United Kingdom by-election records

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an annotated list of notable records from Parliamentary by-elections in the United Kingdom. A by-election occurs when a Member of Parliament (MP) vacates a House of Commons seat (due to resignation, death, disqualification or expulsion) during the course of a parliament.

Scope of these records[]

Although the history of Parliament is much older, most of these records concern only the period since 1945. Earlier exceptional results are listed separately.

Parliaments of England, Scotland, Ireland and the various unions of these Kingdoms had been assembled since the medieval period, though these bodies only gradually evolved to be democratically elected by the populace and records are incomplete. England and Wales had numerous "rotten boroughs" with tiny and tightly controlled electorates until the Reform Act of 1832. The most recent significant expansions of the electoral franchise were the Representation of the People Act 1918 which allowed some women to vote for the first time and greatly expanded the franchise of men, overall more than doubling the size of the electorate, and the Representation of the People (Equal Franchise) Act 1928 which expanded the franchise of women to be equal to that of men.

Furthermore, there are various additional factors complicating comparisons between earlier results and modern cases. Among the most significant aspects of historical elections which are no longer present are:

  • Frequent interventions and withdrawals of parties in different seats.
  • Frequent coalitions between parties, splits within parties and floor-crossing by members.
  • Uncontested elections and truces between parties, in particular during both World Wars.
  • Generally more significant competition from independent candidates and minor parties.
  • Multi-member seats and university seats (abolished 1950).
  • Higher frequency of by-elections, partly due to the practice of often uncontested ministerial by-elections which ended in 1926.
  • Generally higher turnouts, although several wartime elections exhibited the lowest recorded turnouts.
  • Generally higher variation in size of constituency electorates.

Since 1945, the legal and general political situation regarding by-elections has been broadly stable, allowing for meaningful comparison of records.

These records include those from Northern Ireland, however the politics of Northern Ireland is mostly separate from that of Great Britain so comparisons can be problematic.

Glossary[]

For comparison purposes the following definitions have been adopted.

  • Gain - victory by a party that was not victorious at the immediate previous election
  • Loss - defeat of a party that was victorious at the immediate previous election
  • Hold - victory by a party that was victorious at the immediate previous election
  • Win - victory by a party. ambiguous term that could mean either a gain or a hold
  • Incumbent - the party that held the seat at the immediately previous election, irrespective of any intervening change of candidate or candidate's change of party
  • Third party - In England, since 1922, the "third party" has been the Liberal Party and its successor, the Liberal Democrats. Additionally, in Scotland and Wales the Scottish National Party (SNP) and Plaid Cymru are also considered to be third parties. Prior to 1922, the third party was the Labour Party.
  • Minor party - parties smaller than the third party
  • Uncontested - an election where only one candidate is put forward. No votes are actually cast and the candidate is by definition the victor.

Numerical records[]

For more information about what is meant by the term "swing", see Swing (United Kingdom)

Largest swings[]

Election Swing From To
1983 Bermondsey by-election 44.2 Labour Liberal
2014 Clacton by-election 44.11 Conservative UKIP
1973 Lincoln by-election 43.01 Labour Democratic Labour
1967 Hamilton by-election 37.9 Labour SNP
2012 Bradford West by-election 36.6 Labour Respect
1993 Christchurch by-election 35.4 Conservative Liberal Democrats
1988 Glasgow Govan by-election 33.1 Labour SNP
1979 Liverpool Edge Hill by-election 30.2 Labour Liberal
1994 Dudley West by-election 29.2 Conservative Labour
2003 Brent East by-election 28.9 Labour Liberal Democrats
1993 Newbury by-election 28.4 Conservative Liberal Democrats
2014 Rochester and Strood by-election 28.31 Conservative UKIP
2004 Birmingham Hodge Hill by-election 26.72 Labour Liberal Democrats
1962 Orpington by-election 26.3 Conservative Liberal
2021 Chesham and Amersham by-election 25.1 Conservative Liberal Democrats
1994 Dagenham by-election 23.12 Conservative Labour
1996 South East Staffordshire by-election 22.1 Conservative Labour
1994 Barking by-election 22.02 Conservative Labour
2008 Glasgow East by-election 22.6 Labour SNP
1976 Walsall North by-election 22.6 Labour Conservative
2016 Richmond Park by-election 21.73 Conservative Liberal Democrats
1968 Dudley by-election 21.2 Labour Conservative
1977 Ashfield by-election 20.9 Labour Conservative

1 By-elections where the seat was held by the incumbent MP.
2 By-elections where the seat was held by the incumbent party.
3 By-elections contested by the incumbent MP, who failed to gain re-election.

Largest fall in percentage share of vote[]

A party's share of the vote at a general election is not always matched at subsequent by-elections, but given the five-year maximum term of a Parliament, reductions of 20% or more are unusual. Those of 25% or more are listed below:

Election Fall: % Party Result
1948 Glasgow Camlachie by-election 51.3 Ind. Labour Party Unionist gain
1983 Bermondsey by-election 37.5 Labour Liberal gain
1969 Birmingham Ladywood by-election 33.4 Labour Liberal gain
1993 Christchurch by-election 32.5 Conservative Liberal Democrats gain
1946 Glasgow Bridgeton by-election 32.1 Ind. Labour Party Ind. Labour Party hold
1958 Rochdale by-election 31.7 Conservative Labour gain
1994 Dudley West by-election 30.2 Conservative Labour gain
1995 North Down by-election 29.9 NI Conservatives UK Unionist gain from Popular Unionist
1967 Hamilton by-election 29.7 Labour SNP gain
2004 Birmingham Hodge Hill by-election 29.6 Labour Labour hold
1961 Paisley by-election 29.5 Unionist Labour hold
2003 Brent East by-election 29.4 Labour Liberal Democrats gain
1993 Newbury by-election 29.0 Conservative Liberal Democrats gain
1968 Caerphilly by-election 28.7 Labour Labour hold
1999 Hamilton South by-election 28.7 Labour Labour hold
2014 Clacton by-election 28.4 Conservative UKIP gain
1962 West Lothian by-election 28.3 Unionist Labour hold
1979 Liverpool Edge Hill by-election 28.1 Labour Liberal gain
1958 Torrington by-election 27.7 Conservative Liberal gain
1968 Oldham West by-election 27.6 Labour Conservative gain
2009 Norwich North by-election 26.7 Labour Conservative gain
1933 Fulham East by-election 26.6 Conservative Labour gain
1948 Glasgow Gorbals by-election 25.5 Labour Labour hold
2019 Peterborough by-election 25.5 Conservative Labour hold
1962 West Derbyshire by-election 25.2 Conservative Conservative hold

In the 1934 Merthyr by-election the Independent Labour Party share dropped from 69.4% in the 1931 general election to 9.8% (a record 59.6% loss) losing the seat to the Labour Party. However, the 1931 election had no Labour Party candidate, and the MP, R. C. Wallhead, had previously been elected as a Labour candidate in prior elections, when the ILP was affiliated to Labour. Prior to his death, Wallhead joined the Labour Party, so this result could be classed as a Labour hold.

The 1919 East Antrim by-election saw the Irish Unionist party face its first Unionist opposition in the seat since 1906 (in the 1918 general election the heavily unionist area gave the Irish Unionist 94.6% of the vote in a contest with a Sinn Féin candidate). An Independent Unionist candidate won the seat, with the Irish Unionist share dropping by 52.8%

Worst results for other parties:

Election Fall: % Party Result
1982 Belfast South by-election 22.4 UUP UUP hold
2014 Heywood and Middleton by-election 17.6 Liberal Democrats Labour hold
2009 Glasgow North East by-election 14.0 Socialist Labour Labour gain from Speaker
2017 Copeland by-election 9.0 UKIP Conservative gain from Labour
1963 Kinross and Western Perthshire by-election 7.7 SNP Unionist hold
1986 Newry and Armagh by-election 7.7 Sinn Féin SDLP gain from Ulster Unionist
1963 Swansea East by-election 5.3 Plaid Cymru Labour hold

Largest increase in percentage share of vote[]

Election Increase in Share Party Result
1986 East Londonderry by-election 56.0 UUP UUP hold
2012 Bradford West by-election 52.8 Respect Respect gain
1983 Bermondsey by-election 50.9 Liberal Liberal gain
1986 South Antrim by-election 48.4 UUP UUP hold
1986 East Antrim by-election 47.5 UUP UUP hold
1986 North Antrim by-election 43.2 DUP DUP hold
2016 Batley and Spen by-election 42.6 Labour Labour hold
1993 Christchurch by-election 38.6 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats gain
1988 Glasgow Govan by-election 38.4 SNP SNP gain
1979 Liverpool Edge Hill by-election 36.8 Liberal Liberal gain
2014 Heywood and Middleton by-election 36.1 UKIP Labour hold
1986 Belfast East by-election 35.7 DUP DUP hold
1986 Belfast North by-election 35.3 UUP UUP hold
1973 Glasgow Govan by-election 31.6 SNP SNP gain
1986 Lagan Valley by-election 31.5 UUP UUP hold
2021 Chesham and Amersham by-election 30.4 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats gain
2016 Richmond Park by-election 30.3 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats gain
1981 Croydon North West by-election 29.5 Liberal Liberal gain
1968 Caerphilly by-election 29.3 Plaid Cymru Labour hold
2003 Brent East by-election 28.5 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats gain
1994 Dudley West by-election 28.0 Labour Labour gain
1987 Greenwich by-election 27.9 SDP SDP gain
1972 Merthyr Tydfil by-election 27.4 Plaid Cymru Labour gain
1966 Carmarthen by-election 27.4 Plaid Cymru Plaid Cymru gain
1991 Ribble Valley by-election 27.1 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats gain
1994 Monklands East by-election 26.9 SNP Labour hold
2004 Birmingham Hodge Hill by-election 26.1 Liberal Democrats Labour hold
2008 Glasgow East by-election 26.1 SNP SNP gain

Largest winning share of the vote[]

Winning shares of the vote above 90%, since 1918:

