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1923 United Kingdom general election

The 1923 United Kingdom general election was held on Thursday 6 December 1923.[1] The Conservatives, led by Stanley Baldwin, won the most seats, but Labour, led by Ramsay MacDonald, and H. H. Asquith's reunited Liberal Party gained enough seats to produce a hung parliament. It is the most recent UK general election in which a third party (here, the Liberals) won over 100 seats. The Liberals' percentage of the vote, 29.7%, has not been exceeded by a third party at any general election since.

1923 United Kingdom general election

← 1922 6 December 1923 1924 →

All 615 seats in the House of Commons
308 seats needed for a majority
Turnout71.1%, 1.9 pp
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Stanley Baldwin Ramsay MacDonald H. H. Asquith
Party Conservative Labour Liberal
Last election 344 seats, 38.5% 142 seats, 29.7% 115 seats, 28.8%[a]
Seats won 258 191 158
Seat change 86 49 43
Popular vote 5,286,159 4,267,831 4,129,922
Percentage 38.0% 30.7% 29.7%
Swing 0.5 pp 1.0 pp 0.9 pp

Colours denote the winning party—as shown in § Results

Prime Minister before election

Stanley Baldwin
Conservative

Prime Minister after election

Ramsay MacDonald
Labour

MacDonald formed the first ever Labour government with tacit support from the Liberals. Rather than trying to bring the Liberals back into government, Asquith's motivation for permitting Labour to enter power was that he hoped they would prove to be incompetent and quickly lose support. Being a minority, MacDonald's government only lasted ten months and another general election was held in October 1924.

Overview

In May 1923, Prime Minister Bonar Law fell ill and resigned on 22 May,[2] after just 209 days in office. He was replaced by Chancellor of the Exchequer, Stanley Baldwin. The Labour Party had also changed leaders since the previous election, after J. R. Clynes was defeated in a leadership challenge by former leader Ramsay MacDonald.

Having won an election just the year before, Baldwin's Conservative Party had a comfortable majority in the House of Commons and could have waited another four years, but the government was concerned. Baldwin felt the need to receive a mandate from the people, which, if successful, would strengthen his grip on the Conservative Party leadership and allow him to introduce tariff reform and imperial preference as protectionist trade policies over the objections of the free trade elements of his party.

Oxford historian and Conservative MP John Marriott depicts the gloomy national mood:

The times were still out of joint. Mr. Baldwin had indeed succeeded in negotiating (January 1923) a settlement of the British debt to the United States, but on terms which involved an annual payment of £34 million, at the existing rate of exchange. The French remained in the Ruhr. Peace had not yet been made with Turkey; unemployment was a standing menace to national recovery; there was continued unrest among the wage-earners, and a significant strike among farm labourers in Norfolk.

Confronted by these difficulties, convinced that economic conditions in England called for a drastic change in fiscal policy, and urged thereto by the Imperial Conference of 1923, Mr. Baldwin decided to ask the country for a mandate for Preference and Protection.[3]

Parliament was dissolved on 16 November[4] and the result backfired on Baldwin, who lost a host of seats to Labour and the Liberals, resulting in a hung parliament. A reformation of the Conservative-Liberal coalition which had governed the country until the previous year was not practical, as Baldwin had alienated both of the two most prominent Liberals, Asquith and David Lloyd George.

Faced with the choice of supporting either a minority Conservative or Labour government on an issue-by-issue basis, Asquith ultimately chose the latter, partly because Lloyd George's faction was vehemently opposed to working with Baldwin (though Asquith's allies were themselves unenthusiastic about such a prospect), and partly because he believed that Labour's electoral success thus far was mostly the result of the previous split in the Liberal Party, and that a Labour government would expose the party's policies as unworkable, allowing for the Liberals to overtake them at the next election. The Liberals therefore combined with Labour to vote down the King's Speech prepared by Baldwin, causing his government to fall. For the first time in history, Labour formed a government.

