1955 United Kingdom general election explained

Election Name:1955 United Kingdom general election
Country:United Kingdom
Type:parliamentary
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1951 United Kingdom general election
Previous Year:1951
Outgoing Members:List of MPs elected in the 1951 United Kingdom general election
Next Election:1959 United Kingdom general election
Next Year:1959
Elected Members:List of MPs elected in the 1955 United Kingdom general election
Seats For Election:All 630 seats in the House of Commons
Majority Seats:316
Elected Mps:List of MPs elected in the 1955 United Kingdom general election
Election Date:26 May 1955
Turnout:76.8%, 5.8%
Leader1:Anthony Eden
Leader Since1:7 April 1955
Party1:Conservative Party (UK)
Leaders Seat1:Warwick and
Leamington
Last Election1:321 seats, 48.0%
Seats1:345
Seat Change1:23
Popular Vote1:13,310,891
Percentage1:49.7%
Swing1:1.7%
Leader2:Clement Attlee
Leader Since2:25 October 1935
Party2:Labour Party (UK)
Leaders Seat2:Walthamstow West
Last Election2:295 seats, 48.8%
Seats2:277
Seat Change2:18
Popular Vote2:12,405,254
Percentage2:46.4%
Swing2:2.4%
Leader3:Clement Davies
Leader Since3:2 August 1945
Party3:Liberal Party (UK)
Leaders Seat3:Montgomeryshire
Last Election3:6 seats, 2.5%
Seats3:6
Popular Vote3:722,402
Percentage3:2.7%
Swing3:0.2%
Map Size:200px
Map2 Image:File:1955 UK GE Westminster diagram.svg
Map2 Caption:Composition of the House of Commons after the election
Prime Minister
Posttitle:Prime Minister after election
Before Election:Anthony Eden
Before Party:Conservative Party (UK)
After Election:Anthony Eden
After Party:Conservative Party (UK)
Opinion Polls:Opinion polling for the 1955 United Kingdom general election

The 1955 United Kingdom general election was held on Thursday 26 May 1955, four years after the previous general election in 1951. It was a snap election: after Winston Churchill retired in April 1955, Anthony Eden took over and immediately called the election in order to gain a mandate for his government.It resulted in a majority of 60 seats for the government; the result remains the largest party share of the vote at a post-war general election. This was the first general election to be held during the reign of Elizabeth II. She had succeeded her father George VI the year after the previous election.

Results

The election was fought on new boundaries, with five seats added to the 625 fought in 1951. At the same time, the Conservative Party had returned to power for the first time since World War II and increased its popularity by accepting the mixed economy and welfare state created by the previous Labour Party government. It also was lauded for its economic policy after ending rationing, improving foreign trade, and even outperforming Labour in the construction of public housing.[1] The "giveaway budget" of Chancellor Rab Butler prior to the election also improved the popularity of the Conservative Party.[2] On election day, the Daily Mirror had printed the front-page headline "Don't Let the Tories Cheat Our Children", urging its readers to elect Labour on the basis that it had "built a better Britain for us all" .

The BBC later described the election as one of the "dullest" after World War II. The Daily Express wrote that the British people were more interested in Princess Margaret's romance with Peter Townsend.[3] The Labour Party, then in its twentieth year of leadership under Clement Attlee, steadily lost ground owing to infighting between the left-wing (Bevanites) and the right-wing (Gaitskellites), resulting in an unclear election message. It pledged equal pay for women, renationalization of the steel industry and road haulage, comprehensive secondary education, and vague guarantees of greater industrial democracy and workers' control of nationalized industries as demanded by Bevanites but otherwise offered little new policy.[1] It was the fifth and last general election fought by Labour leader Clement Attlee, who by this time was 72 years old. Eden had only become Leader of the Conservative Party a few weeks before the election, after the retirement of former Prime Minister Winston Churchill, but he had long been considered the heir apparent to the Conservative leadership. Eden called a dissolution of parliament and a new general election as soon as he took office in April 1955. The Conservatives were hoping to take advantage of the end of food rationing and the positive atmosphere created by the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953. Eden himself was telegenic (although not as great a public speaker as Churchill, who was now infirm and 80 years old) and gradual economic growth benefited the party greatly. Parliament was dissolved on 6 May.[4]

The result showed very little change from 1951, with fewer than 25 seats changing hands and only a small swing from Labour to the Conservatives. The only real highlight of the night was in Northern Ireland, where Sinn Féin won two seats at a UK election for the first time since 1918 (before the secession of Southern Ireland).

The Labour Party suffered at this time from deep internal divisions, yet for it this election was not the disaster it could have been.