Candidate Party Election Votes % Share
Ernest Gates Conservative 1940 Middleton and Prestwich by-election 32,036 98.7
Ian Paisley DUP 1986 North Antrim by-election 33,937 97.4
John Craik-Henderson Conservative 1940 Leeds North East by-election 23,882 97.1
Charles Key Labour 1940 Bow and Bromley by-election 11,594 95.8
John Taylor UUP 1986 Strangford by-election 32,627 94.2
Clifford Forsythe UUP 1986 South Antrim by-election 30,087 94.1
William Ross UUP 1986 East Londonderry by-election 30,922 93.9
Arthur Woodburn Labour 1939 Clackmannanshire and East Stirlingshire by-election 15,645 93.7
Spencer Summers Conservative 1940 Northampton by-election 16,587 93.4
Harry Thorneycroft Labour 1942 Manchester Clayton by-election 8,892 93.3
James Hollins Labour 1940 Silvertown by-election 14,343 92.8
Francis Douglas Labour 1940 Battersea North by-election 9,947 92.6
Henry Willink Conservative 1940 Croydon North by-election 14,163 90.7
James Henry Molyneaux UUP 1986 Lagan Valley by-election 32,514 90.7

Lowest winning share of the vote[]

Winning shares of the vote below 35%, since 1918:

Candidate Party Election Votes % Share
Henry Strauss Conservative 1946 Combined English Universities by-election 5,483 30.0
Lisa Forbes Labour 2019 Peterborough by-election 10,484 30.9
Mike Thornton Liberal Democrats 2013 Eastleigh by-election 13,342 32.1
Edward Campbell Conservative 1930 Bromley by-election 12,782 32.4
George Machin Labour 1973 Dundee East by-election 14,411 32.7
Roy Jenkins SDP 1982 Glasgow Hillhead by-election 10,106 33.4
Guy Barnett Labour 1962 South Dorset by-election 13,783 33.5
James Carmichael Ind. Labour Party 1946 Glasgow Bridgeton by-election 6,351 34.3
Leah Manning Labour 1931 Islington East by-election 10,591 34.7
Kenneth Lindsay National Labour 1933 Kilmarnock by-election 12,577 34.8
Parmjit Singh Gill Liberal Democrats 2004 Leicester South by-election 10,274 34.9

The 1920 Stockport by-election, was held to elect two MPs. The winners' shares of the total vote were 25.6% and 25.1%. However, as each voter could cast two votes, the situation is not readily comparable to other by-elections in this period.

At the 1909 Sheffield Attercliffe by-election, the winning candidate took only 27.5% of the vote.

Lowest share of the vote[]

Major parties[]

Major parties winning 2% or less share of votes cast in a by-election, since 1918:

Candidate Party Election Votes % Share
Geoff Juby Liberal Democrats 2014 Rochester and Strood by-election 349 0.9
Stephen Arrundale Liberal Democrats 2021 Airdrie and Shotts by-election 220 1.0
Andrew Hagon Liberal Democrats 2021 Hartlepool by-election 349 1.2
Roger Goodfellow Liberal 1948 Glasgow Camlachie by-election 312 1.2
John Scott Duckers Liberal 1924 Westminster Abbey by-election 291 1.3
Andrew Graham Liberal Democrats 2014 Clacton by-election 483 1.3
Hugh Annand Liberal Democrats 2013 South Shields by-election 352 1.4
Robert McCreadie Liberal Democrats 1989 Glasgow Central by-election 411 1.5
Elizabeth Jones UKIP 2016 Tooting by-election 507 1.6
Natasa Pantelic Labour 2021 Chesham and Amersham by-election 622 1.6
Patrick Davies Labour 1997 Winchester by-election 944 1.7
Ian Miller Liberal 1967 Glasgow Pollok by-election 735 1.9
Steve Billcliffe Labour 1993 Newbury by-election 1,151 2.0

The worst Conservative performance was in the 1995 North Down by-election, where they took 2.1% of the votes cast.

The 'continuation' Social Democratic Party (SDP) took 0.4% of the vote at both the 1990 Upper Bann by-election and the Bootle by-election the following week.

Candidates winning fewer than ten votes[]

Since 1918:1
Votes Name Affiliation/Label Election
5 Bill Boaks Public Safety Democratic Monarchist White Resident 1982 Glasgow Hillhead by-election[1]
5 Smiley Smilie Independent 2016 Tooting by-election
5 Bobby Smith No description 2019 Peterborough by-election
5 Kailash Trivedi Independent Janata Party 1988 Kensington by-election[1]
7 John Connell Peace - stop ITN manipulation 1984 Chesterfield by-election
8 Esmond Bevan Systems Designer2 1983 Bermondsey by-election[1]
8 Tony Farnon Independent 2008 Haltemprice and Howden by-election
8 Norman Scarth Independent 2008 Haltemprice and Howden by-election
9 Bobby Smith Bring Back Elmo 2016 Tooting by-election
1 F. R. Lees, a Temperance Chartist, won no votes in the , as his supporters mistakenly believed that he had withdrawn.
2 Bevan put his occupation of "Systems Designer" in the description field of the nomination paper, which appeared on the ballot paper. He was an independent candidate.

Smallest majorities[]

All majorities of less than 1,000 since the Second World War. Bold entries indicate a new record.

Votes Election Result
57 1973 Berwick-upon-Tweed by-election Liberal gain
62 1967 Walthamstow West by-election Conservative gain
100 1986 West Derbyshire by-election Conservative hold
205 1965 Leyton by-election Conservative gain
219 1958 Torrington by-election Liberal gain
220 1962 Central Norfolk by-election Conservative hold
264 1977 Ashfield by-election Conservative gain
289 1982 Birmingham Northfield by-election Labour gain
293 1950 Dunbartonshire West by-election Labour hold
323 2021 Batley and Spen by-election Labour hold
359 1946 Combined English Universities by-election Conservative gain
365 2008 Glasgow East by-election SNP gain
395 1948 Glasgow Camlachie by-election Unionist gain
430 1980 Southend East by-election Conservative hold
437 1950 Brighouse and Spenborough by-election Labour hold
452 1946 Heywood and Radcliffe by-election Labour hold
460 2004 Birmingham Hodge Hill by-election Labour hold
478 1969 Swindon by-election Conservative gain
517 1969 Paddington North by-election Labour hold
520 1977 Grimsby by-election Labour hold
552 1983 Penrith and The Border by-election Conservative hold
556 1999 Hamilton South by-election Labour hold
557 1967 Manchester Gorton by-election Labour hold
559 1985 Brecon and Radnor by-election Liberal gain
571 1973 Glasgow Govan by-election SNP gain
617 2014 Heywood and Middleton by-election Labour hold
633 2006 Bromley and Chislehurst by-election Conservative hold
641 1960 Bolton East by-election Conservative hold
657 1956 Taunton by-election Conservative hold
666 1960 Brighouse and Spenborough by-election Conservative gain
683 2019 Peterborough by-election Labour hold
704 1962 South Dorset by-election Labour gain
705 2000 Falkirk West by-election Labour hold
740 1968 Bassetlaw by-election Labour hold
799 1986 Newcastle-under-Lyme by-election Labour hold
806 1955 Mid Ulster by-election Sinn Féin hold
815 1988 Kensington by-election Conservative hold
822 2000 South Antrim by-election DUP gain
865 1955 South Norfolk by-election Conservative hold
913 1950 Belfast West by-election UUP hold
917 1962 South Northamptonshire by-election Conservative hold
946 1973 Ripon by-election Liberal gain
971 1963 Dumfriesshire by-election Unionist hold
973 1962 Blackpool North by-election Conservative hold

Still smaller majorities have been recorded since 1918. The majority in the 1921 Penrith and Cockermouth by-election, was only 31 votes, and in the 1924 Westminster Abbey by-election it was 43 votes, while at the 1928 Carmarthen by-election it was 47 votes.[1] At the 1892 Cirencester by-election a majority of 3 for the Unionists was overturned on petition, where it was found that both candidates had an equal number of votes. A fresh by-election was called, which was won by the Liberals.

Turnout[]

Turnout is the percentage of registered electors who voted.

Highest turnout[]

The highest turnouts since 1918.

By-election Year Turnout %
1969 Mid Ulster by-election 1969 91.5%
1955 Mid Ulster by-election 1955 89.7%
1928 Ashton-under-Lyne by-election 1928 89.1%[1]
August 1981 Fermanagh and South Tyrone by-election 1981 88.6%
1956 Mid Ulster by-election 1956 88.4%
1923 Tiverton by-election 1923 88.1%[1]
1926 Darlington by-election 1926 87.6%[1]
1957 Carmarthen by-election 1957 87.4%[1]
April 1981 Fermanagh and South Tyrone by-election 1981 86.9%
1925 Stockport by-election 1925 85.7%[1]
1950 Brighouse and Spenborough by-election 1950 85.4%[1]

Turnout increased from general election[]

It is highly unusual for a by-election to attract a higher turnout in a seat than the previous general election.