Results

 
191 158 258 8
Labour Liberal Conservative O
1923 United Kingdom general election
Candidates Votes
Party Leader Stood Elected Gained Unseated Net % of total % No. Net %
  Conservative Stanley Baldwin 536 258 23 109 −86 41.95 38.0 5,286,159 −0.5
  Labour Ramsay MacDonald 427 191 64 15 +49 31.06 30.7 4,267,831 +1.0
  Liberal H. H. Asquith 457 158 86 43 +43 25.69 29.7 4,129,922 +0.9
  Nationalist Joseph Devlin 2 2 0 0 0 0.3 0.3 43,835 N/A
  Independent N/A 6 2 0 1 −1 0.325 0.3 36,802 −0.5
  Communist Albert Inkpin 4 0 0 1 −1 0.2 34,258 0.0
  Belfast Labour David Robb Campbell 1 0 0 0 0 0.2 22,255 N/A
  Independent Labour N/A 4 0 0 1 −1 0.2 17,331 0.0
  Independent Liberal N/A 4 1 1 1 0 0.1 0.1 16,184 0.0
  Constitutionalist N/A 1 0 0 1 −1 0.1 15,500 0.0
  Ind. Conservative N/A 1 0 0 3 −3 0.1 15,171 −0.8
  Scottish Prohibition Edwin Scrymgeour 1 1 0 0 0 0.1 12,877 0.0
  Irish Nationalist N/A 2 1 0 0 0 0.2 0.1 10,322 N/A
  Christian Pacifist N/A 1 1 1 0 0 0.0 570 N/A

Votes summary

Popular vote
Conservative
38.01%
Labour
30.68%
Liberal
29.69%
Others
1.62%

Seats summary

Parliamentary seats
Labour
31.06%
Conservative
41.95%
Liberal
25.69%
Others
1.30%

