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1922 United Kingdom general election

The 1922 United Kingdom general election was held on Wednesday 15 November 1922. It was won by the Conservative Party, led by Prime Minister Andrew Bonar Law, which gained an overall majority over the Labour Party, led by J. R. Clynes, and a divided Liberal Party.

1922 United Kingdom general election

← 1918 15 November 1922 1923 →

All 615 seats in the House of Commons
308 seats needed for a majority
Turnout73.0%, 15.8 pp
  First party Second party
 
Leader Bonar Law J. R. Clynes
Party Conservative Labour
Leader since 23 October 1922 14 February 1921
Leader's seat Glasgow Central Manchester Platting
Last election 379 seats, 38.4%[a] 57 seats, 21.5%
Seats won 344 142
Seat change 35 85
Popular vote 5,294,465 4,076,665
Percentage 38.5% 29.7%
Swing 0.1 pp 8.9 pp

  Third party Fourth party
 
Leader H. H. Asquith David Lloyd George
Party Liberal National Liberal
Leader since 30 April 1908 7 December 1916
Leader's seat Paisley Caernarvon Boroughs
Last election 36 seats, 13.3% 127 seats, 12.6%[b]
Seats won 62[note 1] 53
Seat change 26 74
Popular vote 2,601,486 1,355,366
Percentage 18.9% 9.9%
Swing 5.9 pp 2.7 pp

Colours denote the winning party—as shown in § Results

Prime Minister before election

Bonar Law
Conservative

Prime Minister after election

Bonar Law
Conservative

This election is considered one of political realignment, with the Liberal Party falling to third-party status. The Conservative Party went on to spend all but eight of the next forty-two years as the largest party in Parliament, and Labour emerged as the main competition to the Conservatives.

The election was the first not to be held in Southern Ireland, due to the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty on 6 December 1921, under which Southern Ireland was to secede from the United Kingdom as a Dominion – the Irish Free State – on 6 December 1922. This reduced the size of the House of Commons by nearly one hundred seats when compared to the previous election.

Background edit

The Liberal Party had divided into two factions following the ousting of H. H. Asquith as Prime Minister in December 1916. From then until October 1922 the Conservatives had been in coalition with a Liberal faction (which later became the "National Liberals") led by David Lloyd George. Following the Carlton Club meeting, Lloyd George resigned as Prime Minister and Bonar Law formed a Conservative majority government.

Although still leader of the Liberal Party and a frequent public speaker, former Prime Minister Asquith was no longer a particularly influential figure in the national political debate, and he had played no part in the downfall of the Lloyd George coalition. Most attention was focused on Law and Lloyd George. Asquith's daughter Violet Bonham-Carter, a prominent Liberal Party campaigner, likened the election to a contest between a man with sleeping sickness (Bonar Law) and a man with St Vitus Dance (Lloyd George).[1]

Some of Lloyd George's National Liberals were not opposed by Conservative candidates (e.g. Winston Churchill, who was defeated at Dundee nonetheless), while many leading Conservatives (e.g. former parliamentary leaders Arthur Balfour and Sir Austen Chamberlain, and former Lord Chancellor Lord Birkenhead) were not members of Bonar Law's government, and hoped to hold the balance of power after the election (comparisons were made with the Peelite group—the ousted Conservative front bench of the late 1840s and 1850s); this was not to be, as Bonar Law won an overall majority.

It was the first election at which Labour surpassed the combined strength of both Liberal parties in votes and seats. The election was also notable for Labour in that it saw future Prime Minister Clement Attlee elected as MP for Limehouse.

Some Liberal candidates stood calling for a reunited Liberal Party, while others appear to have backed both Asquith and Lloyd George. Few sources are able to agree on exact numbers, and even in contemporary records held by the two groups, some MPs were claimed for both sides. By one estimate, there were 29 seats where Liberals stood against one another. This is thought to have cost them at least 14 seats, 10 of them to Labour, so in theory a reunited Liberal Party would have been much closer to, and perhaps even ahead of, Labour in terms of seats. However, in reality the two factions were on poor terms, and Lloyd George was still hoping for a renewed coalition with the Conservatives.[2]

Neither of the leaders of the two main parties succeeded in enjoying their achievement in the election for very long; within less than a month of the election, Clynes was defeated in a leadership challenge by former Labour leader Ramsay MacDonald, while Bonar Law would only last a little over seven months as Prime Minister before being forced to step down due to a terminal illness, resulting in Stanley Baldwin succeeding him as both party leader and Prime Minister. As a result, Bonar Law was the shortest-serving UK Prime Minister of the twentieth century. Parliament was dissolved on 26 October; Bonar Law died four days later.[3]

Party platforms edit

The Conservative Party offered continuity to the electorate. Bonar Law's election address stated:

The crying need of the nation have this moment ... Is that we should have tranquility and stability both at home and abroad so that the free scope should be given to the initiative and enterprise of our own citizens, for it is in that way, far more than by any action of the Government that we can hope to recover from the economic and social results of the war.[4]

The Labour Party proposed to nationalise the mines and railways, to impose a levy on financial capital, and to revise the peace treaties. It promised a higher standard of living for workers, higher wages, and better housing.[5]

