Winston Churchill lost his seat of Dundee in the 1922 general election as a National Liberal follower of David Lloyd George. The election was the only time a challenger standing as a prohibitionist was elected as an MP in the UK.

Background

Dundee was a two member constituency at this point. Leading into 1922 there were two MPs, Churchill and the Labour (but in 1918 Unionist supported) Member of Parliament, Alexander Wilkie, who retired in 1922.

Churchill had held the seat since a by-election in 1908 and had easily won the constituency in the previous general election in 1918, topping the poll in a seat that he had called "a seat for life" in 1908 due to its status as a Liberal safe seat.[1]

In his annual constituency visit the year before Churchill noticed a much more hostile atmosphere than before with his agent worried about the progress of the Labour Party in Dundee and the Lord Provost of Dundee refusing to endorse his big set piece speech.[2]

Candidates

As well as Churchill another National Liberal candidate David McDonald, who owned a local engineering company, ran.[3] He was a popular local candidate who eventually polled higher than Churchill and had been reported as saying that he would have been promised more votes only if he had "dropped Mr Churchill".[4]

Robert Pilkington was nominated to oppose Winston Churchill by a rebel group of Asquithian Liberals including Garnet Wilson.[5] His campaign fell flat after reassurances from Churchill quietened the local Liberals and in the 1923 he won the seat of Keighley in West Yorkshire.

Edwin Scrymgeour was a preacher and a councillor on Dundee City Council and had stood at every Parliamentary election in Dundee since the 1908 Dundee by-election. In Parliament, on issues other than prohibition, Scrymgeour generally supported the Labour Party. He was a popular figure and around 5,000 voters only voted for him, not giving their second vote to another candidate.[6]

E. D. Morel was a Labour Party candidate with few previous links to Dundee. He was an ex radical Liberal who had formed the Congo Reform Association and had been prominent in the pacifist inclined Union of Democratic Control during the First World War eventually leading to involvement with the Labour Party in 1918.

Willie Gallacher was a trade unionist and very early Communist candidate who would later represent West Fife and be the last Communist MP.

Campaign

The campaign got off to a poor start for Churchill due to an attack of appendicitis and physical weakness.[7]

Churchill was also opposed by both the Dundee newspapers, both owned by the anti coalition Conservative D C Thomson, and Churchill was so frustrated with the press opposition that he threatened the proprietor with setting up his own paper.[8]

Scrymgeour had attracted the crucial support of John Sime who led the very strong locally based Dundee and District Union of Jute and Flax Workers.

Defeat for Churchill

Despite not being opposed by any Conservative candidate Churchill was defeated by the sole Labour candidate E. D. Morel and Scrymgeour, the only MP ever to be elected for the Scottish Prohibition Party.[9] Morel was considerably to the left of Wilkie, his Labour predecessor.

Although this was the second election for the Dundee seat held with universal male suffrage and (limited) female suffrage under the Representation of the People Act 1918, Churchill was to partially blame this for his defeat saying "The great extensions of the franchise fundamentally altered the political character of Dundee ... and great numbers of very poor women and mill girls, streamed to the poll during the last two hours of the voting."[10] Dundee now had a majority female electorate and this has been seen by later observers as a contributing factor to Churchill's defeat.[11]

Morel regarded Churchill as a warmonger and took pride in having defeated him: "I look upon Churchill as such a personal force for evil that I would take up the fight against him with a whole heart".[12]

Aftermath

Churchill later wrote that he was "without an office, without a seat, without a party, and without an appendix",[13] although he became one of 50 Companions of Honour named in Lloyd George's 1922 Dissolution Honours list.[14]

After the 1923 general election was called, seven Liberal associations asked Churchill to stand as their candidate, and he selected Leicester West, but he did not win the seat.[15] A Labour government led by Ramsay MacDonald took power. Churchill had hoped they would be defeated by a Conservative-Liberal coalition.[16] He strongly opposed the MacDonald government's decision to loan money to Soviet Russia and feared the signing of an Anglo-Soviet Treaty.[17]

On 19 March 1924, alienated by Liberal support for Labour, Churchill stood as an independent anti-socialist "Constitutionalist" candidate in the Westminster Abbey by-election but was defeated.[18] In May, he addressed a Conservative meeting in Liverpool and declared that there was no longer a place for the Liberal Party in British politics. He said that Liberals must back the Conservatives to stop Labour and ensure "the successful defeat of socialism".[19] In July, he agreed with Conservative leader Stanley Baldwin that he would be selected as a Conservative candidate in the next general election, which was held on 29 October. Churchill stood at Epping, but he still described himself as a "Constitutionalist".[20] The Conservatives were victorious and Baldwin formed the new government. Although Churchill had no background in finance or economics, Baldwin appointed him as Chancellor of the Exchequer.[21]