Constituency results

Transfers of seats

  • All comparisons are with the 1922 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 1923. Such circumstances are marked with a †.
From To No. Seats
Communist Liberal 1 Battersea North
Conservative 1 Motherwell
Labour Labour (HOLD) 125 Aberdeen North, Ayrshire South, Bishop Auckland, Chester-le-Street, Derby (one of two), Dundee (one of two), Edinburgh Central, Fife West, Govan, Hamilton, Houghton-le-Spring, Workington, Plaistow, Forest of Dean, Burnley, Nelson and Colne, Preston (one of two), Ince, Platting, Westhoughton, Wigan, Salford North, Newton, St Helens, Holland with Boston, Deptford, Woolwich East, Morpeth, Broxtowe, Nottingham West, Kingswinford, Leek, Smethwick, Wednesbury, West Bromwich, Hemsworth, Leeds South East, Normanton, Rother Valley, Rothwell, Wentworth, Abertillery, Bedwellty, Ebbw Vale, Pontypool, Caerphilly, Gower, Ogmore, Rhondda East, Rhondda West, Glasgow Gorbals, Manchester Gorton, Cannock, East Ham South, Walthamstow West, Leicester West, Wallsend, Hanley, Bradford East, Don Valley, Aberdare, Silvertown, Midlothian South & Peebles, Derbyshire North East, Spennymoor, Seaham, Consett, Leigh, Whitechapel and St Georges, Wansbeck, Newcastle-under-Lyme, Dunfermline Burghs, Renfrewshire East, Renfrewshire West, Rutherglen, Dumbarton Burghs, Glasgow Bridgeton, Crewe, Clay Cross, Ilkeston, Blaydon, Jarrow, Poplar South, Stepney Limehouse, Pontefract, Sheffield Hillsborough, Sheffield Attercliffe, Sheffield Brightside, Leeds South, Doncaster, Barnsley, Batley and Morley, Colne Valley, Wrexham, Llanelli, Aberavon, Merthyr, Neath, Swansea East, Norfolk North, 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, Stratford, Eccles, Farnworth, Manchester Ardwick, Oldham (one of two), Bow and Bromley, Camberwell North, Edmonton, Tottenham North, Newcastle upon Tyne Central, Bradford Central, Pontypridd
Liberal 12 Accrington, Bermondsey West, Burslem, Carnarvonshire, Dewsbury, Elland, Gateshead, Keighley, Newcastle upon Tyne East, Newcastle upon Tyne West, Rochdale, Stirling and Falkirk
Conservative 2 Cathcart, Sedgefield
Independent Labour Liberal 1 Anglesey
Scottish Prohibition Scottish Prohibition 1 Dundee (one of two)
Nationalist Nationalist 2 Fermanagh and Tyrone (both seats)
Irish Nationalist Irish Nationalist 1 Liverpool Scotland
Liberal Labour 5 Bethnal Green North-East, Derby (one of two), Huddersfield, Leeds West, Mansfield
Liberal (HOLD) 45 Greenock, Paisley, Leith, Edinburgh East, Chesterfield, Kingston upon Hull South West, Lambeth North, Wolverhampton East, Middlesbrough West, Penistone, Merionethshire, Montgomeryshire, Orkney and Shetland, East Aberdeenshire & Kincardineshire, Galloway, South Molton, South Shields, Spen Valley, Combined Scottish Universities (one of three), Aberdeen and Kincardine Central†, Forfarshire, Fife East, Edinburgh West, Dumfriesshire, Bedfordshire Mid, Birkenhead East, Tavistock, Dorset North, The Hartlepools, Harwich, Isle of Wight, Kingston upon Hull Central, Preston (one of two), Bootle, Horncastle, Bethnal Green South-West, Great Yarmouth, Nottingham Central, Oxford, Taunton, Chippenham, Westbury, Bradford South, Louth, Walsall
Conservative 7 Aberdeenshire West and Kincardine, Penrith and Cockermouth, Belper, Derbyshire West, Worcester, Holderness, Grantham
National Liberal Labour 19 Kirkcaldy Burghs, Glasgow Partick, Kilmarnock, Berwick & Haddington, Bristol East, Bristol North, Dartford, Bolton (one of two), Leicester East, Shoreditch, Southwark North, Southwark South East, Norwich (both seats), Northampton, Wellingborough, Lichfield, Shipley, Swansea West
Liberal 27 Caithness and Sutherland*, Inverness*, Ross and Cromarty*, Western Isles, Banff*, Montrose Burghs*, Argyll*, Stockport (one of two), Cornwall North*, Stockton-on-Tees, Bristol South*, Blackburn (one of two), Heywood and Radcliffe*, Oldham (one of two)*, Stretford, Camberwell North-West*, Hackney Central, Southwark Central*, Stoke*, Denbigh, Flintshire*, Carmarthen, Pembrokeshire*, Carnarvon*, Brecon and Radnor*, Combined English Universities (one of two)*, Camborne
Independent Liberal 1 Cardiganshire
Christian Pacifist 1 University of Wales
Conservative 6 Moray and Nairn, Kinross and West Perthshire, Romford, Middleton & Prestwich, Sheffield Park, Norfolk South West
Independent Liberal 2 Eye, Cambridge University (one of two)
Independent Independent 2 Mossley, Harrow
Speaker Speaker 1 Halifax