Results edit

 
UK General Election 1922
Candidates Votes
Party Leader Stood Elected Gained Unseated Net % of total % No. Net %
  Conservative Bonar Law 482 344 54 92 −35 55.9 38.5 5,294,465 +0.1
  Labour J. R. Clynes 414 142 91 6 +85 23.1 29.7 4,076,665 +8.9
  Liberal H. H. Asquith 334 62 44 21 +23 10.1 18.9 2,601,486 +5.9
  National Liberal David Lloyd George 155 53 9 80 −71 8.6 9.9 1,355,366 −2.7
  Ind. Conservative N/A 20 3 3 1 +2 0.5 0.9 116,861 +0.5
  Independent N/A 15 3 3 2 0 0.5 0.8 114,697 −0.2
  Nationalist Joseph Devlin 3 2 2 5 −5 0.5 0.3 45,027 −1.9
  Communist Albert Inkpin 4 1 1 0 +1 0.1 0.2 30,684 N/A
  Agriculturalist Harry German 4 0 0 0 0 0.2 21,510 0.0
  Independent Labour N/A 4 1 0 1 −1 0.17 0.1 18,419 −1.0
  Constitutionalist N/A 1 1 1 0 +1 0.17 0.1 16,662 N/A
  Scottish Prohibition Edwin Scrymgeour 1 1 1 0 +1 0.17 0.1 16,289 +0.1
  Independent Liberal N/A 3 1 1 1 0 0.17 0.1 13,197 −0.1
  Irish Nationalist T. P. O'Connor 2 1 0 0 0 0.2 0.1 12,614 N/A
  Ind. Unionist N/A 1 0 0 0 0 0.1 9,861 N/A
  Independent Communist N/A 1 0 0 0 0 0.0 4,027 N/A
  Anti-Parliamentary Communist Guy Aldred 1 0 0 0 0 0.0 470 N/A

Votes summary edit

Popular vote
Conservative
38.51%
Labour
29.65%
Liberal
18.92%
National Liberal
9.86%
Others
3.06%

Seats summary edit

Parliamentary seats
Conservative
55.93%
Labour
23.09%
Liberal
10.08%
National Liberal
8.62%
Others
2.28%