By-election Turnout % Turnout %
at general election
Increase %
1936 Ross and Cromarty by-election 65.2 50.8 14.4
1958 Torrington by-election 80.6 69.2 11.4
1938 Bridgwater by-election 82.3 72.7 9.6
1938 Oxford by-election 76.3 67.3 9.0
1928 Carmarthen by-election 76.6 67.9 8.7
1928 St Ives by-election 77.4 69.1 8.3
1969 Mid Ulster by-election 91.5 83.9 7.6
1958 East Aberdeenshire by-election 65.9 59.8 6.1
1926 Kingston upon Hull Central by-election 82.8 77.1 5.7
1927 Bosworth by-election 84.6 80.8 3.8
1927 Leith by-election 73.9 70.5 3.4
1932 Cardiganshire by-election 70.4 67.5 2.9
1929 North Lanarkshire by-election 82.3 79.9 2.4
1957 Carmarthen by-election 87.4 85.1 2.3
1948 Paisley by-election 76.0 73.9 2.1
1967 Rhondda West by-election 82.2 80.3 1.9
1948 Croydon North by-election 74.8 73.2 1.6
August 1981 Fermanagh and South Tyrone by-election 88.6 87.1 1.5
1926 Darlington by-election 87.6 86.1 1.5
1928 Linlithgowshire by-election 81.5 80.0 1.5
1973 Berwick-upon-Tweed by-election 75.0 73.7 1.3
1970 South Ayrshire by-election 76.3 75.1 1.2
1955 Mid Ulster by-election 89.7 88.6 1.1
1948 Wigan by-election 81.4 80.4 1.0
1986 Newry and Armagh by-election 76.9 76.0 0.9
1928 Ashton-under-Lyne by-election 89.1 88.3 0.8
1977 Great Grimsby by-election 70.2 69.4 0.8
1938 Ipswich by-election 82.8 82.1 0.7
1982 Glasgow Hillhead by-election 76.4 75.7 0.7
1938 Walsall by-election 75.9 75.2 0.7
1958 Argyll by-election 67.1 66.6 0.5
1926 Smethwick by-election 78.6 78.2 0.4
1967 Hamilton by-election 73.7 73.3 0.4
1971 Macclesfield by-election 76.6 76.4 0.2

Lowest turnout[]

During the Second World War the electoral register was not kept up to date despite significant population movements, especially in the London area (which contains all three constituencies listed below). Consequently, only those eligible to vote in the constituency at the outbreak of war were eligible to vote in the by-elections and many voters were physically unable to as they were located elsewhere; in addition the major parties did not compete against each other. The lowest turnout in peacetime since 1918 was 18.2% at the 2012 Manchester Central by-election.[2] The lowest turnouts since 1918 have been:

Turnouts of less than 30% since 1945 (bold indicates a new post-war record)

By-election Turnout %
2012 Manchester Central by-election 18.2%
1999 Leeds Central by-election 19.6%
1958 Shoreditch and Finsbury by-election 24.9%
1999 Wigan by-election 25.0%
2000 Tottenham by-election 25.4%
2012 Cardiff South and Penarth by-election 25.7%
2016 Batley and Spen by-election 25.8%
1974 Newham South by-election 25.9%
2012 Middlesbrough by-election 26.0%
2012 Croydon North by-election 26.5%
2000 West Bromwich West by-election 27.6%
2011 Feltham and Heston by-election 28.8%
2000 Preston by-election 29.6%
1999 Kensington and Chelsea by-election 29.7%

Most candidates[]

Under current UK electoral law there is no upper or lower limit for candidature numbers, with the only required stipulation being the valid nomination of ten electors from the constituency. By-elections often attract "fringe" or novelty candidates, single-issue candidates, or independents. As with nominations in a general election, candidates must pay a £500 deposit, which is only refunded if the candidate wins 5% of the votes cast.

All by-elections with more than ten candidates are listed. Elections are listed in alphabetical order. Those that created a new record number appear in bold.

In 2017, the countermanded poll in Manchester Gorton had 11 candidates.

Year Number of candidates Election
2008 26 Haltemprice and Howden
1993 19 Newbury
1999 18 Kensington and Chelsea
1984 17 Chesterfield
2021 16 Batley and Spen
1983 Bermondsey
2003 Brent East
2021 Hartlepool
1988 15 Kensington
2019 Peterborough
1993 14 Christchurch
2012 Corby
2013 Eastleigh
2004 Hartlepool
2018 Lewisham East
1990 Mid Staffordshire
2016 Tooting
1989 Vauxhall
2016 Witney
2009 13 Glasgow North East
2014 Rochester and Strood
1996 South East Staffordshire
2012 12 Croydon North
1981 Croydon North West
2003 Ealing Southall
1999 Hamilton South
2008 Henley
2012 Manchester Central
2009 Norwich North
1997 Wirral South
2006 11 Bromley and Chislehurst
1986 Fulham
1978 Lambeth Central
2004 Leicester South
2014 Newark
2019 Newport West
2012 Rotherham
2007 Sedgefield
1990 Upper Bann
1997 Uxbridge
1989 Vale of Glamorgan
1981 Warrington
2016 10 Batley and Spen
1977 Birmingham Ladywood
1990 Bradford North
1977 City of London and Westminster South
2008 Crewe and Nantwich
1994 Dudley West
1996 Hemsworth
1995 Littleborough and Saddleworth
2005 Livingston
2002 Ogmore
2010 Oldham East and Saddleworth
2016 Sleaford and North Hykeham
2017 Stoke-on-Trent Central

Fewest candidates[]

Year Number of candidates Election
1954 1 (uncontested) Armagh[3]
1953 North Down[3]
1952 North Antrim[3]
1951 Londonderry[3]
1946 Hemsworth1[3]
1986 2 Eight of the Northern Ireland by-elections2
1981 Fermanagh and South Tyrone
1971 Widnes1
1986 3 Ryedale
*1 The most recent mainland UK instance only is given.
*2 Four of these eight were between the Unionist incumbent and a "paper candidate" using the name "Peter Barry", the name of the then Irish Minister of Foreign Affairs.

Candidate records[]

Durable by-election candidates[]

Major parties[]

Former Labour cabinet minister Tony Benn contested no fewer than four by-elections during his career, topping the poll on each occasion: Bristol South East in 1950, 1961 and 1963, and Chesterfield in 1984. His first and last by-election victories were 33 years and 3 months apart.

Former cabinet minister and European Commissioner Roy Jenkins fought two different by-elections for the Social Democratic Party only eight months apart. He narrowly failed in the 1981 Warrington by-election before winning the 1982 Glasgow Hillhead by-election. He had been first elected as a Labour MP almost 34 years previously in the 1948 Southwark Central by-election.

Former Speaker of the House of Commons, Betty Boothroyd finally secured election at her third by-election attempt at the 1973 West Bromwich by-election. She had previously failed in the 1957 Leicester South East by-election and the 1968 Nelson and Colne by-election as well as the general elections of 1959 and 1970.

John Bickley of UKIP contested three by-elections (all in Greater Manchester) within two years - Wythenshawe and Sale East in February 2014, Heywood and Middleton in October 2014 and Oldham West and Royton in December 2015. He was defeated on each occasion, coming closest in Heywood and Middleton where he lost by less than 700 votes. Bickley also contested Heywood and Middleton at the 2015 general election, making a total of four parliamentary elections contested in fewer than 24 months.

Minor parties and independents[]

Perennial fringe candidates include such personalities as Bill Boaks, whose highest vote was at the 1982 Beaconsfield by-election with 99 votes. Screaming Lord Sutch was for most of his career the leader of the Official Monster Raving Loony Party. His highest vote total was 1,114 at the 1994 Rotherham by-election. Lindi St Clair of the Corrective Party contested eleven by-elections without success, her highest total being 216 votes as 'Lady Whiplash' at the 1990 Eastbourne by-election. Sutch's successor as leader of the Official Monster Raving Loony Party, Alan "Howling Laud" Hope, has also contested eleven by-elections.[4]

John Cartwright of the Official Monster Raving Loony Party has contested three by-elections without success, his most successful total being 188 at the 2007 Ealing Southall by-election. Under various ballot paper descriptions, David Bishop of the Church of the Militant Elvis label has stood at five by-elections, getting 99 votes at the 2012 Corby by-election, an increase over his previous high of ninety-three at 2011 Feltham and Heston by-election.

Pre-1945[]

Arthur Henderson was distinguished in being successful in no fewer than five by-elections in different seats, in Barnard Castle, Widnes, Newcastle upon Tyne East, Burnley, and Clay Cross.

Joseph Gibbins is the only person in modern times to gain the same seat twice in two different by-elections. He triumphed for Labour in the 1924 Liverpool West Toxteth by-election and the 1935 Liverpool West Toxteth by-election.

William O'Brien won four by-elections, in , North East Cork in 1887 and then Cork City in 1904 and 1914. On these last two occasions, he was re-elected having resigned the seat.

Prime Minister Winston Churchill contested five by-elections in his long career:

John Wilkes won the , and was then elected in the Middlesex by-elections of February, March and April 1769, on each occasion being subsequently expelled from the House of Commons.

Former MPs making a comeback at a by-election[]

