1920 Louth by-election


The Louth by-election, 1920 was a parliamentary by-election for the British House of Commons constituency of Louth in Lincolnshire. Voting was held on 3 June 1920. The by-election took place 5 days after the Louth Flood of 29 May 1920 had claimed 23 lives.

Vacancy

The seat had become vacant on the death on 28 April of the Conservative Member of Parliament Henry Langton Brackenbury. He had represented the constituency since the 1918 general election, and previously been Louth's MP from January 1910 to December 1910.

Electoral history

The constituency was created in 1885. The Liberals had won the seat six times and the Unionists three times. It was a marginal seat in 1910 but in 1918 the Liberal MP, Timothy Davies surprisingly did not receive endorsement from the Coalition Government, which instead was given to his Unionist opponent. The result at that General Election in was;

Candidates

The writ for the by-election was moved on 13 May 1920. Polling Day was set for 3 June 1920, 36 days after the death of the former MP. On 25 May 1920 nominations closed to confirm that the election would be a two-way contest. Turnor immediately received the official endorsement of the Coalition Government and a letter of support from Prime Minister David Lloyd George and the Unionist Leader Bonar Law.
Given the nature of the constituency, agricultural issues played a prominent part in the campaign and a subject on which Turnor, the Unionist candidate, felt comfortable given his background. Wintringham, the Liberal candidate was known to be a strong supporter of the temperance movement. The issue of how to resolve problems in Ireland was high on the agenda of the politicians in London. The Liberals argued for the implementation of the Irish Home Rule Bill that had been passed in 1914.
On 29 May, 5 days before polling day, the flooding occurred causing much damage and claiming 23 lives. This event substantially restricted campaigning in the final week. Both campaigns agreed to cancel all planned meetings. The surprisingly large number of photographs that were taken of the flood aftermath was largely due to the presence of the press, who were already in the town, in advance of the by-election.
The Liberal campaign seemed to have gone down particularly well in the more rural areas and among women voters.

Result

The Unionist press were confidently predicting a Unionist victory. There was also talk of a very low turnout due to the recent flooding making it difficult for voters to get to the polls. Despite this difficulty, the turnout was actually higher than it had been at the previous general election. The Liberal candidate Thomas Wintringham, won the by-election, gaining the seat from the Unionists on a large 11.8% swing;
This was the Liberal Party's fourth gain of the parliament in just 18 months, equaling the number of gains made by the Labour party. The by-election was clear evidence that the Liberals could be restored to their pre-1918 position in agricultural constituencies where Labour candidates were unlikely to feature.

Aftermath

died in office the following year, triggering another by-election which was won by his wife Margaret. The result at that election was;