Although little changed, this was a strong victory for the Conservatives, who won the largest share of seats for a single party at a post-war general election. It became the first party since the passage of the Reform Act 1867 to increase its parliamentary majority after a term in office.[1]

The Liberal Party had yet another poor performance, only slightly improving their popular vote total from the previous election, and again winning just six seats. Five of their six seats did not have Conservative challengers, as per local-level agreements to avoid vote-splitting which likely would have thrown the seats to Labour; the only Liberal candidate to be victorious against both Conservative and Labour challengers was Orkney and Shetland MP Jo Grimond, who was first elected in 1950. The poor national showing was widely viewed as the death knell for the embattled leadership of Clement Davies, who resigned the following year and was replaced by Grimond.

Future Labour leader Michael Foot lost his seat of Plymouth Devonport at this election; he returned for Ebbw Vale at a 1960 by-election.

For the first time, television took a prominent role in the campaign; this is the earliest UK general election of which television coverage survives (the 1950 and 1951 election nights were broadcast on television live, but the footage was not recorded). Only three hours of the coverage, presented by Richard Dimbleby, was kept; this was rebroadcast on BBC Parliament on the fiftieth and sixtieth anniversaries of the date of the election.

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Government's new majority60
Total votes cast26,759,729
Turnout76.8%

Seats summary

Selected declarations

Transfers of seats

FromToNo.class=unsortableSeats
(HOLD)manyAshfield (replaced Broxtowe), Barons Court (replaced Hammersmith South), Blackburn (replaced Blackburn East), Fulham (replaced Fulham East), Glasgow Provan (replaced Glasgow Camlachie), Hackney Central (replaced Hackney South), Kingston upon Hull West (replaced Kingston upon Hull Central), Manchester Openshaw (replaced Droylsden), Midlothian (replaced Midlothian and Peebles), Nottingham North (replaced Nottingham East), Nottingham West (replaced Nottingham North West), Reading (replaced Reading South), Walsall North (replaced Walsall), et al.
2Bradford West (replaced Bradford Central), Plymouth Devonport
19Ayrshire Central, Carlisle, Ealing North, Gloucestershire South, Gravesend, Halifax, Hornchurch, Leeds North East, Liverpool Kirkdale, Maldon, Nottingham Central, Nottingham South, Preston South, Southampton Test, Sunderland South†, Walthamstow East, Wandsworth Central, Watford, The Wrekin
abolished6Birmingham Erdington, Fulham West, Glasgow Tradeston, Leeds Central, Manchester Clayton, Sheffield Neepsend
1Belfast West
1Fermanagh and South Tyrone2
1Mid Ulster1
(HOLD)6Bolton West, Cardiganshire, Carmarthen, Huddersfield West, Montgomery, Orkney and Shetland
(HOLD)17Angus North and Mearns, Angus South, Bedfordshire South, Bradford North, Denbigh, Dumfriesshire, Fife East, Harwich, Holland with Boston, Huntingdonshire, Luton, Newcastle upon Tyne North, Norfolk Central, Renfrewshire West, Ross and Cromarty, St Ives, Torrington
4Bristol North West, Glasgow Govan, Norfolk South West, Romford
(HOLD)manyBirmingham Selly Oak (replaced Birmingham King's Norton), Croydon NE (replaced Croydon East), Croydon NW (replaced Croydon North), Croydon South (replaced Croydon West), Howden (replaced Beverley), Roxburgh, Selkirk and Peebles (replaced Roxburgh and Selkirk), Stroud (replaced Stroud & Thornbury), et al.
Cirencester and Tewkesbury
abolished2Blackburn West, Leeds North, Reading North
9North Antrim, South Antrim, Armagh, Belfast East, Belfast North, Belfast South, Down North, Down South, Londonderry
Seat created5Birmingham All Saints, Erith and Crayford, Feltham, Leeds East, Meriden
Seat created9Chigwell, Eastleigh, Essex South East, Glasgow Craigton, Hertfordshire East, Nantwich, Rye, Surbiton, Walsall South

1 Sinn Féin winner overturned on petition for a criminal conviction. The second-placed Ulster Unionist candidate was also overturned by resolution of the House; eventually the 1956 by-election was held, which returned an Independent Unionist.

2 Sinn Féin winner overturned on petition for a criminal conviction. The second-placed candidate, an Ulster Unionist, was awarded the seat.

See also

Further reading

External links

Manifestos

Notes and References

  1. Book: Thorpe, Andrew . Andrew Thorpe . A History of the British Labour Party . 1997 . Macmillan Education UK . 978-0-333-56081-5 . London . en . 10.1007/978-1-349-25305-0.
  2. Web site: Pre-election budgets: a history of hair shirts and handouts. The Guardian. Elliott, Larry. 21 March 2010. 14 April 2023.
  3. News: 1955-05-30 . Palace Challenged To Deny Royal Romance . 8 . Sarasota Herald-Tribune . United Press . 2020-11-07.
  4. Web site: Parliamentary Election Timetables . 3rd . . 25 March 1997 . 3 July 2022.