Conservative Labour 40 Dunbartonshire, Lanark, Midlothian & Peebles North, Reading, Birkenhead West, Barnard Castle, Leyton East, East Ham North, Essex SE, Maldon, Upton, Gravesend, Manchester Clayton, Salford South, Salford West, Warrington, Liverpool Edge Hill†, Greenwich, Kennington, Hammersmith North, Finsbury, Hackney South, Islington South, Islington West, Stepney Mile End, Rotherhithe, St Pancras North, St Pancras South East, Norfolk South, Kettering, The Wrekin, Frome, Ipswich, Coventry, Enfield, Tottenham South, Willesden West, Wakefield, Rotherham, Cardiff South
Liberal 69 Perth, Edinburgh North, Luton, Abingdon, Newbury, Aylesbury, Wycombe, Huntingdonshire, Isle of Ely, Altrincham, Stalybridge and Hyde, Wirral, Penryn and Falmouth, St Ives, Barnstaple, Plymouth Devonport, Tiverton, Torquay, Totnes, Chelmsford, Stroud, Thornbury, Basingstoke, Portsmouth Central, Hemel Hempstead, Sevenoaks, Blackpool, Darwen, Lancaster, Lonsdale, Manchester Blackley, Manchester Exchange, Manchester Moss Side, Manchester Rusholme, Manchester Withington, Royton, Liverpool Wavertree, Liverpool West Derby, Southport, Bosworth, Harborough, Leicester South, Gainsborough, Hackney North, Brixton, Islington East, Stoke Newington, King's Lynn, Norfolk East, Hexham, Nottingham East, Shrewsbury, Bath, Bridgwater, Wells, Weston-super-Mare, Sudbury, Chichester, Nuneaton, Rugby, Finchley, Willesden East†, Devizes, Salisbury, Cleveland, Middlesbrough East, Bradford North, Sowerby, Cardiff East
Conservative (HOLD) 226 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, Edinburgh South, Windsor, Buckingham, Cambridge, Chester, Eddisbury, Knutsford, Macclesfield, Northwich, Wallasey, Cumberland North, Westmorland, High Peak, Exeter, Honiton, Plymouth Drake, Plymouth Sutton, Dorset South, Dorset West, Darlington, Sunderland (both seats), Colchester, Epping, Ilford, Leyton West, Southend, Walthamstow E, Bristol Central, Bristol West, Cheltenham, Cirencester and Tewkesbury, Gloucester, Aldershot, Fareham, New Forest & Christchurch, Petersfield, Portsmouth North, Portsmouth South, Winchester, Hereford, Leominster, Bewdley, Dudley, Evesham, Kidderminster, Hitchin, St Albans, Watford, Ealing, Hornsey, Twickenham, Wood Green, Brentford and Chiswick, Hendon, Spelthorne, Uxbridge, Acton, Howdenshire, Kingston upon Hull East, Kingston upon Hull North West, Ashford, Bromley, Canterbury, Chatham, Chislehurst, Dover, Faversham, Gillingham, Hythe, Isle of Thanet, Maidstone, Tonbridge, Barrow-in-Furness, Blackburn (one of two), Chorley, Fylde, Rossendale, Ashton-under-Lyne, Bury, Hulme, E Toxteth, Everton, Liverpool Exchange, Fairfield, Kirkdale, Walton, West Toxteth, Waterloo, Widnes, Melton, Brigg, Grimsby, Lincoln, Rutland and Stamford, Balham and Tooting, Chelsea, Clapham, Dulwich, Fulham East, Hampstead, Holborn, Lewisham East, Lewisham West, Kensington South, Fulham West, Hammersmith South, Islington North, Kensington North, Battersea South, City of London (both seats), Norwood, Paddington North, Paddington South, Putney, St Marylebone, St Pancras South West, Streatham, Wandsworth Central, Westminster Abbey, Woolwich West, Daventry, Peterborough, Newcastle upon Tyne North, Tynemouth, Bassetlaw, Nottingham South, Rushcliffe, Newark, Henley, Ludlow, Oswestry, Yeovil, Burton, Stafford, Stone, Tamworth, Bilston, Wolverhampton West, Bury St Edmunds, Woodbridge, Chertsey, Croydon North, Croydon South, Epsom, Farnham, Guildford, Kingston upon Thames, Mitcham, Reigate, Surrey East, Wimbledon, Brighton (both seats), East Grinstead, Eastbourne, Hastings, Horsham and Worthing, Lewes, Rye, Aston, Deritend, Erdington, King's Norton, Ladywood, Yardley, Sparkbrook, Birmingham West, Edgbaston, Handsworth, Moseley, Warwick and Leamington, Swindon, York, Richmond (Yorks), Scarborough and Whitby, Thirsk and Malton, Barkston Ash, Ripon, Ecclesall, Hallam, Skipton, Leeds North East, Sheffield Central, Monmouth, Llandaff & Barry, Cardiff C, Bournemouth, Hertford, Bedford, Cambridgeshire, Derbyshire South, Southampton (both seats), Buckrose, Peckham, Banbury, Lowestoft, Pudsey and Otley, Leeds North, Leeds Central, Newport (Monmouthshire), Bodmin, Saffron Walden, Stourbridge, Berwick-upon-Tweed, Birmingham Duddeston, Stockport (one of two), Clitheroe, Ormskirk, Bolton (one of two)
Ind. Conservative Conservative 3 Westminster St George's, Richmond (Surrey)*, Dorset East
Ulster Unionist Ulster Unionist 11 Antrim (both seats), Armagh, Belfast East, Belfast North, Belfast South, Belfast West, Down (both seats), Londonderry, Queen's University of Belfast

