservative Party (UK) |
The 1906 Dulwich by-election was a by-election held on 15 May 1906 for the British House of Commons constituency of Dulwich in South London.
The by-election was triggered by the resignation of the serving Conservative Party Member of Parliament (MP), Dr Frederick Rutherfoord Harris, who was moving back to South Africa where he had previously lived for many years. The Unionist candidate was Bonar Law, former Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Trade who had lost his seat in the Liberal landslide in the February general election. The Liberal Party candidate was David Williamson, who had also contested the February election.
The Conservative majority increased by over 900 votes, which the Times attributed not only to Bonar Law's candidature but also to the unpopularity of the Government's Education Bill, suggesting that the Catholic vote, estimated at 700, had gone mostly to the Conservatives as a result.