1991 Liverpool Walton by-election explained

Election Name:1991 Liverpool Walton by-election
Type:parliamentary
Country:United Kingdom
Seats For Election:Constituency of Liverpool Walton
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1987 United Kingdom general election
Previous Year:1987
Election Date:4 July 1991
Candidate1:Peter Kilfoyle
Party1:Labour Party (UK)
Popular Vote1:21,317
Percentage1:53.1%
Swing1: 11.3%
Candidate2:Paul Clark
Party2:Liberal Democrats (UK)
Popular Vote2:14,457
Percentage2:36.0%
Swing2: 14.8%
Candidate3:Lesley Mahmood
Party3:Walton Real Labour
Popular Vote3:2,613
Percentage3:6.5%
Swing3:New
MP
Posttitle:Subsequent MP
Before Election:Eric Heffer
Before Party:Labour Party (UK)
After Election:Peter Kilfoyle
After Party:Labour Party (UK)
Turnout:57.0% (16.6%)
Next Election:1992 United Kingdom general election
Next Year:1992

The Liverpool Walton by-election was held on 4 July 1991, following the death of the Labour Party Member of Parliament Eric Heffer for Liverpool Walton, on 27 May.

The constituency had become a safe Labour seat under Heffer, who was known as being on the left of the party and a member of the Campaign Group. The Trotskyist Militant group, using entryist tactics was working within the Labour Party, and had gained control of Liverpool City Council in 1982. The city had become a significant base for the group. When Heffer announced his retirement, Lesley Mahmood, a "Broad Left" councillor and a member of Militant, stood for the Labour nomination. Peter Kilfoyle, who had been the Labour Party organiser in the city since 1985, gained the nomination by a narrow margin; he had been involved in removing Militant influence from the Liverpool Labour Party.[1] Mahmood stood as a "Walton Real Labour" candidate.

Several other candidates stood. The Liberal Democrat candidate was Paul Clark, a local councillor who had been the Liberal Party candidate in the 1987 general election. The Conservatives, who had little support in the constituency, although they had held it until 1964, stood Berkeley Greenwood. Screaming Lord Sutch stood for the Official Monster Raving Loony Party, and George Lee-Delisle stood on a platform advocating proportional representation.

Kilfoyle was able to win the election, taking a majority of the votes cast (53.1%), although 11.3% down on Heffer's result in the previous general election. The Liberal Democrats gained from the division in the Labour Party and increased their vote to come second. Mahmood was only able to take a distant third place with 6.5% of the vote. The Conservatives were beaten into fourth, for the first time in Britain since the 1983 Bermondsey by-election, and lost their deposit. They did not place fourth in an English by-election again until the 2004 Hartlepool by-election.

Kilfoyle held the seat at the 1992 general election and at each subsequent election, eventually standing down at the 2010 general election.

Some of Militant's leaders, Ted Grant and Rob Sewell, had remained convinced of the merits of entryism and argued privately against Mahmood standing.[2] The candidacy was part of the process in Militant's rejection of entryism, or as they saw it, their open turn, and the expulsion of Grant leading to a split in the group.

Notes and References

  1. Andy McSmith Faces of Labour: The Inside Story, London: Verso, 1996, p.115
  2. Taaffe, P. (1995) The Rise of Militant Militant Publications: London p.437