Transfers of seats edit

  • All comparisons are with the 1918 election.
    • In some cases the change is due to the MP defecting to the gaining party. Such circumstances are marked with a *.
    • In other circumstances the change is due to the seat having been won by the gaining party in a by-election in the intervening years, and then retained in 1922. Such circumstances are marked with a †.
From To No. Seats
Labour Labour (HOLD) 51 Abertillery, Ayrshire South, Bedwellty, Bishop Auckland, Broxtowe, Burnley, Burslem, Caerphilly, Chester-le-Street, Deptford, Derby (one of two), Dundee (one of two), Ebbw Vale, Edinburgh Central, Fife West, Forest of Dean, Gorton, Govan, Gower, Hamilton, Hemsworth, Holland with Boston, Houghton-le-Spring, Ince, Kingswinford, Leeds South East, Leek, Morpeth, Nelson and Colne, Newton, Normanton, Nottingham West, Ogmore, Plaistow, Platting, Pontypool, Preston (one of two), Rhondda East, Rhondda West, Rother Valley, Rothwell, St Helens, Salford North, Smethwick, Wednesbury, Wentworth, West Bromwich, Westhoughton, Wigan, Woolwich East, Workington
Liberal 1 Mansfield
National Liberal 1 Wellingborough
Conservative 4 Barnard Castle, Bolton (one of two), Clitheroe, Ormskirk
Coalition Labour Labour 2 Cannock, Gorbals
Independent 1 Norwich (one of two)*
Conservative 1 Stockport (one of two)†
Independent Labour Independent Labour 1 Anglesey
Labour 1 Aberdeen North*
Coalition National Democratic Labour 8 Aberdare, Bradford East, Don Valley, East Ham South, Hanley, Leicester West, Wallsend, Walthamstow West
Conservative 1 Duddeston
National Socialist Party Labour 1 Silvertown*
Co-operative Party Conservative 1 Kettering
Labour Unionist abolished 3 Shankill, St Anne's, Victoria
Sinn Féin Nationalist 1 Fermanagh and Tyrone (one of two) (replaced Fermanagh South)
abolished 72 Londonderry City, Tyrone NW, N Donegal, S Donegal, W Donegal, N Monaghan, S Monaghan, E Cavan, W Cavan, Connemara, E Galway, N Galway, S Galway, Leitrim, N Roscommon, S Roscommon, N Sligo, S Sligo, E Mayo, N Mayo, S Mayo, W Mayo, Longford, Louth, King's County, Queen's County, Westmeath, County Carlow, N Meath, S Meath, Dublin College Green, Dublin Harbour, Dublin St Patrick's, Dublin St Stephen's Green, N Dublin, S Dublin, National University of Ireland, Dublin Clontarf, Dublin Pembroke, Dublin St James's, Dublin St Michan's, E Wicklow, W Wicklow, N Kildare, S Kildare, N Kilkenny, S Kilkenny, N Wexford, S Wexford, E Clare, W Clare, E Tipperary, Mid Tipperary, N Tipperary, S Tipperary, Limerick City, E Limerick, W Limerick, E Kerry, N Kerry, S Kerry, W Kerry, Cork (both seats), E Cork, Mid Cork, N Cork, NE Cork, S Cork, SE Cork, W Cork, County Waterford
Nationalist Nationalist 2 Fermanagh and Tyrone (one of two) (replaced Tyrone North-East)
abolished 3 Armagh South, Belfast Falls, Down South
Irish Parliamentary Irish Nationalist 1 Liverpool Scotland
abolished 2 East Donegal, Waterford City
Liberal Labour 9 Stirling and Falkirk, Midlothian South & Peebles, Derbyshire North East, Spennymoor, Seaham, Consett, Leigh, Bermondsey West, Whitechapel and St Georges
Liberal (HOLD) 15 Greenock, Paisley, Leith, Edinburgh East, Chesterfield, Belper, Derbyshire West, Kingston upon Hull South West, Lambeth North, Wolverhampton East, Middlesbrough West, Penistone, Merionethshire, Montgomeryshire, South Molton
National Liberal 6 Camborne, Western Isles, Kinross and West Perthshire*, Loughborough, Norwich* (one of two), Berwick-upon-Tweed
Conservative 5 Portsmouth Central, Stourbridge, Middlesbrough East, Cardiff East, Norfolk South
National Liberal Scottish Prohibition 1 Dundee (one of two)
Labour 37 Dunfermline Burghs, Glasgow Cathcart, Renfrewshire East, Renfrewshire West, Rutherglen, Dumbarton Burghs, Glasgow Bridgeton, Crewe, Carlisle, Clay Cross, Ilkeston, Blaydon, Jarrow, Poplar South, Stepney Limehouse, Newcastle upon Tyne East, Newcastle upon Tyne West, Pontefract, Sheffield Hillsborough, Sheffield Attercliffe, Sheffield Brightside, Leeds South, Doncaster, Barnsley, Batley and Morley, Colne Valley, Wrexham, Llanelli, Carnarvonshire, Aberavon, Merthyr, Neath, Pontypridd†, Swansea East, Wansbeck, Cornwall North, Battersea North
Liberal 13 Orkney and Shetland, East Aberdeenshire & Kincardineshire, Aberdeenshire West and Kincardine, Galloway, South Shields, Bethnal Green North-East, Leeds West*, Huddersfield, Spen Valley, Combined Scottish Universities (one of three)*, Eye*, Banff, Kilmarnock
National Liberal (HOLD) 45 Combined English Universities (one of two), University of Wales, Caithness and Sutherland, Inverness, Ross and Cromarty, Moray and Nairn, Montrose Burghs, Argyll, Partick, Kirkcaldy Burghs, Roxburgh & Selkirk, Berwick & Haddington, Stockport (one of two), Stockton-on-Tees, Romford, Bristol East, Bristol North, Bristol South, Blackburn (one of two), Bolton (one of two), Heywood and Radcliffe, Middleton & Prestwich, Oldham (one of two), Stretford, Leicester East, Camberwell North-West, Hackney Central, Shoreditch, Southwark Central, Southwark North, Southwark South East, Northampton, Lichfield, Stoke, Shipley, Denbigh, Flintshire, Cardiganshire, Carmarthen, Pembrokeshire, Carnarvon, Brecon and Radnor, Swansea West, Norfolk South West, Sheffield Park
Speaker 1 Halifax*
Conservative 28 St Ives, Perth, Bedford, Luton, Cambridgeshire, Isle of Ely, Derbyshire South, Barnstaple, Sunderland (one of two), Leyton East, East Ham North, Stroud, Thornbury, Southampton (both seats), Buckrose, Bosworth, Kennington, Peckham, Banbury, The Wrekin, Lowestoft, Sudbury, Pudsey and Otley, Leeds North, Leeds Central, Newport (Monmouthshire)†, Saffron Walden
Ind. Conservative 1 Dorset East
Constitutionalist 1 Dartford
Independent 1 Mossley*
Independent Conservative 2 Hackney South†, Sowerby
Coalition Independent Labour 1 Norfolk North
Speaker Liberal 1 Penrith and Cockermouth