Election MP Party notes
2012 Bradford West by-election1 George Galloway Respect returns after failing to win a seat in the 2010 general election
2000 South Antrim by-election1 William McCrea DUP returns after losing his Mid Ulster seat in the 1997 general election.
1999 Kensington and Chelsea by-election Michael Portillo Conservative returns after losing his Enfield Southgate seat at the 1997 general election.
1997 Beckenham by-election Jacqui Lait Conservative returns after losing her Hastings and Rye seat at the 1997 general election.
1988 Epping Forest by-election Steve Norris Conservative returns after losing his Oxford East seat at the 1987 general election.
1988 Glasgow Govan by-election1 Jim Sillars SNP He had first sat as a Labour MP (later as Scottish Labour) for South Ayrshire between 1970 and 1979.
1984 Chesterfield by-election Tony Benn Labour returns after losing his redrawn Bristol East seat at the 1983 general election.
1982 Beaconsfield by-election Tim Smith Conservative returns after losing his Ashfield seat in the 1979 general election.
1982 Glasgow Hillhead by-election2: Roy Jenkins SDP returns after a spell as European Commissioner, then co-founding the Social Democratic Party (SDP). He had first sat as a Labour MP for Southwark Central from 1948–50 and Birmingham Stechford from 1950-77.
1981 Crosby by-election1 Shirley Williams SDP returns as the first-elected SDP MP. She had first sat as a Labour MP for Hitchin 1964-74 and for Hertford and Stevenage 1974-79
1981 Warrington by-election Douglas Hoyle Labour returns after losing his Nelson and Colne seat in the 1979 general election.
1980 Southend East by-election Teddy Taylor Conservative returns after losing his Glasgow Cathcart seat at the 1979 general election
1979 South West Hertfordshire by-election Richard Page Conservative returns after losing his Workington seat in the 1979 general election
1979 Knutsford by-election Jock Bruce-Gardyne Conservative returns after losing his South Angus seat at the October 1974 general election.
1979 Clitheroe by-election David Waddington Conservative returns after losing his Nelson and Colne seat at the October 1974 general election.
1978 Glasgow Garscadden by-election Donald Dewar Labour returns after losing his Aberdeen South seat in the 1970 general election.
1977 Saffron Walden by-election Alan Haselhurst Conservative returns after losing his Middleton and Prestwich seat in the February 1974 general election.
1974 Newham South by-election Nigel Spearing Labour returns after losing his Acton seat in the February 1974 general election.
1972 Merthyr Tydfil by-election2 Edward Rowlands Labour returns after losing his Cardiff North seat in the 1970 general election.
1971 Greenwich by-election Guy Barnett Labour returns after losing his South Dorset seat in the 1964 general election.
1971 Southampton Itchen by-election Bob Mitchell Labour returns after losing his Southampton Test seat in the 1970 general election.
1970 St Marylebone by-election Kenneth Baker Conservative returns after losing his Acton seat in the 1970 general election.
1969 Chichester by-election Christopher Chataway Conservative returns after losing his Lewisham North seat in the 1966 general election.
1969 Brighton Pavilion by-election Julian Amery Conservative returns after losing his Preston North seat in the 1966 general election.
1968 New Forest by-election Patrick McNair-Wilson Conservative returns after losing his Lewisham West seat in the 1966 general election.
1968 Warwick and Leamington by-election Dudley Smith Conservative returns after losing his Brentford and Chiswick seat in the 1966 general election.
1967 West Derbyshire by-election James Scott-Hopkins Conservative returns after losing his Cornwall North seat in the 1966 general election.
1967 Brierley Hill by-election Fergus Montgomery Conservative returns after losing his Newcastle upon Tyne East seat in the 1964 general election.
1967 Honiton by-election Peter Emery Conservative returns after losing his Reading seat in the 1966 general election.
1965 Saffron Walden by-election Peter Kirk Conservative returns after losing his Gravesend seat in the 1964 general election.
1965 Salisbury by-election Michael Hamilton Conservative returns after losing his Wellingborough seat in the 1964 general election.
1965 East Grinstead by-election Geoffrey Johnson-Smith Conservative returns after losing his Holborn and St. Pancras South seat in the 1964 general election.
1965 Altrincham and Sale by-election Anthony Barber Conservative returns after losing his Doncaster seat in the 1964 general election.
1963 St Marylebone by-election Quintin Hogg Conservative returns after disclaiming his peerage. He had previously sat for Oxford 1938-1950.
1963 Kinross and Western Perthshire by-election Sir Alec Douglas-Home Unionist returns after disclaiming his peerage. He had previously sat for Lanark 1931-45 and 1950-51.
1963 Bristol South East by-election Tony Benn Labour returns after disclaiming his peerage. He had been disqualified after the death of his father in 1960, and his election in a 1961 by-election had been adjudged undue on petition.
1962 Middlesbrough East by-election Arthur Bottomley Labour returns after losing his Rochester and Chatham seat in the 1959 general election.
1960 Ebbw Vale by-election Michael Foot Labour returns after losing his Plymouth Devonport seat in the 1955 general election.
1956 Newport by-election Frank Soskice Labour returns after his Sheffield Neepsend seat was abolished at the 1955 general election.
1950 Sheffield Neepsend by-election Frank Soskice Labour returns after his Birkenhead East seat was abolished at the 1950 general election.
1913 Houghton-le-Spring by-election1 Thomas Edward Wing Liberal returns after losing his Grimsby seat at the December 1910 general election.
1911 Bootle by-election Bonar Law Conservative returns after failing to win Manchester North-West in the December 1910 general election.
1908 Dundee by-election Winston Churchill Liberal returns after losing his Manchester North West seat in a 1908 by-election, upon his appointment to the Board of Trade.
1906 Dulwich by-election Bonar Law Conservative returns after losing his Glasgow Blackfriars and Hutchesontown seat in the 1906 general election.
February 1906 City of London by-election Arthur Balfour Conservative returns after losing his Manchester East seat in the 1906 general election.

Notes:

1 by-election gain lost at the subsequent general election

2 by-election gain held at the subsequent general election

Former MPs failing in a by-election[]

  • 2021 Batley and Spen by-election: Former Glasgow Kelvin, Bethnal Green and Bow, and Bradford West MP George Galloway, formerly of Labour and then Respect and now representing the Workers Party of Britain, wins 21% of the vote.
  • 2021 Hartlepool by-election: Former Stockton South MP Paul Williams, the Labour candidate, lost the seat in the party's greatest-ever reverse while in Opposition. Former Labour Colne Valley MP Thelma Walker also stands as an independent; and former Labour Lancaster and Wyre MP Hilton Dawson stands for the North East Party. Neither win more than 1% of the vote.
  • 2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election: Previous incumbent Chris Davies runs again after being removed by a recall petition and loses the seat to the Liberal Democrats.
  • 2019 Newport West by-election: Former Conservative Tatton MP Neil Hamilton stands for the UK Independence Party, winning 8.6% of the votes.
  • 2016 Richmond Park by-election: Incumbent Richmond Park MP Zac Goldsmith stands as an independent Conservative to protest against a third runway at Heathrow. He loses to the Liberal Democrats.
  • 2008 Haltemprice and Howden by-election: Former Vale of Glamorgan MP Walter Sweeney stands as an independent, winning 1% of the votes.
  • 2005 Cheadle by-election: Stephen Day fails to regain for the Conservatives a seat he lost by only 33 votes four years previously.
  • 1997 Winchester by-election: Gerald Malone fails to regain the seat for the Conservatives, after losing by only 2 votes six months previously.
  • 1993 Christchurch by-election: Robert Hayward loses one of the Conservatives' safest seats to the Liberal Democrats.
  • 1990 Eastbourne by-election: Richard Hickmet fails to defend the seat for the Conservatives, after publicly stating that for electors not to support him would be a moral victory for the Provisional Irish Republican Army.
  • 1989 Pontypridd by-election: Tom Ellis, former Labour and SDP MP, stands for the Social and Liberal Democrats, losing his deposit.
  • 1986 Fermanagh and South Tyrone by-election: Owen Carron fails to regain the seat for Sinn Féin that he held 1981-83.
  • 1982 Peckham by-election: Dick Taverne, former Labour and Democratic Labour MP, stands for the SDP, fails to take Labour seat.
  • 1982 Gower by-election: Gwynoro Jones, former Labour MP, stands for the SDP, fails to take Labour seat.
  • 1982 Beaconsfield by-election: Paul Tyler fails for the Liberals in a by-election held during the Falklands War.
  • 1981 Warrington by-election: Roy Jenkins narrowly fails to win for the SDP from Labour in its first parliamentary contest.
  • April 1981 Fermanagh and South Tyrone by-election: Harry West fails to regain his old seat against Bobby Sands
  • 1978 Hamilton by-election: Margo MacDonald fails to repeat the SNP's 1967 triumph.
  • 1978 Ilford North by-election: Thomas Iremonger, who had sat for the seat 1954-74, stands as an independent Conservative, winning a mere 1.5% of the vote.
  • 1977 Birmingham Stechford by-election: Terry Davis loses a safe Labour seat.
  • 1976 Walsall North by-election: David Winnick loses a safe Labour seat.
  • 1971 Liverpool Scotland by-election: Peter Mahon stands as an Independent Labour Anti-Abortion candidate, securing 10.3% of the vote.
  • 1969 Brighton Pavilion by-election: Thomas Skeffington-Lodge stands for Labour in a safe Conservative seat, 19 years after losing his seat.
  • 1967 Nuneaton by-election: Air Vice-Marshal Donald Bennett stands as a National Party candidate, 22 years after losing his seat as a Liberal MP.
  • 1965 Salisbury by-election: Horace Trevor-Cox stands as an independent Conservative, 20 years after losing his seat.
  • 1965 Leyton by-election: Patrick Gordon Walker narrowly loses a supposed safe seat.
  • 1962 South Dorset by-election: Angus Maude narrowly loses.
  • 1960 Bolton East by-election: Frank Byers stands for the Liberals.
  • 1956 Hereford by-election: Frank Owen fails to regain for the Liberals the seat he previously sat for 1929-1931.
  • 1956 Mid Ulster by-election: Michael O'Neill fails to regain the seat, a year after retiring as its MP.
  • 1948 Croydon North by-election: Air Vice-Marshal Donald Bennett stands for the Liberals, losing his deposit, and Harold Nicolson, for Labour, but fail to take a Conservative seat three years after both lost their respective seats.
  • 1941 Hornsey by-election, 1941 Hampstead by-election and two others: Noel Pemberton Billing fails to take a seat, 20 years after standing down as an independent MP.
  • 1924 Westminster Abbey by-election: Winston Churchill narrowly fails to take the seat, as a Constitutionalist.
  • 1923 Anglesey by-election: Edward Thomas John failed to defend the seat.
  • 1921 Woolwich East by-election: Ramsay MacDonald loses a supposed safe Labour seat.
  • 1921 Westminster Abbey by-election: Arnold Lupton failed to take a Conservative seat, coming third, ten years after standing down.
  • 1921 Cardiganshire by-election: W. Llewelyn Williams defeated in this race, as anti-Coalition Liberal contesting against a Coalition Liberal, three years after abolition of his previous seat.
  • 1920 Dartford by-election: Thomas Edward Wing failed to defend the seat, over a year after losing his previous seat, losing it to Labour.
Re-election of Ministers[]

Until the Re-election of Ministers Acts 1919 and 1926 there were many cases of members having to seek re-election on appointment to ministerial office. In eight instances they were unsuccessful:

  • 1922 Pontypridd by-election Thomas Arthur Lewis was defeated after being appointed a Junior Lord of the Treasury.
  • 1921 Dudley by-election Sir Arthur Griffith-Boscawen was defeated after being appointed Minister of Agriculture.
  • 1914 Ipswich by-election Charles Masterman was defeated in a subsequent attempt to return to the House of Commons.
  • 1914 Bethnal Green South West by-election Charles Masterman was defeated after being appointed Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster.
  • 1912 Manchester South by-election Sir Arthur Haworth was defeated after being appointed a Junior Lord of the Treasury.
  • 1911 North Ayrshire by-election Andrew Macbeth Anderson was defeated after being appointed Solicitor General for Scotland.
  • 1908 Manchester North West by-election Winston Churchill was defeated after being appointed President of the Board of Trade
  • 1905 Brighton by-election Gerald Loder was defeated after being appointed Lord Commissioner of the Treasury

Shortest-serving by-election victors[]

Note this list covers completed service only; it excludes any current MPs.