See also

Notes

  1. ^ This represents the joint total of the Liberals and the National Liberals in the 1922 election. The two parties reunified for the 1923 election.
  2. ^ All parties shown. Conservatives include Ulster Unionists. Liberal total is compared to joint total of Liberals and National Liberals in 1922.

References

  1. ^ Morgan, William Thomas (1924). "The British Elections of December, 1923". American Political Science Review. 18 (2): 331–340. doi:10.2307/1943928. ISSN 0003-0554.
  2. ^ . Number10.gov.uk. Archived from the original on 25 August 2008. Retrieved 31 July 2008.
  3. ^ Marriott 1948, p. 517; Doerr 1998, p. 75–76.
  4. ^ "Parliamentary Election Timetables" (PDF) (3rd ed.). House of Commons Library. 25 March 1997. Retrieved 3 July 2022.
  5. ^ (PDF). House of Commons Library. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 July 2014. Retrieved 23 May 2014.

Sources

Further reading

  • Cook, Chris P. (1969), "Wales and the General Election of 1923", Welsh History Review, 4 (4): 393–4
  • Craig, F. W. S., ed. (1975), British General Election Manifestos, 1900-74
  • Irwin, Douglas A. (1995), Industry or Class Cleavages over Trade Policy? Evidence from the British General Election of 1923 (PDF), National Bureau of Economic Research
  • Self, Robert (1992), "Conservative reunion and the general election of 1923: a reassessment", Twentieth Century British History, 3 (3): 249–273, doi:10.1093/tcbh/3.3.249
  • Smart, Nick (1996), "Baldwin's Blunder? The General Election of 1923", Twentieth Century British History, 7 (1): 110–139, doi:10.1093/tcbh/7.1.110

