February 1920 The Wrekin by-election explained

Election Name:February 1920 The Wrekin by-election
Type:presidential
Country:United Kingdom
Previous Election:1918 United Kingdom general election
Previous Year:1918
Next Election:November 1920 The Wrekin by-election
Next Year:Nov. 1920
Election Date:7 February 1920
Candidate1:Charles Palmer
Image1: IC
Party1:Independent Conservative
Popular Vote1:9,267
Percentage1:40.7%
Candidate2:Charles Duncan
Party2:Labour Party (UK)
Popular Vote2:8,729
Percentage2:38.4%
MP
Posttitle:Subsequent MP
Before Election:Charles Henry
Before Party:Liberal Party (UK)
After Election:Charles Palmer
After Party:Independent Conservative
Alliance1:IPG
Votes For Election:Constituency of The Wrekin
Turnout:71.0%
Image3: Lib
Popular Vote3:4,750
Percentage3:20.9%
Candidate3:John Bayley
Alliance3:Coalition
Party3:Liberal Party (UK)

1920 The Wrekin by-election was held on 7 February 1920. The by-election was held due to the death of the incumbent Coalition Liberal MP, Sir Charles Henry Bt. It was won by the Independent Conservative candidate Charles Palmer, who was backed by Horatio Bottomley's Independent Parliamentary Group.

Although forced out of Parliament through bankruptcy in 1912, Bottomley had come back as an Independent in his old seat of Hackney South in 1918. He formed the Independent Parliamentary Group and sensed the growing unpopularity of the Coalition and the reluctance of many working men and women to give wholehearted support to a Labour Party still feared as introducing the novelty of socialism to British politics. Bottomley knew from his own brand of populist, jingoistic, politics that, as Palmer put it, "there is an immense body of sound opinion in the working classes which ranges itself on the side of King and Constitution."[1] In this climate, Bottomley understood that here was an opportunity to try add create a new third force in Parliament, anticipating the upsurge of opinion which was to produce good results for Anti-Waste candidates in the coming months. He persuaded Palmer to stand for election in The Wrekin and in a three-cornered contest against a Coalition Liberal and a Labour candidate, Palmer – without the advantages of local organisation or local connections and strongly supported by Bottomley himself – won a stunning and unexpected victory. The Coalition candidate, John Bayley, who had been closely associated with the previous MP and was well known locally as principal of Wellington College could only come in a poor third place.

Palmer died on 25 October 1920 from double pneumonia and pleurisy after catching a chill during a visit to the Wrekin.[2] Another by-election was held in November, also won by a Conservative opposed to the coalition, Charles Vere Ferrers Townshend.

Notes and References

  1. The Times, 21 February 1920 p14
  2. The Times, 26 October 1920 p7