Since 1945[]

Member of Parliament By-election Party Duration (days)
Bobby Sands April 1981 Fermanagh and South Tyrone by-election Anti H-Block 251
Michael Carr May 1990 Bootle by-election Labour 571
Oswald O'Brien 1983 Darlington by-election 772
Margo MacDonald 1973 Glasgow Govan by-election SNP 922
Jane Dodds 2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election Liberal Democrats 972
Charles Beattie 1955 Mid Ulster by-election UUP 1233
Mark Reckless 2014 Rochester and Strood by-election UKIP 1302b
Lisa Forbes 2019 Peterborough by-election Labour 1532
Sarah Olney 2016 Richmond Park by-election Liberal Democrats 1532a
Nicol Stephen 1991 Kincardine and Deeside by-election 1542
Ashok Kumar 1991 Langbaurgh by-election Labour 1542a
Helen McElhone 1982 Glasgow Queen's Park by-election 1894
David Austick 1973 Ripon by-election Liberal 2172
John Spellar 1982 Birmingham Northfield by-election Labour 2242a
Christopher Ward 1969 Swindon by-election Conservative 2312
William McCrea 2000 South Antrim by-election DUP 2592ab
Parmjit Singh Gill 2004 Leicester South by-election Liberal Democrats 2942
David Colville Anderson 1963 Dumfriesshire by-election Unionist 3095
Huw Edwards 1991 Monmouth by-election Labour 3292a
Thomas Teevan 1950 Belfast West by-election UUP 3302
Wallace Lawler 1969 Birmingham Ladywood by-election Liberal 3572
George Machin 1973 Dundee East by-election Labour 3642

Notes

  • 1 died
  • 2 defeated at next general election
  • 3 disqualified (Beattie was never elected. He was awarded the seat on the disqualification of his predecessor, only to be found to be disqualified himself)
  • 4 retired at next general election (seat abolished by redistribution and failed to secure alternative seat)
  • 5 retired at next general election due to personal difficulties
  • a returned to Parliament at a subsequent election
  • b had served previously as an MP

Pre-1945[]

  • Henry Francis Compton, Conservative 1905 New Forest by-election 46 days 2
  • Ronald Bell, Conservative 1945 Newport by-election 70 days 2a
  • Donald Bennett, Liberal 1945 Middlesbrough West by-election 73 days 2
  • John Dumphreys, Conservative 1909 Bermondsey by-election 83 days 2
  • Seaborne Davies, Liberal 1945 Caernarvon Boroughs by-election 91 days 2
  • Ruth Dalton, Labour 1929 Bishop Auckland by-election 92 days 3
  • Joseph Ormond Andrews, Liberal 1905 Barkston Ash by-election 97 days 2
  • Dr Robert McIntyre, SNP 1945 Motherwell by-election 104 days 2
  • George Knox Anderson, Conservative 1918 Canterbury by-election 113 days 3
  • Herbert Evans, Labour 1931 Gateshead by-election 121 days 1
  • Andrew Clarke, Labour 1929 Midlothian and Peebles Northern by-election 121 days 2b
  • Sir Henry Wilson, Unionist February 1922 North Down by-election 121 days 5
  • Joseph Henderson, Labour 1931 Manchester Ardwick by-election 135 days 2a
  • Evan Cotton, Liberal 1918 Finsbury East by-election 151 days 2
  • David Hardie, Labour 1931 Rutherglen by-election 159 days 2
  • Lord Arthur Hill, Unionist 1907 West Down by-election 193 days 7b
  • Oswald Cawley, Liberal January 1918 Prestwich by-election 202 days 1
  • Francis Norie-Miller, Liberal National 1935 Perth by-election 212 days 3
  • George Banton, Labour 1922 Leicester East by-election 230 days 2a
  • William Henry Somervell, Liberal 1918 Keighley by-election 232 days 2
  • Noel Edward Buxton, Liberal 1905 Whitby by-election 238 days 2a
  • Leslie Orme Wilson, Conservative 1922 Portsmouth South by-election 243 days 7b
  • Leah Manning, Labour 1931 Islington East by-election 250 days 2a
  • Frederick William Gibbins, Liberal 1910 Mid Glamorgan by-election 253 days 3
  • C. V. F. Palmer, Independent February 1920 The Wrekin by-election 261 days 1
  • Maurice Healy, Ind. Nationalist 1909 Cork City by-election 262 days 2ab
  • John Edward Sutton, Labour 1922 Manchester Clayton by-election 270 days 2ab
  • James Chuter Ede, Labour 1923 Mitcham by-election 278 days 2a
  • J. J. Cleary, Labour 1935 Liverpool Wavertree by-election 281 days 2
  • Sir William Beveridge, Liberal 1944 Berwick-upon-Tweed by-election 282 days 2
  • W. P. Sidney, Conservative 1944 Chelsea by-election 288 days 4
  • Sir John Reith, National February 1940 Southampton by-election 293 days 6
  • W. E. Gibbons, Conservative 1944 Bilston by-election 309 days 2
  • Lord Charles Beresford, Conservative 320 days 7ab
  • Arthur Henderson, Labour 1923 Newcastle-upon-Tyne East by-election 323 days 2ab
  • James Henry Hall, Labour 1930 Whitechapel and St Georges by-election 328 days 2a
  • Thomas Naylor, Labour 1921 Southwark South East by-election 336 days 2a
  • 1 died
  • 2 defeated at next general election
  • 3 retired at next general election
  • 4 retired at next general election, upon succession to a peerage
  • 5 assassinated by IRA
  • 6 elevated to the Peerage
  • 7 resigned
  • a returned to Parliament at a subsequent election
  • b had served previously as an MP

Youngest by-election victors[]

  • Esmond Harmsworth, elected on 15 November 1919 from Isle of Thanet aged 21 years 170 days.[6]
  • Youngest woman: Bernadette Devlin, elected on 17 April 1969 from Mid Ulster aged 21 years 359 days.

Babies of the House elected at by-elections[]

See Baby of the House of Commons

Oldest by-election victors[]

Debuts in Parliament:

  • John Benbow was 75 or 76 when he held the for the Conservatives.
  • Hucks Gibbs was 71 when he held the for the Conservatives.
  • Philip Manfield was 71 or 72 when he held the for the Liberals.
  • Sir Robert Pullar was 79 (less 6 days) when he held the 1907 Perth by-election for the Liberals.
  • David Cleghorn Hogg was 73 when he gained the 1913 Londonderry City by-election for the Liberals.
  • Sir Swire Smith was 73 when he held the 1915 Keighley by-election for the Liberals.
  • William Frederick Hicks Beach was 74 when he held the 1916 Tewkesbury by-election for the Conservatives.
  • Sir George Reid was 70 when he held the 1916 St George's, Hanover Square by-election for the Conservatives. He was a former Prime Minister of Australia.
  • Sir John Fleming was 69 or 70 when he held the 1917 Aberdeen South by-election for the Liberals.
  • George Edwards was almost 70 when he gained the 1920 South Norfolk by-election for Labour. He was a former agricultural labourer.
  • Henry Bruce Armstrong was almost 77 when he held the 1921 Mid Armagh by-election for the Ulster Unionists.
  • William Nathaniel Jones was 70 when he held the 1928 Carmarthen by-election for the Liberals.
  • Francis Norie-Miller was 76 when he gained the 1935 Perth by-election for the Liberal Nationals.
  • James Little was 70 when he held the 1939 Down by-election for the Ulster Unionists.
  • John Evans was 70 when he held the 1946 Ogmore by-election for Labour.

Comebacks to Parliament:

  • John Blaquiere was 71 when he held the for the Tories. He was previously MP for Rye in 1801-02.
  • Bartholomew Bouverie was 73 when he held the for the Tories. He was previously MP for the same seat from 1819 until the general election earlier in 1826.
  • Quintin Dick was 71 when he held the for the Conservatives. He was previously MP for Maldon in 1830-47.
  • James William Freshfield was 77 when he won the for the Conservatives. He was previously MP for Penryn and Falmouth in 1835-41.
  • William Johnson Fox was 71 when he held the for the Liberals. He was previously MP for the same seat from 1852 until the general election earlier in 1857.
  • William Cubitt was 71 when he held the for the Conservatives. He was previously MP for the same seat in 1847-61.
  • John Morgan Cobbett was 71 when he won the 1872 Oldham by-election for the Conservatives. He had been previously MP for the same seat as a Liberal in 1852-65.
  • James Patrick Mahon was 79 when he held the 1879 Clare by-election and 87 when he held the 1887 County Carlow by-election for the Irish Nationalists.
  • Isaac Holden was 75 when he held the for the Liberals. He had previously been MP for Knaresborough in 1865-68.
  • Sir Wilfrid Lawson was 74 when he held the 1903 Camborne by-election for the Liberals. He had previously been MP for Cockermouth in 1886-1900.
  • John Frederick Cheetham was 70 when he won the 1905 Stalybridge by-election for the Liberals. He had served previously as MP for North Derbyshire 1880-85 prior to that seat's abolition.
  • Sir Alfred Hopkinson was 74 when he won the 1926 Combined English Universities by-election for the Conservatives. He had previously been MP for Cricklade 1895-98 before resigning.
  • Arthur Salter was 70 when he held the 1951 Ormskirk by-election for the Conservatives. He had served previously as MP for Oxford University 1937-50 prior to that seat's abolition.

In defence of a previously held seat:

  • Enoch Powell was 73 when he successfully defended his seat at the 1986 South Down by-election for the Ulster Unionists, after a protest resignation against the Anglo-Irish Agreement, although he had been an MP almost continuously since 1950.

First women by-election victors[]

The first woman to be elected in a by-election was Nancy Astor, who succeeded her husband at the 1919 Plymouth Sutton by-election, becoming the first woman to take her seat in the House of Commons.

