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1963 Labour Party Shadow Cabinet election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Elections to the Labour Party's Shadow Cabinet (more formally, its "Parliamentary Committee") occurred in November 1963. In addition to the 12 members elected, the Leader (Harold Wilson), Deputy Leader (George Brown), Labour Chief Whip (Herbert Bowden), Labour Leader in the House of Lords (A. V. Alexander), and Labour Chief Whip in the House of Lords (the Earl of Lucan) were automatically members.[1]

All existing members of the Shadow Cabinet were re-elected. However, as Wilson had succeeded to the leadership of the party, he did not need to stand in the election, and Douglas Jay won the newly available seat.[1]

Colour
key
Retained in the Shadow Cabinet
Joined the Shadow Cabinet
Voted out of the Shadow Cabinet
Rank
Candidate
Constituency
Votes
1 Michael Stewart Fulham 184
2 James Callaghan Cardiff South East 175
3 Douglas Houghton Sowerby 164
4 Frank Soskice Newport 159
5 Patrick Gordon Walker Smethwick 156
6 Tom Fraser Hamilton 146
7 Denis Healey Leeds East 143
8 Ray Gunter Southwark 137
9= Fred Lee Newton 135
9= Fred Willey Sunderland North 135
11 Douglas Jay Battersea North 135
12 Dick Mitchison Kettering 123
13 Richard Crossman Coventry East 102
14 Anthony Greenwood Rossendale 90
15 Tony Benn Bristol South East 82
16 Arthur Bottomley Middlesbrough East 78
17 Elwyn Jones West Ham South 77
18 Anthony Crosland Great Grimsby 72
19 Roy Jenkins Birmingham Stechford 64
20 George Thomas Cardiff West 58
21 Bob Edwards Bilston 57
22= Fenner Brockway Eton and Slough 55
22= Barbara Castle Blackburn 55
24 Reg Prentice East Ham North 52
25 Judith Hart Lanark 50
26 Alice Bacon Leeds South East 46
27 Harold Davies Leek 42
28 Ben Parkin Paddington North 40
29 George Thomson Dundee East 37

References

  1. ^ a b Greenfield, Edward (22 November 1963). "All 'Shadow' Cabinet members re-elected". The Guardian.
This page was last edited on 25 January 2024, at 18:40
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