1911 North Tyrone by-election explained

Election Name:1911 North Tyrone by-election
Type:parliamentary
Seats For Election:North Tyrone (constituency)
Election Date:6 October 1911
Candidate1:Redmond Barry
Party1:Liberal Party
Popular Vote1:3,104
Percentage1:50.1%
Candidate2:Lord Arthur John Hamilton
Party2:Irish Unionist
Popular Vote2:3,086
Percentage2:49.9%

The 1911 North Tyrone by-election was a Parliamentary by-election. North Tyrone returned one Member of Parliament (MP) to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom, elected by the first past the post voting system. The by-election was held on 6 October 1911.

Vacancy

The by-election was held due to the incumbent Liberal MP, Redmond Barry, becoming Lord Chancellor of Ireland, requiring him to cease membership of the House of Commons. Barry had been Liberal MP for the seat of since the 1907 North Tyrone by-election when he successfully defended the seat for the Liberals.

Electoral history

Unlike most Irish seats, the Liberals rather than the Irish Nationalists, were the standard bearers for Irish Home Rule. Close results were part of the seat's tradition with the Unionists winning three times and the Liberals six times. Barry's hold on the seat had always been tenuous; His three successful defences were all in two-party contests with an Irish Unionist, where he had never polled higher than the 51.1% of the vote he polled last time:

Candidates

Campaign

The issue of Irish Home Rule was not prominent in the campaign, even though the Liberal Government, supported by the Irish Nationalists, was about to embark on the 3rd Irish Home Rule Bill. This was because in Tyrone, the electorate had long since made up its mind on this issue. Instead, the Unionist campaign sought to weaken the ties between the Liberal candidate and his would be supporters. A number of the Unionist influenced newspapers attempted to undermine Russell's campaign, by attacking him personally. They referred to the Liberal candidate as a 'Nationalist' and a turncoat. He was even referred to as a political Carpet-bagger, despite the fact that he was a local man.[1]

Result

The seat was narrowly held by the Liberal candidate Thomas Russell:Russell's 50.1% vote share was exactly the same as that won by Barry in the 1907 by-election.

Aftermath

Russell retired from politics at the dissolution of parliament in 1918. The seat of Tyrone North was merged with part of Mid Tyrone to create a new seat of Tyrone North West. Herdman eventually was elected to the Northern Ireland Senate.

Notes and References

  1. OUR CORRESPONDENT. "Election Intelligence." Times [London, England] 9 Oct. 1911: 8. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 22 Apr. 2014.