The first woman to gain a seat in a by-election was Susan Lawrence who won the 1926 East Ham North by-election, although she had previously sat for the same seat between 1923-4.1

The first woman to gain a seat ab initio in a by-election was Jennie Lee who won the 1929 North Lanarkshire by-election, at the same time becoming the first woman Baby of the House of Commons.

Note 1 Mabel Philipson succeeded her husband at the 1923 Berwick-upon-Tweed by-election. He had been elected as a National Liberal Party candidate. She won as a Conservative so this could arguably be classed as the first gain by a woman.

First ethnic minority by-election victors[]

Whilst the first ethnic minority Members of Parliament were elected at general elections as early as the 1890s, it would be almost 100 years before one was returned at a by-election.

The first ethnic minority candidate to be elected in a by-election was Ashok Kumar who gained the 1991 Langbaurgh by-election for Labour.

  • David Lammy held the 2000 Tottenham by-election for Labour.
  • Mark Hendrick held the 2000 Preston by-election for Labour.
  • Parmjit Singh Gill gained the 2004 Leicester South by-election for the Liberal Democrats.
  • Seema Malhotra held the 2011 Feltham and Heston by-election for Labour, the first woman to win it.

The first by-election in which all three major-party candidates were from the ethnic minorities was the 2007 Ealing Southall by-election, held by Labour.

First by-election victors from specific religions[]

When the UK Parliament was established in 1801, non-Anglicans were prevented from taking their seats as MPs under the Test Act 1672. However, Methodists took communion at Anglican churches until 1795, and some continued to do so, and many Presbyterians were prepared to accept Anglican communion, thus ensuring that members of these creeds were represented in the Parliament.[7] Some Unitarians were also elected.

The first by-election victor (and first ever MP) to be an adherent of the Eastern Orthodox Church was The Honourable Frederick North who was elected in 1792 for Banbury (to succeed his brother who had entered the House of Lords), having converted to the faith the previous year.

The first Roman Catholic by-election victor in the UK Parliament was Daniel O'Connell in the 1828 Clare by-election. He was not permitted to take his seat until the following year.

The first atheist by-election victor was Charles Bradlaugh, at the . As an atheist, Bradlaugh was not allowed to swear the Oath of Allegiance, and the by-election was re-run in and . Both were also won by Bradlaugh, who eventually was able to take his seat after the 1885 general election.[8]

  • David Salomons was the first Jewish by-election victor, at the .
  • Terry Rooney was the first Mormon by-election victor, at the 1990 Bradford North by-election.
  • Parmjit Singh Gill became the first Sikh by-election victor, at the 2004 Leicester South by-election.
  • Virendra Sharma became the first Hindu by-election victor, at the 2007 Ealing Southall by-election.
  • Rosena Allin-Khan was the first Muslim by-election victor, at the 2016 Tooting by-election.

Physically disabled by-election victors[]

Most physically disabled MPs in the history of the parliament entered in the intakes of general elections. Those known to have been disabled when entering parliament at by-elections are rarer and include:

  • John Horne Tooke, who lost sight of an eye in a boyhood fight, won the .
  • Fulk Greville Howard, who lost sight of an eye in the Helder expedition in 1799, won the .
  • Sir William Carr Beresford, who lost sight of an eye in an accident on military service in 1786, won the .
  • Samuel Shepherd, increasingly deaf from 1790, won the .
  • Arthur MacMurrough Kavanagh, born without hands and feet, won the .
  • Michael Davitt, who lost his right arm in a factory accident in 1857, won the , although he was disqualified from sitting because he was in prison.
  • Aubrey Herbert, who was almost blind from childhood, won the 1911 South Somerset by-election.
  • John Dugdale, who was partly deaf from childhood, won the 1941 West Bromwich by-election.
  • Cecil Manning, who lost his right arm in action in World War I, won the 1944 Camberwell North by-election.
  • Hervey Rhodes, who walked with a limp since severe wounding in World War I, won the 1945 Ashton-under-Lyne by-election.
  • William Rees-Davies, who lost his right arm in action in World War II, won the 1953 Isle of Thanet by-election.

By-elections losers awarded seats on disqualification of winner[]

  • Malcolm St Clair, 1961 Bristol South East by-election (resigned in 1963 to enable another by-election)
  • Charles Beattie, 1955 Mid Ulster by-election (he too was disqualified a few weeks later, causing another by-election)
  • Pre-1945: Stephen Moore, March 1875 Tipperary by-election (retired in 1880)

Two or more former MPs contest by-election[]

  • 2021 Hartlepool by-election1 (three former MPs)
  • 2008 Haltemprice and Howden by-election2
  • 1997 Winchester by-election
  • 1986 Fermanagh and South Tyrone by-election
  • 1982 Beaconsfield by-election
  • 1981 Warrington by-election
  • 1969 Brighton Pavilion by-election
  • 1965 Salisbury by-election
  • 1956 Mid Ulster by-election
  • 1948 Croydon North by-election
  • 1933 Altrincham by-election (three former MPs)
  • 1930 Glasgow Shettleston by-election
  • 1930 Nottingham Central by-election (three former MPs)
  • 1928 Cheltenham by-election

1Hilton Dawson, Thelma Walker, and Paul Williams 2 Conservative MPs David Davis and Walter Sweeney

Frequency and duration records[]

Longest period without a by-election[]

The years 1998 and 2020 stand as the two in modern British history without any Westminster election. 1992, 1998, 2010 and 2020 are the four full calendar years in history without a single by-election.

From To Period (days)
1 August 2019 6 May 2021 645
20 November 1997 10 June 1999 567
7 November 1991 6 May 1993 546
12 March 1987 14 July 1988 489
14 February 2002 18 June 2003 483
23 February 2017 3 May 2018 434
12 November 2009 13 January 2011 427
23 May 1974 26 June 1975 399
18 June 2003 15 July 2004 393
29 June 2006 19 July 2007 385

Longest period between a vacancy arising and a by-election writ being moved[]

  • 1941 The Wrekin by-election: 357 days. James Baldwin-Webb was presumed killed as a result of enemy action when SS City of Benares was torpedoed on 17 September 1940; the writ was moved on 9 September 1941.
  • 1941 King's Norton by-election: 327 days. Ronald Cartland was killed in action on 29–30 May 1940. Initially posted missing, his death was not presumed until January 1941. The writ was moved on 22 April 1941.
  • 1941 Hitchin by-election: 272 days. Sir Arnold Wilson was presumed killed in action on 31 May 1940; the writ was moved on 27 February 1941.
  • 1969 Newcastle-under-Lyme by-election: 236 days. Stephen Swingler died on 19 February 1969; the writ was moved on 13 October 1969.
  • 1969 Swindon by-election: 220 days. Francis Noel-Baker resigned on 7 March 1969; the writ was moved on 13 October 1969.

Longest period without a seat changing hands[]

The longest period without a seat changing hands in a by-election was the five years between the Conservative victories in the 1948 Glasgow Camlachie by-election and the 1953 Sunderland South by-election.

During the short Parliaments of 1910, 1950-1 and 1974 no seats changed hands in a by-election.

Longest period between by-election gains for a party[]

The Liberal Party endured 29 years without a single by-election gain between the 1929 Holland with Boston by-election and the 1958 Torrington by-election. It did not win a single by-election in the thirteen years between holding the 1945 Middlesbrough West by-election and gaining Torrington.

Until the 2008 Crewe and Nantwich by-election, the opposition Conservative Party had not gained a seat in almost 26 years, the last being the 1982 Mitcham and Morden by-election, which occurred during the unique circumstances of the Falklands War and the sitting Labour MP defecting to the Social Democratic Party and seeking re-election under his new party label. The Conservatives' last gain while in Opposition was 30 years previously at the 1978 Ilford North by-election.

Labour's longest lean stretch was almost 18 years, between gaining the 1939 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election and the 1957 Lewisham North by-election.1

As of 21 September 2021, the most recent gains for each currently active party were:

Party Date Time since By-election Result
Liberal Democrats 17 June 2021 3 months and 4 days Chesham and Amersham Gain from Conservative
Conservative 6 May 2021 4 months and 15 days Hartlepool Gain from Labour
UKIP 20 November 2014 6 years, 10 months and 1 day Rochester and Strood2 Gain from Conservative
Labour 15 November 2012 8 years, 10 months and 6 days Corby Gain from Conservative
SNP 24 July 2008 13 years, 1 month and 28 days Glasgow East Gain from Labour
DUP 27 April 2000 21 years, 4 months and 25 days South Antrim Gain from UUP
SDLP 23 January 1986 35 years, 7 months and 29 days Newry and Armagh Gain from UUP
Plaid Cymru 14 July 1966 55 years, 2 months and 7 days Carmarthen Gain from Labour
UUP 6 June 1946 75 years, 3 months and 15 days Down3 Gain from Independent
Sinn Féin 20 June 1918 103 years, 3 months and 1 day East Cavan4 Gain from Irish Parliamentary

Notes 1 The Labour Party were the official opposition in the Parliament elected in 1935, but after the major parties agreed an electoral truce on the outbreak of war in 1939, they did not contest any Conservative or Liberal seats for the remainder of the Parliament, a period of six years, and were members of the wartime coalition government between May 1940 and May 1945.
2 Notional gain: incumbent Conservative stood as UKIP. No UKIP candidate has ever defeated an incumbent of a different party
3 The UUP were also declared winners of the 1955 Mid Ulster by-election after the Sinn Féin candidate was disqualified, but the UUP candidate was also disqualified shortly after.
4 Sinn Féin have not gained a seat at a by-election since 1918. However, the Anti H-Block party, an Irish Republican group that merged into Sinn Féin, gained Fermanagh and South Tyrone in the April 1981 by-election (40 years, 5 months and 12 days ago).

Longest period between by-election holds for a party[]

The Conservatives did not successfully defend a single by-election in the eight years between their holds of the 1989 Richmond (Yorks) by-election and the 1997 Uxbridge by-election, losing a record 15 consecutive seats where they were the incumbents. By the time of the by-election in Uxbridge, the victor in Richmond, William Hague, had become leader of the Conservative Party.