Independent Liberal Labour 1 Newcastle-under-Lyme*
Conservative Communist 1 Motherwell
Labour 32 Clackmannan and Eastern Stirlingshire, Stirlingshire West, Lanarkshire North, Glasgow Maryhill, Glasgow Camlachie, Bothwell†, Coatbridge, Glasgow Springburn, Glasgow Tradeston, Glasgow St. Rollox, Glasgow Shettleston, Linlithgow, Durham, Sedgefield, Gateshead, Stratford, Accrington, Eccles, Farnworth, Manchester Ardwick, Oldham (one of two), Rochdale, Bow and Bromley, Camberwell North†, Edmonton, Tottenham North, Newcastle upon Tyne Central, Elland, Bradford Central, Keighley, Dewsbury, Whitehaven
Liberal 30 Aberdeen and Kincardine Central†, Forfarshire, Fife East, Edinburgh West, Dumfriesshire, Bedfordshire Mid, Birkenhead East, Derby (one of two), Tavistock, Dorset North, The Hartlepools, Harwich, Isle of Wight, Worcester, Holderness, Kingston upon Hull Central†, Preston (one of two), Bootle, Grantham, Horncastle, Bethnal Green South-West, Great Yarmouth, Nottingham Central, Oxford, Taunton, Chippenham, Westbury, Bradford South, Louth†, Bodmin
Independent Liberal 1 Cambridge University (one of two)
Independent 1 Harrow*
Conservative (HOLD) 289 Cambridge University (one of two), Combined English Universities (one of two), Oxford University (both seats), London University, Combined Scottish Universities (two of three), Aberdeen South, Ayr Burghs, Ayrshire N & Bute, Glasgow Central, Hillhead, Pollok, Kelvingrove, Dunbartonshire, Lanark, Edinburgh South, Midlothian N, Edinburgh North, Abingdon, Newbury, Reading, Windsor, Aylesbury, Buckingham, Wycombe, Cambridge, Huntingdonshire, Altrincham, Birkenhead West, Chester, Eddisbury, Knutsford, Macclesfield, Northwich, Stalybridge and Hyde, Wallasey, Wirral, Penryn and Falmouth, Cumberland North, Westmorland, High Peak, Exeter, Honiton, Plymouth Devonport, Plymouth Drake, Plymouth Sutton, Tiverton, Torquay, Totnes, Dorset South, Dorset West, Darlington, Sunderland (one of two), Chelmsford, Colchester, Epping, Essex SE, Ilford, Maldon, Leyton West, Southend, Walthamstow E, Upton, Bristol Central, Bristol West, Cheltenham, Cirencester and Tewkesbury, Gloucester, Aldershot, Basingstoke, Fareham, New Forest & Christchurch, Petersfield, Portsmouth North, Portsmouth South, Winchester, Hereford, Leominster, Bewdley, Dudley, Evesham, Kidderminster, Hitchin, St Albans, Watford, Hemel Hempstead, Ealing, Hornsey, Twickenham, Wood Green, Finchley, Brentford and Chiswick, Hendon, Spelthorne, Uxbridge, Willesden East, Acton, Enfield, Tottenham South, Willesden West, Howdenshire, Kingston upon Hull East, Kingston upon Hull North West, Ashford, Bromley, Canterbury, Chatham, Chislehurst, Dover, Faversham, Gillingham, Gravesend, Hythe, Isle of Thanet, Maidstone, Sevenoaks, Tonbridge, Barrow-in-Furness, Blackburn (one of two), Blackpool, Chorley, Darwen, Fylde, Lancaster, Lonsdale, Rossendale, Ashton-under-Lyne, Bury, Manchester Blackley, Manchester Clayton, Manchester Exchange, Hulme, Moss Side, Rusholme, Withington, Royton, Salford South, Salford West, E Toxteth, Edge Hill, Everton, Liverpool Exchange, Fairfield, Kirkdale, Walton, Wavertree, West Derby, West Toxteth, Southport, Warrington, Waterloo, Widnes, Harborough, Leicester South, Melton, Brigg, Gainsborough, Grimsby, Lincoln, Rutland and Stamford, Balham and Tooting, Chelsea, Clapham, Dulwich, Fulham East, Hampstead, Holborn, Lewisham East, Lewisham West, Kensington South, Hackney North, Brixton, Fulham West, Hammersmith South, Islington North, Kensington North, Battersea South, Greenwich, Islington East, Hammersmith North, Finsbury, Islington South, Islington West, City of London (both seats), Mile End, Stoke Newington, Norwood, Paddington North, Paddington South, Putney, Rotherhithe, St Marylebone, St Pancras North, St Pancras South East, St Pancras South West, Streatham, Wandsworth Central, Westminster Abbey, Woolwich West, King's Lynn, Norfolk East, Daventry, Peterborough, Hexham, Newcastle upon Tyne North, Tynemouth, Bassetlaw, Nottingham South, Nottingham East, Rushcliffe, Newark, Henley, Ludlow, Oswestry, Shrewsbury, Bath, Bridgwater, Frome, Wells, Weston-super-Mare, Yeovil, Burton, Stafford, Stone, Tamworth, Bilston, Wolverhampton West, Bury St Edmunds, Ipswich, Woodbridge, Chertsey, Croydon North, Croydon South, Epsom, Farnham, Guildford, Kingston upon Thames, Mitcham, Reigate, Surrey East, Wimbledon, Brighton (both seats), Chichester, East Grinstead, Eastbourne, Hastings, Horsham and Worthing, Lewes, Rye, Nuneaton, Coventry, Aston, Deritend, Erdington, King's Norton, Ladywood, Yardley, Sparkbrook, Birmingham West, Edgbaston, Handsworth, Moseley, Rugby, Warwick and Leamington, Devizes, Salisbury, Swindon, York, Cleveland, Richmond (Yorks), Scarborough and Whitby, Thirsk and Malton, Barkston Ash, Ripon, Ecclesall, Hallam, Skipton, Leeds North East, Sheffield Central, Bradford North, Wakefield, Rotherham, Monmouth, Llandaff & Barry, Cardiff C, Cardiff S
Ind. Conservative 2 Westminster St George's, Richmond (Surrey)
Ulster Unionist Ulster Unionist 10 Antrim (both seats) (replaced South Antrim and Antrim Mid), Armagh (replaced Armagh North), Belfast East (replaced Belfast Pottinger), Belfast North (replaced Belfast Duncairn), Belfast South (replaced Belfast Ormeau), Belfast West (replaced Belfast Woodvale), Down (both seats) (replaced Down East and Down North), Londonderry (replaced Londonderry North)
abolished 10 Antrim East, Antrim North, Armagh Mid, Belfast Cromac, Down Mid, Down West, Londonderry South, Fermanagh North, Tyrone South, Queen's University of Belfast
Irish Unionist abolished 2 Dublin Rathmines, Dublin University (one of two)
Ind. Unionist abolished 1 Dublin University (one of two)
National Liberal 1 Walsall
Conservative 1 Bournemouth*
Silver Badge 1 Hertford1
1 MP elected as an Anti-Waste League candidate at a 1921 by-election, but moved to the Conservatives for the 1922 election