External links

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

Manifestos

  • 1923 Conservative manifesto
  • 1923 Liberal manifesto

1923, united, kingdom, general, election, held, thursday, december, 1923, conservatives, stanley, baldwin, most, seats, labour, ramsay, macdonald, asquith, reunited, liberal, party, gained, enough, seats, produce, hung, parliament, most, recent, general, elect. The 1923 United Kingdom general election was held on Thursday 6 December 1923 1 The Conservatives led by Stanley Baldwin won the most seats but Labour led by Ramsay MacDonald and H H Asquith s reunited Liberal Party gained enough seats to produce a hung parliament It is the most recent UK general election in which a third party here the Liberals won over 100 seats The Liberals percentage of the vote 29 7 has not been exceeded by a third party at any general election since 1923 United Kingdom general election 1922 6 December 1923 1924 outgoing memberselected members All 615 seats in the House of Commons308 seats needed for a majorityTurnout71 1 1 9 pp First party Second party Third party Leader Stanley Baldwin Ramsay MacDonald H H AsquithParty Conservative Labour LiberalLast election 344 seats 38 5 142 seats 29 7 115 seats 28 8 a Seats won 258 191 158Seat change 86 49 43Popular vote 5 286 159 4 267 831 4 129 922Percentage 38 0 30 7 29 7 Swing 0 5 pp 1 0 pp 0 9 ppColours denote the winning party as shown in ResultsPrime Minister before electionStanley BaldwinConservative Prime Minister after election Ramsay MacDonaldLabourMacDonald formed the first ever Labour government with tacit support from the Liberals Rather than trying to bring the Liberals back into government Asquith s motivation for permitting Labour to enter power was that he hoped they would prove to be incompetent and quickly lose support Being a minority MacDonald s government only lasted ten months and another general election was held in October 1924 Contents 1 Overview 2 Results 2 1 Votes summary 2 2 Seats summary 2 3 Constituency results 3 Transfers of seats 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 6 1 Sources 7 Further reading 8 External links 8 1 ManifestosOverview EditIn May 1923 Prime Minister Bonar Law fell ill and resigned on 22 May 2 after just 209 days in office He was replaced by Chancellor of the Exchequer Stanley Baldwin The Labour Party had also changed leaders since the previous election after J R Clynes was defeated in a leadership challenge by former leader Ramsay MacDonald Having won an election just the year before Baldwin s Conservative Party had a comfortable majority in the House of Commons and could have waited another four years but the government was concerned Baldwin felt the need to receive a mandate from the people which if successful would strengthen his grip on the Conservative Party leadership and allow him to introduce tariff reform and imperial preference as protectionist trade policies over the objections of the free trade elements of his party Oxford historian and Conservative MP John Marriott depicts the gloomy national mood The times were still out of joint Mr Baldwin had indeed succeeded in negotiating January 1923 a settlement of the British debt to the United States but on terms which involved an annual payment of 34 million at the existing rate of exchange The French remained in the Ruhr Peace had not yet been made with Turkey unemployment was a standing menace to national recovery there was continued unrest among the wage earners and a significant strike among farm labourers in Norfolk Confronted by these difficulties convinced that economic conditions in England called for a drastic change in fiscal policy and urged thereto by the Imperial Conference of 1923 Mr Baldwin decided to ask the country for a mandate for Preference and Protection 3 Parliament was dissolved on 16 November 4 and the result backfired on Baldwin who lost a host of seats to Labour and the Liberals resulting in a hung parliament A reformation of the Conservative Liberal coalition which had governed the country until the previous year was not practical as Baldwin had alienated both of the two most prominent Liberals Asquith and David Lloyd George Faced with the choice of supporting either a minority Conservative or Labour government on an issue by issue basis Asquith ultimately chose the latter partly because Lloyd George s faction was vehemently opposed to working with Baldwin though Asquith s allies were themselves unenthusiastic about such a prospect and partly because he believed that Labour s electoral success thus far was mostly the result of the previous split in the Liberal Party and that a Labour government would expose the party s policies as unworkable allowing for the Liberals to overtake them at the next election The Liberals therefore combined with Labour to vote down the King s Speech prepared by Baldwin causing his government to fall For the first time in history Labour formed a government Results Edit 191 158 258 8Labour Liberal Conservative O1923 United Kingdom general election Candidates VotesParty Leader Stood Elected Gained Unseated Net of total No Net Conservative Stanley Baldwin 536 258 23 109 86 41 95 38 0 5 286 159 0 5 Labour Ramsay MacDonald 427 191 64 15 49 31 06 30 7 4 267 831 1 0 Liberal H H Asquith 457 158 86 43 43 25 69 29 7 4 129 922 0 9 Nationalist Joseph Devlin 2 2 0 0 0 0 3 0 3 43 835 N A Independent N A 6 2 0 1 1 0 325 0 3 36 802 0 5 Communist Albert Inkpin 4 0 0 1 1 0 2 34 258 0 0 Belfast Labour David Robb Campbell 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 22 255 N A Independent Labour N A 4 0 0 1 1 0 2 17 331 0 0 Independent Liberal N A 4 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 16 184 0 0 