Labour's worst run was 4 consecutive by-election losses, which has occurred three times since 1945:

Longest period between by-election losses for a party[]

Between the 1988 Glasgow Govan by-election and the 2003 Brent East by-election, Labour successfully defended every seat it held at by-elections, for a total of 30 holds (not counting Falkirk West and West Bromwich West, represented by a Labour MP turned independent and a Labour speaker respectively and both won by Labour). The span of 14 years, 10 months and 8 days is the longest period without a by-election defeat for either of the two main parties. The Conservatives did not lose a seat between the 2000 Romsey by-election and the 2012 Corby by-election, a span of 12 years, 6 months and 12 days. However, they only defended 3 seats in that time. In terms of total number, their longest run of by-election holds was 51, between the 1945 Chelmsford by-election and the 1957 Lewisham North by-election, a span of 11 years, 9 months and 21 days.

Since their formation, the Liberal Democrats have held every Lib Dem seat contested at a by-election, of which there have been 3. Including their successor parties, their most recent by-election loss was the 1982 Mitcham and Morden by-election, lost by the SDP 39 years, 3 months and 18 days ago. The SDP candidate had however defected from Labour – the last seat lost by either party that had been won at a previous election was the 1957 Carmarthen by-election, lost by the Liberals 64 years, 6 months and 24 days ago. Since 1982, the Liberal Democrats and predecessors together have defended 4; since 1957 they have defended 5 seats.

By-elections in seats held by minor and nationalist parties are rare, and so most have never lost a seat – the DUP and Plaid Cymru have defended but never lost a seat at a by-election, Sinn Féin have only lost seats by disqualification, and the UUP have never lost more than one seat in a row. No by-election has ever been called in an SDLP held seat.

Longest period without an opposition gain[]

For a period of 11 years, until the 2008 Crewe and Nantwich by-election, the principal opposition Conservative Party failed to register a by-election gain against the incumbent Labour Government. This is the longest period of such failure since records began, and more than twice the previous record of the five years it took the then Labour opposition to gain the 1957 Lewisham North by-election. The present Labour opposition has not registered a gain for over eight years, since the 2012 Corby by-election.

Apart from the brief parliaments of 1910, 1950-1 and 1974, the parliaments of 1951-5 and 1997-2001 are the only occasions when the Government did not lose a by-election.

Most by-elections in one day[]

The largest number of by-elections held on a single day occurred on 23 January 1986 when 15 simultaneous contests were held in Northern Ireland. The elections had been engineered by the incumbent Unionist parties as a protest against the Anglo-Irish Agreement of 1985. They intended the results to be interpreted as a referendum on the treaty. The elections were boycotted by the main Nationalist parties except in four seats where they had a reasonable prospect of victory. In the event, the Social Democratic and Labour Party gained one seat, Newry and Armagh, from the Ulster Unionist Party.

Apart from the above example, it is common for UK mainland parties to schedule several by-elections on the same day. Motivations include attempting to divide opponents' resources and getting bad news (expected losses) out of the way. Since 1945, the largest number of simultaneous mainland by-elections has been 6, held on 16 November 1960. On four occasions, 5 by-elections have been held on the same day, most recently on 9 June 1994. Groupings of two or three are very common.

Before November 2012, the last day on which three by-elections had been held was 23 November 2000. In November 2012 there were two such groupings of three (15 November and 29 November). The last time there were six by-elections in one calendar month was in June 1994.

Most by-election losses in one day[]

The largest number of by-elections lost on a single day is three, when the Labour party lost Acton, Dudley and Meriden on 28 March 1968, all to the Conservatives.

Occasions since 1945 when two seats have fallen are:

Date By-election Winning party Losing party
7 November 1991 1991 Kincardine and Deeside by-election Liberal Democrats Conservative
1991 Langbaurgh by-election Labour
4 November 1976 1976 Walsall North by-election Conservative Labour
1976 Workington by-election Conservative
8 November 1973 1973 Glasgow Govan by-election SNP
1973 Berwick-upon-Tweed by-election Liberal Conservative
26 July 1973 1973 Ripon by-election
1973 Isle of Ely by-election
2 November 1967 1967 Hamilton by-election SNP Labour
1967 Leicester South West by-election Conservative
21 September 1967 1967 Walthamstow West by-election Conservative
1967 Cambridge by-election Conservative
22 November 1962 1962 Glasgow Woodside by-election Labour Conservative
1962 South Dorset by-election Labour

Seats with more than one by-election in a single Parliament[]

  • Bootle: May and November 1990.
  • Fermanagh and South Tyrone: April and August 1981.
  • Bristol South East: 1961 and 1963.
  • Mid Ulster: 1955 and 1956.
  • Edinburgh East: 1945 and 1947.
  • Middlesbrough West: 1940 and 1945.
  • Combined Scottish Universities: 1936, 1938 and 1945.
  • Berwick-upon-Tweed: 1941 and 1944.
  • Clay Cross: 1936 and 1944.
  • West Derbyshire: 1938 and 1944.
  • Buckingham: 1937 and 1943.
  • Manchester Gorton: 1937 and 1942.
  • Dunbartonshire: 1936 and 1941.
  • Greenock: 1936 and 1941.
  • Doncaster: 1938 and 1941.
  • Southampton: February and November 1940.
  • Preston: 1936 and 1940.
  • Wandsworth Central: 1937 and 1940.
  • City of London: 1938 and 1940.
  • Combined Scottish Universities: 1934 and 1935.
  • Eastbourne: 1932 and 1935.
  • Twickenham: 1932 and 1934.
  • Portsmouth South: 1922 and 1923.
  • North Down: 1921, February and July 1922.
  • West Down: 1921 and 1922.
  • South Londonderry: 1921 and 1922.
  • Louth: 1920 and 1921.
  • The Wrekin: February and November 1920.
  • Londonderry North: and .
  • Prestwich: January and October 1918.
  • Edinburgh and St Andrews Universities: 1916 and 1917.
  • St George's Hanover Square: 1913, 1916 and 1918.
  • Portsmouth: and 1916.
  • City of London: February and June 1906.
  • Oswestry: and 1904.
  • Southport: and .
  • City of London: and .
  • Buckingham: 1889 and 1891.
  • Ayr Burghs: 1888 and 1890.
  • Northampton: , and .
  • Preston: 1881 and and .
  • Bath: May, June and October 1873.
  • South Shropshire: and .
  • East Gloucestershire: and .
  • Greenwich: and .
  • South Nottinghamshire: and .
  • Buckinghamshire: and and and , within two successive parliaments.

Other seats with by-elections less than five years apart[]

  • Batley and Spen: 2016 and 2021
  • Hemsworth: 1991 and 1996.
  • Upper Bann: 1986 and 1990.
  • Belfast South: 1982 and 1986.
  • Fermanagh and South Tyrone: August 1981 and 1986.
  • Nuneaton: 1965 and 1967.
  • Ormskirk: 1951 and 1953.
  • Liverpool Wavertree: 1931 and 1935.
  • Twickenham: 1929, 1932 and 1934.
  • Westminster Abbey: 1921 and 1924.

By-election days[]

British Parliamentary elections are invariably held on a Thursday. The last by-election not held on a Thursday was the 1978 Hamilton by-election, held on Wednesday 31 May due to a World Cup opening match on the Thursday evening.

Due to an administrative oversight, the 1973 Manchester Exchange by-election was held on Wednesday 27 June 1973. Prior to that, the last by-elections not held on a Thursday were the 1965 Saffron Walden by-election held on Tuesday 23 March, and the 1965 Roxburgh, Selkirk and Peebles by-election held the following day.

Until the mid-1960s, it was common to hold by-elections on any day of the week (other than Sunday).

Countermanded poll[]

Very occasionally, a scheduled by-election may be overtaken by the calling of a general election and the dissolution of Parliament, in which case the poll is countermanded by the Returning Officer. There have been only three occasions since 1918: a by-election was scheduled to take place in Warwick and Leamington on 21 November 1923, but was cancelled by a dissolution of Parliament on 16 November. A by-election was scheduled to poll between 13–17 October 1924 in London University but was cancelled by a dissolution of Parliament on 9 October. In 2017 the Manchester Gorton by-election was cancelled by a Motion in the House of Commons following the calling of the 2017 United Kingdom general election.[9]

Seats left vacant[]

Occasionally seats are left vacant for a substantial period.

No by-election writ was moved for any seat held by Sinn Féin after the 1918 general election. Four Sinn Féin candidates were elected in two different seats and would have had to decline one of them if they had wanted to take their seats. They were Éamon de Valera (East Clare and East Mayo), Arthur Griffith (East Cavan and North West Tyrone), Eoin MacNeill (Londonderry City and National University of Ireland) and Liam Mellowes (East Galway and North Meath).

By the end of the Parliament, the following Sinn Féin MPs had died without being replaced: Pierce McCan (East Tipperary) of influenza on 6 March 1919, Terence MacSwiney (Mid Cork) following a hunger strike in Brixton prison on 25 October 1920, Frank Lawless (North County Dublin) as a result of a riding injury on 16 April 1922, Joseph McGuinness (Longford) on 31 May 1922, Cathal Brugha (Waterford) in action during the Irish Civil War on 7 July 1922, Harry Boland (South Roscommon) shot while being arrested on 2 August 1922, Arthur Griffith (East Cavan and North West Tyrone) on 12 August 1922, and Michael Collins (South Cork assassinated on 22 August 1922). In each case their seats were abolished in 1922 as a result of the establishment of the Irish Free State.

Other than these cases the longest time a seat has been left vacant with no by-election held is when Dennis Vosper was elevated to the Peerage on 20 April 1964, and no writ was moved by the time Parliament was dissolved on 25 September 1964.