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Including Conservatives not elected under the Coalition Coupon.
  2. ^ As Coalition Liberals.
  3. ^ All parties shown. Conservatives include Ulster Unionists. National Liberals were party formed by Lloyd George's Coalition Liberals after leaving the government. Their net seat change is compared with the Coalition Liberals' number of seats after the 1918 election.
  1. ^ The seat and vote count figures for the Liberals given here include the Speaker of the House of Commons

References edit

  1. ^ Jenkins 1964, p. 495.
  2. ^ Koss 1985, p. 257–258.
  3. ^ "Parliamentary Election Timetables" (PDF) (3rd ed.). House of Commons Library. 25 March 1997. Retrieved 3 July 2022.
  4. ^ Craig 1970, p. 10.
  5. ^ Somervell 1936, p. 303; Craig 1970, pp. 9–17.
  6. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 July 2014. Retrieved 23 May 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

Sources edit

External links edit

  • United Kingdom election results—summary results 1885–1979 8 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine

Manifestos edit

  • 1922 Conservative manifesto
  • 1922 Liberal manifesto

1922, united, kingdom, general, election, held, wednesday, november, 1922, conservative, party, prime, minister, andrew, bonar, which, gained, overall, majority, over, labour, party, clynes, divided, liberal, party, 1918, november, 1922, 1923, outgoing, member. The 1922 United Kingdom general election was held on Wednesday 15 November 1922 It was won by the Conservative Party led by Prime Minister Andrew Bonar Law which gained an overall majority over the Labour Party led by J R Clynes and a divided Liberal Party 1922 United Kingdom general election 1918 15 November 1922 1923 outgoing memberselected members All 615 seats in the House of Commons308 seats needed for a majorityTurnout73 0 15 8 pp First party Second party Leader Bonar Law J R Clynes Party Conservative Labour Leader since 23 October 1922 14 February 1921 Leader s seat Glasgow Central Manchester Platting Last election 379 seats 38 4 a 57 seats 21 5 Seats won 344 142 Seat change 35 85 Popular vote 5 294 465 4 076 665 Percentage 38 5 29 7 Swing 0 1 pp 8 9 pp Third party Fourth party Leader H H Asquith David Lloyd George Party Liberal National Liberal Leader since 30 April 1908 7 December 1916 Leader s seat Paisley Caernarvon Boroughs Last election 36 seats 13 3 127 seats 12 6 b Seats won 62 note 1 53 Seat change 26 74 Popular vote 2 601 486 1 355 366 Percentage 18 9 9 9 Swing 5 9 pp 2 7 ppColours denote the winning party as shown in ResultsPrime Minister before election Bonar Law Conservative Prime Minister after election Bonar Law Conservative This election is considered one of political realignment with the Liberal Party falling to third party status The Conservative Party went on to spend all but eight of the next forty two years as the largest party in Parliament and Labour emerged as the main competition to the Conservatives The election was the first not to be held in Southern Ireland due to the signing of the Anglo Irish Treaty on 6 December 1921 under which Southern Ireland was to secede from the United Kingdom as a Dominion the Irish Free State on 6 December 1922 This reduced the size of the House of Commons by nearly one hundred seats when compared to the previous election Contents 1 Background 2 Party platforms 3 Results 3 1 Votes summary 3 2 Seats summary 4 Transfers of seats 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Sources 8 External links 8 1 ManifestosBackground editThe Liberal Party had divided into two factions following the ousting of H H Asquith as Prime Minister in December 1916 From then until October 1922 the Conservatives had been in coalition with a Liberal faction which later became the National Liberals led by David Lloyd George Following the Carlton Club meeting Lloyd George resigned as Prime Minister and Bonar Law formed a Conservative majority government Although still leader of the Liberal Party and a frequent public speaker former Prime Minister Asquith was no longer a particularly influential figure in the national political debate and he had played no part in the downfall of the Lloyd George coalition Most attention was focused on Law and Lloyd George Asquith s daughter Violet Bonham Carter a prominent Liberal Party campaigner likened the election to a contest between a man with sleeping sickness Bonar Law and a man with St Vitus Dance Lloyd George 1 Some of Lloyd George s National Liberals were not opposed by Conservative candidates e g Winston Churchill who was defeated at Dundee nonetheless while many leading Conservatives e g former parliamentary leaders Arthur Balfour and Sir Austen Chamberlain and former Lord Chancellor Lord Birkenhead were not members of Bonar Law s government and hoped to hold the balance of power after the election comparisons were made with the Peelite group the ousted Conservative front bench of the late 1840s and 1850s this was not to be as Bonar Law won an overall majority It was the first election at which Labour surpassed the combined strength of both Liberal parties in votes and seats The election was also notable for Labour in that it saw future Prime Minister Clement Attlee elected as MP for Limehouse Some Liberal candidates stood calling for a reunited Liberal Party while others appear to have backed both