Constitutionalist N A 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 15 500 0 0 Ind Conservative N A 1 0 0 3 3 0 1 15 171 0 8 Scottish Prohibition Edwin Scrymgeour 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 877 0 0 Irish Nationalist N A 2 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 10 322 N A Christian Pacifist N A 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 570 N ATotal votes cast 13 909 017 Turnout 71 1 5 b Votes summary Edit Popular voteConservative 38 01 Labour 30 68 Liberal 29 69 Others 1 62 Seats summary Edit Parliamentary seatsLabour 31 06 Conservative 41 95 Liberal 25 69 Others 1 30 Constituency results Edit For a full list of the results by constituency see Constituency election results in the 1923 United Kingdom general election Transfers of seats EditAll comparisons are with the 1922 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 1923 Such circumstances are marked with a From To No SeatsCommunist Liberal 1 Battersea NorthConservative 1 MotherwellLabour Labour HOLD 125 Aberdeen North Ayrshire South Bishop Auckland Chester le Street Derby one of two Dundee one of two Edinburgh Central Fife West Govan Hamilton Houghton le Spring Workington Plaistow Forest of Dean Burnley Nelson and Colne Preston one of two Ince Platting Westhoughton Wigan Salford North Newton St Helens Holland with Boston Deptford Woolwich East Morpeth Broxtowe Nottingham West Kingswinford Leek Smethwick Wednesbury West Bromwich Hemsworth Leeds South East Normanton Rother Valley Rothwell Wentworth Abertillery Bedwellty Ebbw Vale Pontypool Caerphilly Gower Ogmore Rhondda East Rhondda West Glasgow Gorbals Manchester Gorton Cannock East Ham South Walthamstow West Leicester West Wallsend Hanley Bradford East Don Valley Aberdare Silvertown Midlothian South amp Peebles Derbyshire North East Spennymoor Seaham Consett Leigh Whitechapel and St Georges Wansbeck Newcastle under Lyme Dunfermline Burghs Renfrewshire East Renfrewshire West Rutherglen Dumbarton Burghs Glasgow Bridgeton Crewe Clay Cross Ilkeston Blaydon Jarrow Poplar South Stepney Limehouse Pontefract Sheffield Hillsborough Sheffield Attercliffe Sheffield Brightside Leeds South Doncaster Barnsley Batley and Morley Colne Valley Wrexham Llanelli Aberavon Merthyr Neath Swansea East Norfolk North 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 Stratford Eccles Farnworth Manchester Ardwick Oldham one of two Bow and Bromley Camberwell North Edmonton Tottenham North Newcastle upon Tyne Central Bradford Central Pontypridd Liberal 12 Accrington Bermondsey West Burslem Carnarvonshire Dewsbury Elland Gateshead Keighley Newcastle upon Tyne East Newcastle upon Tyne West Rochdale Stirling and FalkirkConservative 2 Cathcart SedgefieldIndependent Labour Liberal 1 Anglesey Scottish Prohibition Scottish Prohibition 1 Dundee one of two Nationalist Nationalist 2 Fermanagh and Tyrone both seats Irish Nationalist Irish Nationalist 1 Liverpool ScotlandLiberal Labour 5 Bethnal Green North East Derby one of two Huddersfield Leeds West MansfieldLiberal HOLD 45 Greenock Paisley Leith Edinburgh East Chesterfield Kingston upon Hull South West Lambeth North Wolverhampton East Middlesbrough West Penistone Merionethshire Montgomeryshire Orkney and Shetland East Aberdeenshire amp Kincardineshire Galloway South Molton South Shields Spen Valley Combined Scottish Universities one of three Aberdeen and Kincardine Central Forfarshire Fife East Edinburgh West Dumfriesshire Bedfordshire Mid Birkenhead East Tavistock Dorset North The Hartlepools Harwich Isle of Wight Kingston upon Hull Central Preston one of two Bootle Horncastle Bethnal Green South West Great Yarmouth Nottingham Central Oxford Taunton Chippenham Westbury Bradford South Louth WalsallConservative 7 Aberdeenshire West and Kincardine Penrith and Cockermouth Belper Derbyshire West Worcester Holderness GranthamNational Liberal Labour 19 Kirkcaldy Burghs Glasgow Partick Kilmarnock Berwick amp Haddington Bristol East Bristol North Dartford Bolton one of two Leicester East Shoreditch Southwark North Southwark South East Norwich both seats Northampton Wellingborough Lichfield Shipley Swansea WestLiberal 27 Caithness and Sutherland Inverness Ross and Cromarty Western Isles Banff Montrose Burghs Argyll Stockport one of two Cornwall North Stockton on Tees Bristol South Blackburn one of two Heywood and Radcliffe Oldham one of two Stretford Camberwell North West Hackney Central Southwark Central Stoke Denbigh Flintshire Carmarthen Pembrokeshire Carnarvon Brecon and Radnor Combined English Universities one of two CamborneIndependent Liberal 1 CardiganshireChristian Pacifist 1 University of WalesConservative 6 Moray and Nairn Kinross and West Perthshire Romford Middleton amp Prestwich Sheffield Park Norfolk South WestIndependent Liberal 2 Eye Cambridge University one of two Independent Independent 2 Mossley HarrowSpeaker Speaker 1 HalifaxConservative Labour 40 Dunbartonshire Lanark Midlothian amp Peebles North Reading Birkenhead West Barnard Castle Leyton East East Ham North Essex SE Maldon Upton Gravesend Manchester Clayton Salford South Salford West Warrington Liverpool Edge Hill Greenwich Kennington Hammersmith North Finsbury Hackney South Islington South Islington West Stepney Mile End Rotherhithe St Pancras North St Pancras South East Norfolk South Kettering The Wrekin Frome Ipswich Coventry Enfield Tottenham South Willesden West Wakefield Rotherham Cardiff SouthLiberal 69 Perth Edinburgh North Luton Abingdon Newbury Aylesbury Wycombe Huntingdonshire Isle of Ely Altrincham Stalybridge and Hyde Wirral Penryn and Falmouth St Ives Barnstaple Plymouth Devonport Tiverton Torquay Totnes Chelmsford Stroud Thornbury Basingstoke Portsmouth Central Hemel Hempstead Sevenoaks