Woolwich East by-election, 1921

Woolwich East in the Parliamentary County of London from 1918 to 1949.

The Woolwich East by-election, 1921 was a parliamentary by-election held on 2 March 1921 for the British House of Commons constituency of Woolwich East, in the Metropolitan Borough of Woolwich in London.

Vacancy

The seat had become vacant on the resignation of the constituency's Labour Member of Parliament (MP), Will Crooks, due to ill-health. Crooks was a noted trade unionist and working-class organiser, and had represented Woolwich East and its predecessor seat, Woolwich, since a by-election in 1903, with a gap between the two general elections of 1910.

1918 General Election: Woolwich East
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Labour Rt Hon. Will Crooks Unopposed N/A N/A
Labour hold Swing N/A

Candidates

Ramsay MacDonald

Campaign

The newly formed Communist Party of Great Britain urged voters to abstain, saying ""that while the coalition candidate stands openly and avowedly for capitalism in all its ramifications, its industrial autocracy, its attacks on trade unions, its exploitation, its predatory imperialism, the Labour candidate stands for Capitalism and all its manifestations, none the less surely because its purpose is hidden under high sounding words". [1]

Result

Gee took the seat with a majority of nearly 700 votes.

Woolwich East by-election, 1921
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Coalition Conservative Capt. Robert Gee, VC 13,724 51.3 N/A
Labour Rt Hon. James Ramsay MacDonald 13,081 48.7 N/A
Majority 683 2.6 N/A
Turnout 26,805 78.5 N/A
Coalition Conservative gain from Labour Swing N/A

Aftermath

Gee held the seat until the 1922 election, when Harry Snell retook the seat for Labour.

1922 General Election: Woolwich, East
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Labour Harry Snell 15,620 57.1
Conservative Capt. Robert Gee, VC 11,714 42.9
Majority 3,906 14.2
Turnout 33,993 80.4
Labour gain from Conservative Swing

MacDonald would go on to be elected MP for Aberavon in 1922, and be re-elected Leader of the Labour Party, then become Prime Minister after the 1923 election.

Sources

Ramsay MacDonald campaigning at Woolwich

See also

References

Bibliography

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