Asquith and Lloyd George Few sources are able to agree on exact numbers and even in contemporary records held by the two groups some MPs were claimed for both sides By one estimate there were 29 seats where Liberals stood against one another This is thought to have cost them at least 14 seats 10 of them to Labour so in theory a reunited Liberal Party would have been much closer to and perhaps even ahead of Labour in terms of seats However in reality the two factions were on poor terms and Lloyd George was still hoping for a renewed coalition with the Conservatives 2 Neither of the leaders of the two main parties succeeded in enjoying their achievement in the election for very long within less than a month of the election Clynes was defeated in a leadership challenge by former Labour leader Ramsay MacDonald while Bonar Law would only last a little over seven months as Prime Minister before being forced to step down due to a terminal illness resulting in Stanley Baldwin succeeding him as both party leader and Prime Minister As a result Bonar Law was the shortest serving UK Prime Minister of the twentieth century Parliament was dissolved on 26 October Bonar Law died four days later 3 Party platforms editThe Conservative Party offered continuity to the electorate Bonar Law s election address stated The crying need of the nation have this moment Is that we should have tranquility and stability both at home and abroad so that the free scope should be given to the initiative and enterprise of our own citizens for it is in that way far more than by any action of the Government that we can hope to recover from the economic and social results of the war 4 The Labour Party proposed to nationalise the mines and railways to impose a levy on financial capital and to revise the peace treaties It promised a higher standard of living for workers higher wages and better housing 5 Results edit nbsp UK General Election 1922 Candidates Votes Party Leader Stood Elected Gained Unseated Net of total No Net Conservative Bonar Law 482 344 54 92 35 55 9 38 5 5 294 465 0 1 Labour J R Clynes 414 142 91 6 85 23 1 29 7 4 076 665 8 9 Liberal H H Asquith 334 62 44 21 23 10 1 18 9 2 601 486 5 9 National Liberal David Lloyd George 155 53 9 80 71 8 6 9 9 1 355 366 2 7 Ind Conservative N A 20 3 3 1 2 0 5 0 9 116 861 0 5 Independent N A 15 3 3 2 0 0 5 0 8 114 697 0 2 Nationalist Joseph Devlin 3 2 2 5 5 0 5 0 3 45 027 1 9 Communist Albert Inkpin 4 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 2 30 684 N A Agriculturalist Harry German 4 0 0 0 0 0 2 21 510 0 0 Independent Labour N A 4 1 0 1 1 0 17 0 1 18 419 1 0 Constitutionalist N A 1 1 1 0 1 0 17 0 1 16 662 N A Scottish Prohibition Edwin Scrymgeour 1 1 1 0 1 0 17 0 1 16 289 0 1 Independent Liberal N A 3 1 1 1 0 0 17 0 1 13 197 0 1 Irish Nationalist T P O Connor 2 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 12 614 N A Ind Unionist N A 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 9 861 N A Independent Communist N A 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 027 N A Anti Parliamentary Communist Guy Aldred 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 470 N A Total votes cast 13 748 300 Turnout 73 0 6 c Votes summary edit Popular vote Conservative 38 51 Labour 29 65 Liberal 18 92 National Liberal 9 86 Others 3 06 Seats summary edit Parliamentary seats Conservative 55 93 Labour 23 09 Liberal 10 08 National Liberal 8 62 Others 2 28 Transfers of seats editAll comparisons are with the 1918 election In some cases the change is due to the MP defecting to the gaining party Such circumstances are marked with a In other circumstances the change is due to the seat having been won by the gaining party in a by election in the intervening years and then retained in 1922 Such circumstances are marked with a From To No Seats Labour Labour HOLD 51 Abertillery Ayrshire South Bedwellty Bishop Auckland Broxtowe Burnley Burslem Caerphilly Chester le Street Deptford Derby one of two Dundee one of two Ebbw Vale Edinburgh Central Fife West Forest of Dean Gorton Govan Gower Hamilton Hemsworth Holland with Boston Houghton le Spring Ince Kingswinford Leeds South East Leek Morpeth Nelson and Colne Newton Normanton Nottingham West Ogmore Plaistow Platting Pontypool Preston one of two Rhondda East Rhondda West Rother Valley Rothwell St Helens Salford North Smethwick Wednesbury Wentworth West Bromwich Westhoughton Wigan Woolwich East Workington Liberal 1 Mansfield National Liberal 1 Wellingborough Conservative 4 Barnard Castle Bolton one of two Clitheroe Ormskirk Coalition Labour Labour 2 Cannock Gorbals Independent 1 Norwich one of two Conservative 1 Stockport one of two Independent Labour Independent Labour 1 Anglesey Labour 1 Aberdeen North Coalition National Democratic Labour 8 Aberdare Bradford East Don Valley East Ham South Hanley Leicester West Wallsend Walthamstow West Conservative 1 Duddeston National Socialist Party Labour 1 Silvertown Co operative Party Conservative 1 Kettering Labour Unionist abolished 3 Shankill St Anne s Victoria Sinn Fein Nationalist 1 Fermanagh and Tyrone one of two replaced Fermanagh South abolished 72 Londonderry City Tyrone NW N Donegal S Donegal W Donegal N Monaghan S Monaghan E Cavan W Cavan Connemara E Galway N Galway S Galway Leitrim N Roscommon S Roscommon N Sligo S Sligo E Mayo N Mayo S Mayo W Mayo Longford Louth King s County Queen s County Westmeath