Blackpool Darwen Lancaster Lonsdale Manchester Blackley Manchester Exchange Manchester Moss Side Manchester Rusholme Manchester Withington Royton Liverpool Wavertree Liverpool West Derby Southport Bosworth Harborough Leicester South Gainsborough Hackney North Brixton Islington East Stoke Newington King s Lynn Norfolk East Hexham Nottingham East Shrewsbury Bath Bridgwater Wells Weston super Mare Sudbury Chichester Nuneaton Rugby Finchley Willesden East Devizes Salisbury Cleveland Middlesbrough East Bradford North Sowerby Cardiff EastConservative HOLD 226 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 Edinburgh South Windsor Buckingham Cambridge Chester Eddisbury Knutsford Macclesfield Northwich Wallasey Cumberland North Westmorland High Peak Exeter Honiton Plymouth Drake Plymouth Sutton Dorset South Dorset West Darlington Sunderland both seats Colchester Epping Ilford Leyton West Southend Walthamstow E Bristol Central Bristol West Cheltenham Cirencester and Tewkesbury Gloucester Aldershot Fareham New Forest amp Christchurch Petersfield Portsmouth North Portsmouth South Winchester Hereford Leominster Bewdley Dudley Evesham Kidderminster Hitchin St Albans Watford Ealing Hornsey Twickenham Wood Green Brentford and Chiswick Hendon Spelthorne Uxbridge Acton Howdenshire Kingston upon Hull East Kingston upon Hull North West Ashford Bromley Canterbury Chatham Chislehurst Dover Faversham Gillingham Hythe Isle of Thanet Maidstone Tonbridge Barrow in Furness Blackburn one of two Chorley Fylde Rossendale Ashton under Lyne Bury Hulme E Toxteth Everton Liverpool Exchange Fairfield Kirkdale Walton West Toxteth Waterloo Widnes Melton Brigg Grimsby Lincoln Rutland and Stamford Balham and Tooting Chelsea Clapham Dulwich Fulham East Hampstead Holborn Lewisham East Lewisham West Kensington South Fulham West Hammersmith South Islington North Kensington North Battersea South City of London both seats Norwood Paddington North Paddington South Putney St Marylebone St Pancras South West Streatham Wandsworth Central Westminster Abbey Woolwich West Daventry Peterborough Newcastle upon Tyne North Tynemouth Bassetlaw Nottingham South Rushcliffe Newark Henley Ludlow Oswestry Yeovil Burton Stafford Stone Tamworth Bilston Wolverhampton West Bury St Edmunds Woodbridge Chertsey Croydon North Croydon South Epsom Farnham Guildford Kingston upon Thames Mitcham Reigate Surrey East Wimbledon Brighton both seats East Grinstead Eastbourne Hastings Horsham and Worthing Lewes Rye Aston Deritend Erdington King s Norton Ladywood Yardley Sparkbrook Birmingham West Edgbaston Handsworth Moseley Warwick and Leamington Swindon York Richmond Yorks Scarborough and Whitby Thirsk and Malton Barkston Ash Ripon Ecclesall Hallam Skipton Leeds North East Sheffield Central Monmouth Llandaff amp Barry Cardiff C Bournemouth Hertford Bedford Cambridgeshire Derbyshire South Southampton both seats Buckrose Peckham Banbury Lowestoft Pudsey and Otley Leeds North Leeds Central Newport Monmouthshire Bodmin Saffron Walden Stourbridge Berwick upon Tweed Birmingham Duddeston Stockport one of two Clitheroe Ormskirk Bolton one of two Ind Conservative Conservative 3 Westminster St George s Richmond Surrey Dorset EastUlster Unionist Ulster Unionist 11 Antrim both seats Armagh Belfast East Belfast North Belfast South Belfast West Down both seats Londonderry Queen s University of BelfastSee also EditList of MPs elected in the 1923 United Kingdom general election 2019 United Kingdom general election the next UK general election after 1923 to be held in December 1923 United Kingdom general election in Northern IrelandNotes Edit This represents the joint total of the Liberals and the National Liberals in the 1922 election The two parties reunified for the 1923 election All parties shown Conservatives include Ulster Unionists Liberal total is compared to joint total of Liberals and National Liberals in 1922 References Edit Morgan William Thomas 1924 The British Elections of December 1923 American Political Science Review 18 2 331 340 doi 10 2307 1943928 ISSN 0003 0554 Andrew Bonar Law Number10 gov uk Archived from the original on 25 August 2008 Retrieved 31 July 2008 Marriott 1948 p 517 Doerr 1998 p 75 76 Parliamentary Election Timetables PDF 3rd ed House of Commons Library 25 March 1997 Retrieved 3 July 2022 Election Statistics UK 1918 2007 PDF House of Commons Library Archived from the original PDF on 8 July 2014 Retrieved 23 May 2014 Sources Edit Craig F W S 1989 British Electoral Facts 1832 1987 Dartmouth Gower ISBN 0900178302 Doerr Paul W 1998 British foreign policy 1919 1939 Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 0719046718 Marriott J A R 1948 Modern England 1885 1945Further reading EditCook Chris P 1969 Wales and the General Election of 1923 Welsh History Review 4 4 393 4 Craig F W S ed 1975 British General Election Manifestos 1900 74 Irwin Douglas A 1995 Industry or Class Cleavages over Trade Policy Evidence from the British General Election of 1923 PDF National Bureau of Economic Research Self Robert 1992 Conservative reunion and the general election of 1923 a reassessment Twentieth Century British History 3 3 249 273 doi 10 1093 tcbh 3 3 249 Smart Nick 1996 Baldwin s Blunder The General Election of 1923 Twentieth Century British History 7 1 110 139 doi 10 1093 tcbh 7 1 110External links EditUnited Kingdom election results summary results 1885 1979 Archived 8 October 2020 at the Wayback MachineManifestos Edit 1923 Conservative manifesto 1923 Labour manifesto 1923 Liberal manifesto Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1923 United Kingdom general election amp oldid 1135251682, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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