Local Effect

This was also a shift in Dundee's political history with one historian saying "1922 marked the final moment of the shift from a position of Whig/Liberal dominance, which had endured since the 1832 Reform Act, to a Labour predominance which was to last most of the twentieth century."[22] Within a Scottish context this was seen as a particularly stark reversal for the National Liberals who supported Lloyd George, with Churchill securing the second highest proportion of the vote for a National Liberal candidate in Scotland in 1918 but receiving the second lowest in 1922.[23]

Result

General election 1922: Dundee (2 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Scottish Prohibition Edwin Scrymgeour 32,578 27.6 +12.5
Labour E. D. Morel 30,292 25.6 -10.5
National Liberal David Johnstone MacDonald 22,244 18.8 N/A
National Liberal Winston Churchill 20,466 17.3 -20.2
Liberal Robert Pilkington 6,681 5.7 N/A
Communist Willie Gallacher 5,906 5.0 New
Majority 10,334 8.8 N/A
Majority 8,048 6.8 -14.2
Turnout 118,167 80.5 +33.9
Scottish Prohibition gain from National Liberal Swing
Labour hold Swing

References

  1. CHURCHILL; WHY CELEBRATED FUTURE PM WAS REJECTED BY HIS SCOTS CONSTITUENTS THE DUNDEE YEARS, Anna Burnside, Daily Record (Scotland), Jan 24, 2015
  2. "Churchill in Dundee, 1921". 4 October 2020.
  3. "General Election Special 1: Parliamentary Elections in Dundee 1910-2010". 26 April 2010.
  4. Dundee advertiser, 14 November 1923, quoted in Dundee's Disenchantment with Churchill, The Scottish Historical Review, Vol. 49, No. 147, Part 1 (Apr., 1970), p. 87
  5. Wilson, Garnet (1966). The Making of a Lord Provost. Dundee: David Winter & Son Ltd. p. 86.
  6. D Southgate "Politics and representation in Dundee 1832-1963' in J. Jackson, ed, "The third statistical account of Scotland: the city of Dundee", cited in footnote 106, CHURCHILL'S DEFEAT IN DUNDEE, 1922, AND THE DECLINE OF LIBERAL POLITICAL ECONOMY, TOMLINSON, JIM. Historical Journal , Sep2020, Vol. 63 Issue 4, p980-1006, 27p. Publisher: Cambridge University Press., Database: Complementary Index
  7. CHURCHILL; WHY CELEBRATED FUTURE PM WAS REJECTED BY HIS SCOTS CONSTITUENTS THE DUNDEE YEARS, Anna Burnside, Daily Record (Scotland), Jan 24, 2015
  8. Henry Pelling, Winston Churchill, page 280
  9. "Discontent, War & the Impact of Revolution in Dundee". Archives, Records and Artefacts at the University of Dundee. University of Dundee. February 2012. Retrieved 2 February 2016.
  10. Thoughts and Adventures, Winston Churchill, pages 211 & 212
  11. The First World War in a 'women's town': Dundee 1914-1922, Jim Tomlinson, Women's History Review, 31(2), pp. 173-197
  12. Wright, Patrick. Iron Curtain: From Stage to Cold War. New York: Oxford University Press, 2007. p. 170.
  13. Jenkins 2001, p. 376.
  14. "No. 32766". The London Gazette (Supplement). 10 November 1922. p. 8017.
  15. Rhodes James 1970, pp. 150–151; Gilbert 1991, p. 459; Jenkins 2001, pp. 382–384.
  16. Gilbert 1991, p. 460.
  17. Gilbert 1991, pp. 462–463.
  18. Rhodes James 1970, pp. 151–153; Gilbert 1991, pp. 460–461.
  19. Rhodes James 1970, p. 154; Gilbert 1991, p. 462.
  20. Rhodes James 1970, p. 154; Gilbert 1991, pp. 462–463; Ball 2001, p. 311.
  21. Rhodes James 1970, pp. 155, 158; Gilbert 1991, p. 465.
  22. CHURCHILL'S DEFEAT IN DUNDEE, 1922, AND THE DECLINE OF LIBERAL POLITICAL ECONOMY, TOMLINSON, JIM. Historical Journal , Sep2020, Vol. 63 Issue 4, p980-1006, 27p. Publisher: Cambridge University Press., Database: Complementary Index
  23. Dundee's Disenchantment with Churchill, The Scottish Historical Review, Vol. 49, No. 147, Part 1 (Apr., 1970), p. 87

Bibliography

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