Hanley by-election, 1912

The Hanley by-election, 1912 was a by-election held for the British House of Commons constituency of Hanley on 13 July 1912.

Vacancy

The seat had become vacant on 28 June 1912 when the sitting Labour Member of Parliament (MP), 60-year-old Enoch Edwards died. Edwards had represented the constituency since gaining it from the Unionists at the 1906 General Election as a Liberal candidate. In 1909, Edwards crossed from Liberal to Labour in accordance with the wishes of his trade union. Even though he contested both the 1910 General Elections as a Labour candidate, he was still supported by the Liberal Party.

Enoch Edwards
General Election December 1910:
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Labour Enoch Edwards 8,343 64.2
Conservative George Herman Rittner 4,658 35.8
Majority 28.4
Turnout
Labour hold Swing

Candidates

The Conservative candidate was George Rittner, who was standing here for the third time. The Labour candidate was Samuel Finney. Unlike Enoch Edwards, Finney had no sympathies with the Liberal party, so the local Liberal Association considered fielding a candidate. A neighbouring Liberal MP, Josiah Wedgwood encouraged his friend, Robert Leonard Outhwaite to stand as a Liberal Party candidate. Liberal Chancellor of the Exchequer, David Lloyd George was looking towards a Liberal Land Campaign to gain support for a reform of land taxation to introduce a 'Single Tax'. Like Josiah Wedgwood, Outhwaite was a strong supporter of the 'Single Tax'. The local Liberal Association therefore adopted Outhwaite as candidate to campaign on a 'Single Tax' platform.

The Campaign

The Liberal campaign received a boost when John Redmond, the Leader of the nationalist Irish Parliamentary Party, sent a letter of support to Outhwaite due to his support for the Liberal Government's Irish Home Rule Bill.

Result

RL Outhwaite
Hanley by-election, 1912
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Liberal Robert Leonard Outhwaite 6,647 46.4
Conservative George Herman Rittner 5,993 41.8
Labour Samuel Finney 1,694 11.8
Majority 654 4.57
Liberal gain from Labour Swing
Turnout

The result was a boost for Lloyd George's land reform campaign and shortly afterwards, H. H. Asquith agreed to commit the Liberal government to a reform of land taxation. It also demonstrated that the Liberal party could be successful against the Labour party by pursuing a radical agenda.

See also

References

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