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1982 Birmingham Northfield by-election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1982 Birmingham Northfield by-election

← 1979 28 October 1982 1983 →

Constituency of Birmingham Northfield
Turnout55.0%
  First party Second party Third party
 
Lib
Candidate John Spellar Roger Gale Stephen Ridley
Party Labour Conservative Liberal
Popular vote 15,904 15,615 11,453
Percentage 36.3% 35.6% 26.1%
Swing Decrease 8.8% Decrease 9.8% Increase 18.0%

MP before election

Jocelyn Cadbury
Conservative

Elected MP

John Spellar
Labour

The Birmingham, Northfield by-election of 28 October 1982 was held after the death of Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) Jocelyn Cadbury on 31 July 1982. The seat was gained by the Labour Party in a defeat for Margaret Thatcher's government, ironically just after opinion polls showed an upswing in Conservative support following the victorious Falklands War campaign weeks earlier.

Candidates

  • John Spellar, the winning Labour candidate, would later serve as MP for Warley West.
  • Roger Gale would later serve as MP for North Thanet.
  • Stephen Ridley, a solicitor, ran on a campaign of introducing works councils to give workers more say in their jobs and improving local amenities.[1]
  • Ian Anderson emerged as the leading figure of the Flag Group wing of the National Front and later became leader of the party.
  • Peter Sheppard ran on an anti-National Front, anti-Margaret Thatcher platform. He was chairman of the All Birmingham Committee Against Racism and Fascism.[2]
  • Bill Boaks, a serial independent candidate during the 1970s who frequently managed only double figure vote totals, was standing in his final by-election (he was also a candidate in the Peckham by-election, which was held simultaneously).

Results

Birmingham, Northfield by-election, 1982[3]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour John Spellar 15,904 36.3 −8.8
Conservative Roger Gale 15,615 35.6 −9.8
Liberal Stephen Ridley 11,453 26.1 +18.0
National Front Ian Anderson 411 0.9 -0.2
Communist Peter Sheppard 349 0.8 N/A
People's Progressive Party Ronald Taylor 63 0.2 N/A
Democratic Monarchist, Public Safety, White Resident Bill Boaks 60 0.1 N/A
Majority 289 0.7
Turnout 43,855 55.0
Labour gain from Conservative Swing -0.51

Aftermath

The result gave the Labour Party its first gain in a by-election in Britain since 1971. Yet while Labour had regained the seat which it had lost in 1979, the Conservatives were reported to be delighted at only narrowly losing given that the seat had been their third most vulnerable based on the 1979 results. Norman Tebbit, then a Conservative Cabinet minister, noted his party had come "within an ace of holding one of our most marginal constituencies" and argued that the results in Northfield and the by-election held on the same day for the Peckham constituency showed that the intervention of the Alliance allowed Labour to win.[4] Writing in The Glasgow Herald, political journalist Geoffrey Parkhouse argued that winning Northfield saved Labour leader Michael Foot "from disaster", but the closeness of the result meant it was a "desperate victory" for him. He also argued that the results showed that Mrs Thatcher's Government was on course to win the next election, but that the Alliance's potential to take votes from the Conservatives could yet prevent them from gaining an overall majority.[4]

References

  1. ^ Ridley's election leaflet Archived 14 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Sheppard's election leaflet Archived 14 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Boothroyd, David. "Results of Byelections in the 1979-83 Parliament". United Kingdom Election Results. Archived from the original on 9 June 2000. Retrieved 19 September 2015.
  4. ^ a b Parkhouse, Geoffrey (29 October 1982). "Double Labour victory after two recounts". The Herald. Glasgow. Retrieved 16 February 2019.
This page was last edited on 21 May 2022, at 02:13
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