County Carlow N Meath S Meath Dublin College Green Dublin Harbour Dublin St Patrick s Dublin St Stephen s Green N Dublin S Dublin National University of Ireland Dublin Clontarf Dublin Pembroke Dublin St James s Dublin St Michan s E Wicklow W Wicklow N Kildare S Kildare N Kilkenny S Kilkenny N Wexford S Wexford E Clare W Clare E Tipperary Mid Tipperary N Tipperary S Tipperary Limerick City E Limerick W Limerick E Kerry N Kerry S Kerry W Kerry Cork both seats E Cork Mid Cork N Cork NE Cork S Cork SE Cork W Cork County Waterford Nationalist Nationalist 2 Fermanagh and Tyrone one of two replaced Tyrone North East abolished 3 Armagh South Belfast Falls Down South Irish Parliamentary Irish Nationalist 1 Liverpool Scotland abolished 2 East Donegal Waterford City Liberal Labour 9 Stirling and Falkirk Midlothian South amp Peebles Derbyshire North East Spennymoor Seaham Consett Leigh Bermondsey West Whitechapel and St Georges Liberal HOLD 15 Greenock Paisley Leith Edinburgh East Chesterfield Belper Derbyshire West Kingston upon Hull South West Lambeth North Wolverhampton East Middlesbrough West Penistone Merionethshire Montgomeryshire South Molton National Liberal 6 Camborne Western Isles Kinross and West Perthshire Loughborough Norwich one of two Berwick upon Tweed Conservative 5 Portsmouth Central Stourbridge Middlesbrough East Cardiff East Norfolk South National Liberal Scottish Prohibition 1 Dundee one of two Labour 37 Dunfermline Burghs Glasgow Cathcart Renfrewshire East Renfrewshire West Rutherglen Dumbarton Burghs Glasgow Bridgeton Crewe Carlisle Clay Cross Ilkeston Blaydon Jarrow Poplar South Stepney Limehouse Newcastle upon Tyne East Newcastle upon Tyne West Pontefract Sheffield Hillsborough Sheffield Attercliffe Sheffield Brightside Leeds South Doncaster Barnsley Batley and Morley Colne Valley Wrexham Llanelli Carnarvonshire Aberavon Merthyr Neath Pontypridd Swansea East Wansbeck Cornwall North Battersea North Liberal 13 Orkney and Shetland East Aberdeenshire amp Kincardineshire Aberdeenshire West and Kincardine Galloway South Shields Bethnal Green North East Leeds West Huddersfield Spen Valley Combined Scottish Universities one of three Eye Banff Kilmarnock National Liberal HOLD 45 Combined English Universities one of two University of Wales Caithness and Sutherland Inverness Ross and Cromarty Moray and Nairn Montrose Burghs Argyll Partick Kirkcaldy Burghs Roxburgh amp Selkirk Berwick amp Haddington Stockport one of two Stockton on Tees Romford Bristol East Bristol North Bristol South Blackburn one of two Bolton one of two Heywood and Radcliffe Middleton amp Prestwich Oldham one of two Stretford Leicester East Camberwell North West Hackney Central Shoreditch Southwark Central Southwark North Southwark South East Northampton Lichfield Stoke Shipley Denbigh Flintshire Cardiganshire Carmarthen Pembrokeshire Carnarvon Brecon and Radnor Swansea West Norfolk South West Sheffield Park Speaker 1 Halifax Conservative 28 St Ives Perth Bedford Luton Cambridgeshire Isle of Ely Derbyshire South Barnstaple Sunderland one of two Leyton East East Ham North Stroud Thornbury Southampton both seats Buckrose Bosworth Kennington Peckham Banbury The Wrekin Lowestoft Sudbury Pudsey and Otley Leeds North Leeds Central Newport Monmouthshire Saffron Walden Ind Conservative 1 Dorset East Constitutionalist 1 Dartford Independent 1 Mossley Independent Conservative 2 Hackney South Sowerby Coalition Independent Labour 1 Norfolk North Speaker Liberal 1 Penrith and Cockermouth Independent Liberal Labour 1 Newcastle under Lyme Conservative Communist 1 Motherwell Labour 32 Clackmannan and Eastern Stirlingshire Stirlingshire West Lanarkshire North Glasgow Maryhill Glasgow Camlachie Bothwell Coatbridge Glasgow Springburn Glasgow Tradeston Glasgow St Rollox Glasgow Shettleston Linlithgow Durham Sedgefield Gateshead Stratford Accrington Eccles Farnworth Manchester Ardwick Oldham one of two Rochdale Bow and Bromley Camberwell North Edmonton Tottenham North Newcastle upon Tyne Central Elland Bradford Central Keighley Dewsbury Whitehaven Liberal 30 Aberdeen and Kincardine Central Forfarshire Fife East Edinburgh West Dumfriesshire Bedfordshire Mid Birkenhead East Derby one of two Tavistock Dorset North The Hartlepools Harwich Isle of Wight Worcester Holderness Kingston upon Hull Central Preston one of two Bootle Grantham Horncastle Bethnal Green South West Great Yarmouth Nottingham Central Oxford Taunton Chippenham Westbury Bradford South Louth Bodmin Independent Liberal 1 Cambridge University one of two Independent 1 Harrow Conservative HOLD 289 Cambridge University one of two Combined English Universities one of two Oxford University both seats London University Combined Scottish Universities two of three Aberdeen South Ayr Burghs Ayrshire N amp Bute Glasgow Central Hillhead Pollok Kelvingrove Dunbartonshire Lanark Edinburgh South Midlothian N Edinburgh North Abingdon Newbury Reading Windsor Aylesbury Buckingham Wycombe Cambridge Huntingdonshire Altrincham Birkenhead West Chester Eddisbury Knutsford Macclesfield Northwich Stalybridge and Hyde Wallasey Wirral Penryn and Falmouth Cumberland North Westmorland High Peak Exeter Honiton Plymouth Devonport Plymouth Drake Plymouth Sutton Tiverton Torquay Totnes Dorset South Dorset West Darlington Sunderland one of two Chelmsford Colchester Epping Essex SE Ilford Maldon Leyton West Southend Walthamstow E Upton Bristol Central Bristol West Cheltenham Cirencester and Tewkesbury Gloucester Aldershot Basingstoke Fareham New Forest amp Christchurch Petersfield Portsmouth North Portsmouth South Winchester Hereford Leominster Bewdley Dudley Evesham Kidderminster Hitchin St Albans Watford Hemel Hempstead Ealing Hornsey Twickenham Wood Green Finchley Brentford and Chiswick Hendon Spelthorne Uxbridge Willesden East Acton Enfield Tottenham South Willesden West Howdenshire Kingston upon Hull East Kingston upon Hull North West Ashford Bromley Canterbury Chatham Chislehurst Dover Faversham Gillingham Gravesend Hythe Isle of Thanet Maidstone Sevenoaks Tonbridge Barrow in Furness Blackburn one of two Blackpool Chorley Darwen Fylde Lancaster Lonsdale Rossendale Ashton under Lyne Bury Manchester Blackley Manchester Clayton Manchester Exchange Hulme Moss Side Rusholme Withington Royton Salford South Salford West E Toxteth Edge Hill Everton Liverpool Exchange Fairfield Kirkdale Walton Wavertree West Derby West Toxteth Southport Warrington Waterloo Widnes Harborough Leicester South Melton Brigg Gainsborough Grimsby Lincoln Rutland and Stamford Balham and Tooting Chelsea Clapham Dulwich Fulham East Hampstead Holborn Lewisham East Lewisham West Kensington South Hackney North Brixton Fulham West Hammersmith South Islington North Kensington North Battersea South Greenwich Islington East Hammersmith North Finsbury Islington South Islington West City of London both seats Mile End Stoke Newington Norwood Paddington North Paddington South Putney Rotherhithe St Marylebone St Pancras North St Pancras South East St Pancras South West Streatham Wandsworth Central Westminster Abbey Woolwich West King s Lynn Norfolk East Daventry Peterborough Hexham Newcastle upon Tyne North Tynemouth Bassetlaw Nottingham South Nottingham East Rushcliffe Newark Henley Ludlow Oswestry Shrewsbury Bath Bridgwater Frome Wells Weston super Mare Yeovil Burton Stafford Stone Tamworth Bilston Wolverhampton West Bury St Edmunds Ipswich Woodbridge Chertsey Croydon North Croydon South Epsom Farnham Guildford Kingston upon Thames Mitcham Reigate Surrey East Wimbledon Brighton both seats Chichester East Grinstead Eastbourne Hastings Horsham and Worthing Lewes Rye Nuneaton Coventry Aston Deritend Erdington King s Norton Ladywood Yardley Sparkbrook Birmingham West Edgbaston Handsworth Moseley Rugby Warwick and Leamington Devizes Salisbury Swindon York Cleveland Richmond Yorks Scarborough and Whitby Thirsk and Malton Barkston Ash Ripon Ecclesall Hallam Skipton Leeds North East Sheffield Central Bradford North Wakefield Rotherham Monmouth Llandaff amp Barry Cardiff C Cardiff S Ind Conservative 2 Westminster St George s Richmond Surrey Ulster Unionist Ulster Unionist 10 Antrim both seats replaced South Antrim and Antrim Mid Armagh replaced Armagh North Belfast East replaced Belfast Pottinger Belfast North replaced Belfast Duncairn Belfast South replaced Belfast Ormeau Belfast West replaced Belfast Woodvale Down both seats replaced Down East and Down North Londonderry replaced Londonderry North abolished 10 Antrim East Antrim North Armagh Mid Belfast Cromac Down Mid Down West Londonderry South Fermanagh North Tyrone South Queen s University of Belfast Irish Unionist abolished 2 Dublin Rathmines Dublin University one of two Ind Unionist abolished 1 Dublin University one of two National Liberal 1 Walsall Conservative 1 Bournemouth Silver Badge 1 Hertford 1 1 MP elected as an Anti Waste League candidate at a 1921 by election but moved to the Conservatives for the 1922 electionSee also editList of MPs elected in the 1922 United Kingdom general election 1922 United Kingdom general election in Scotland 1922 United Kingdom general election in Northern IrelandNotes edit Including Conservatives not elected under the Coalition Coupon As Coalition Liberals All parties shown Conservatives include Ulster Unionists National Liberals were party formed by Lloyd George s Coalition Liberals after leaving the government Their net seat change is compared with the Coalition Liberals number of seats after the 1918 election The seat and vote count figures for the Liberals given here include the Speaker of the House of CommonsReferences edit Jenkins 1964 p 495 Koss 1985 p 257 258 Parliamentary Election Timetables PDF 3rd ed House of Commons Library 25 March 1997 Retrieved 3 July 2022 Craig 1970 p 10 Somervell 1936 p 303 Craig 1970 pp 9 17 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 8 July 2014 Retrieved 23 May 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Sources edit Craig F W S ed 1970 British General Election Manifestos 1900 1966 Not available pp 9 17 Craig F W S ed 1989 British Electoral Facts 1832 1987 Dartmouth Gower ISBN 0900178302 Jenkins Roy 1964 Asquith first ed London Collins OCLC 243906913 Koss Stephen 1985 Asquith London Hamish Hamilton ISBN 978 0 231 06155 1 Somervell D C 1936 The Reign of King George V Faber and Faber Limited p 303External links editUnited Kingdom election results summary results 1885 1979 Archived 8 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine Manifestos edit 1922 Conservative manifesto 1922 Labour manifesto 1922 Liberal manifesto Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1922 United Kingdom general election amp oldid 1199056018, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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