Causes of by-elections[]

By-elections prompted by assassination[]

Date of assassination Member Detail By-election By-election date Defending Party Winning Party
16 June 2016 Jo Cox Cox was killed by a white nationalist 2016 Batley and Spen by-election 20 October 2016 Labour Labour
30 July 1990 Ian Gow Killed by Provisional IRA bomb under his car 1990 Eastbourne by-election 18 October 1990 Conservative Liberal Democrats
12 October 1984 Sir Anthony Berry Killed by Provisional IRA bombing of Brighton 1984 Enfield Southgate by-election 13 December 1984 Conservative Conservative
14 November 1981 Rev. Robert Bradford Shot by Provisional IRA 1982 Belfast South by-election 4 March 1982 UUP UUP
22 June 1922 Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson, Bt. Shot outside his home by IRA gunmen July 1922 North Down by-election 21 July 1922 UUP UUP

By-elections prompted by suicide[]

Member By-election By-election date Defending Party Winning Party
Gordon McMaster 1997 Paisley South by-election 6 November 1997 Labour Labour
John Heddle 1990 Mid Staffordshire by-election 22 March 1990 Conservative Labour
Jocelyn Cadbury 1982 Birmingham Northfield by-election 28 October 1982 Conservative Labour
Bobby Sands1 August 1981 Fermanagh and South Tyrone by-election 20 August 1981 Anti H-Block Anti H-Block
Bernard Floud 1968 Acton by-election 28 March 1968 Labour Conservative
Sir Albert Braithwaite 1960 Harrow West by-election 17 March 1960 Conservative Conservative
Thomas Stamford 1949 Leeds West by-election 21 July 1949 Labour Labour
John Whittaker 1946 Heywood and Radcliffe by-election 21 February 1946 Labour Labour
Sir Charles Cayzer[10] 1940 City of Chester by-election 7 March 1940 Conservative Conservative
Anthony Muirhead 1939 Wells by-election 13 December 1939 Conservative Conservative
Edward Marjoribanks 1932 Eastbourne by-election 28 April 1932 Conservative Conservative

Note

1Death by hunger strike.

By-elections prompted by accidental death[]

  • 2014 Heywood and Middleton by-election: Jim Dobbin died from alcohol poisoning.
  • 2000 Romsey by-election: Michael Colvin was killed by a house fire.
  • 1994 Eastleigh by-election: Stephen Milligan accidentally choked himself while attempting autoerotic asphyxia.
  • 1994 Bradford South by-election: Bob Cryer was killed in a car crash.
  • 1987 Truro by-election: David Penhaligon was killed in a car crash.
  • 1980 Glasgow Central by-election: Thomas McMillan died from injuries received in falling from a bus.
  • 1963 Rotherham by-election: Jack Jones was killed in a car crash.
  • 1959 South West Norfolk by-election: Sidney Dye was killed in a car crash.
  • 1958 Islington North by-election: Wilfred Fienburgh was killed in a car crash.
  • 1957 Ipswich by-election: Richard Stokes died from injuries received in a car crash.
  • 1953 North Down by-election: Sir Walter Smiles was killed in the MV Princess Victoria disaster during the storm surge.
  • 1952 Dundee East by-election: Thomas Cook was killed in a car crash.
  • 1948 Edmonton by-election: Evan Durbin was drowned while swimming.
  • 1948 Stirling and Falkirk by-election: Joseph Westwood was killed in a car crash.
  • 1948 Armagh by-election: Sir William Allen died from injuries received in a road accident.
  • 1947 Liverpool Edge Hill by-election: Dr Richard Clitherow died due to an overdose of barbiturates after he had been "run down and jaded".[11]
  • 1947 Jarrow by-election: Ellen Wilkinson was killed by an accidental overdose of medication.
  • 1946 Glasgow Cathcart by-election: Francis Beattie was killed in a car crash.
  • 1945 Smethwick by-election: Alfred Dobbs was killed in a car crash.
  • 1945 Motherwell by-election: James Walker was killed in a road accident.
  • 1944 Bury St Edmunds by-election: Lieut-Col. Frank Heilgers was killed in a train crash.
  • 1942 Manchester Clayton by-election: John Jagger was killed in a motorcycle accident.
  • 1939 Stretford by-election: Anthony Crossley was killed in an air crash.
  • 1933 Hitchin by-election: Viscount Knebworth was killed in a plane crash.

By-elections prompted by posthumous election of MP[]

  • 1945 Bromley by-election: Sir Edward Taswell Campbell died before his election declaration at the 1945 general election.
  • 1945 Monmouth by-election: Leslie Pym died before his election declaration at the 1945 general election.
  • 1935 Combined Scottish Universities by-election: Noel Skelton died before his election declaration at the 1935 general election.
  • 1906 North Galway by-election: Thomas Higgins died before his election declaration at the 1906 general election.

By-elections prompted by scandal[]

  • 2021 Hartlepool by-election: Mike Hill resigned in advance of an employment tribunal verdict that he had assaulted, harassed and victimised a parliamentary worker.
  • 2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election: the seat was declared vacant after Chris Davies pleaded guilty to filing false expenses claims, and a recall petition was successful.
  • 2019 Peterborough by-election: the seat was declared vacant after Fiona Onasanya was convicted of perverting the course of justice in relation to motoring penalty points issued in 2017. This was the first successful recall petition under the provisions of the Recall of MPs Act 2015.
  • 2018 West Tyrone by-election: Barry McElduff resigned after becoming embroiled in a social media controversy.
  • 2014 Newark by-election: Patrick Mercer resigned after being suspended from the House of Commons for six months by the Parliamentary Standards Committee for asking parliamentary questions in exchange for money.
  • 2013 Eastleigh by-election: Chris Huhne resigned after pleading guilty to perverting the course of justice in relation to persuading his wife to accept motoring penalty points in 2003.
  • 2012 Rotherham by-election: Denis MacShane resigned after House of Commons Standards and Privileges Committee recommended he be suspended from the service of the House for twelve months; their inquiry arose from the United Kingdom Parliamentary expenses scandal.
  • 2011 Barnsley Central by-election: Eric Illsley resigned after pleading guilty to charges of false accounting arising from the United Kingdom Parliamentary expenses scandal.
  • 2009 Glasgow North East by-election: Michael Martin resigned as Speaker rather than face a vote of no-confidence, amid criticism of his actions arising from the United Kingdom Parliamentary expenses scandal.
  • 2009 Norwich North by-election: Ian Gibson resigned after being debarred as a Labour candidate, due to allegations arising from the United Kingdom Parliamentary expenses scandal.
  • 1997 Beckenham by-election: Piers Merchant resigned after a newspaper story revealed that his previous denials of an affair were lies.
  • 1977 Bournemouth East by-election: John Cordle resigned after he was criticised by a Select Committee for business links to corrupt architect John Poulson.
  • 1976 Walsall North by-election: John Stonehouse resigned after being convicted of insurance fraud.
  • 1973 Berwick-upon-Tweed by-election: Antony Lambton resigned after his visits to prostitutes and use of cannabis were exposed by the News of the World.
  • 1963 Stratford-upon-Avon by-election: John Profumo resigned after his denials of an affair with Christine Keeler were shown to be lies.
  • 1959 Harrow East by-election: Ian Harvey resigned after conviction for gross indecency with a guardsman in Hyde Park.
  • 1953 Paddington North by-election: Bill Field resigned after conviction for importuning for immoral purposes in a public lavatory.
  • 1949 Sowerby by-election: John Belcher resigned after being found to have accepted gifts from businessmen for political favours.
  • 1941 Scarborough and Whitby by-election: Sir Paul Latham resigned after he was arrested to be tried by court-martial on 13 charges of disgraceful conduct.
  • 1936 Derby by-election: James Henry Thomas resigned after being found to have disclosed budget secrets.
  • 1936 Balham and Tooting by-election: Sir Alfred Butt resigned after being found to have disclosed budget secrets.
  • 1931 Pontypridd by-election: Thomas Mardy Jones resigned after being found to have abused a travel voucher.
  • 1926 Buckrose by-election: Guy Gaunt resigned after being cited as co-respondent in a divorce case.

By-elections prompted to provide seat for seat-less personality[]

  • 1965 Nuneaton by-election: For Frank Cousins.
  • 1965 Leyton by-election: For Patrick Gordon-Walker (defeated).
  • 1950 Sheffield Neepsend by-election: For Frank Soskice.
  • February 1940 Southampton by-election: For Sir John Reith.
  • 1940 Wandsworth Central by-election: For Ernest Bevin.
  • 1922 Portsmouth South by-election: For Leslie Orme Wilson.
  • February 1906 City of London by-election: For Arthur Balfour.
  • : For John Morley.

By-elections prompted by party disputes and defections[]

By-elections are ostensibly to vote for a 'person', not a 'party', meaning that a member switching parties mid-term is not cause for a by-election. However, some members do seek re-election under their new party as a point of principle.

Member of Parliament By-election Party Details
Stephen Phillips 2016 Sleaford and North Hykeham by-election Conservative Resigned, citing irreconcilable differences with his party owing to a "lurch to the right", he could no longer accept the appellation "Conservative" or continue to represent his constituents.
Mark Reckless 2014 Rochester and Strood by-election Conservative Joined the UK Independence Party over policy on European Union membership referendum.
Douglas Carswell 2014 Clacton by-election Conservative Joined the UK Independence Party over policy on European Union membership referendum.
Robert Mellish 1983 Bermondsey by-election Labour Disenchanted with left-wing takeover of his Constituency Labour Party (CLP), obtained a job with the London Docklands Development Corporation, left the Labour Party and resigned to force a by-election.
Bruce Douglas-Mann 1982 Mitcham and Morden by-election Labour Sought re-election having defected to newly formed SDP; defeated by Conservative candidate.
Dick Taverne 1973 Lincoln by-election Labour Sought re-election as an Independent 'Democratic Labour' candidate after being deselected by his CLP; he was successful.
Ray Gunter 1972 Southwark by-election Labour Resigned from the Labour Party in disagreement with its stance opposing European Economic Community entry.
Victor Raikes 1957 Liverpool Garston by-election Conservative Resigned the Conservative whip over the Suez crisis, and then resigned from Parliament on obtaining a business appointment in Southern Rhodesia.
Stanley Evans 1957 Wednesbury by-election Labour Supported the Conservative government's Suez policy, resigned after being asked to by his Constituency Labour Party.
Anthony Nutting 1956 Melton by-election Conservative Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, resigned in protest at Suez invasion policy.
William Allen Jowitt 1929 Preston by-election Liberal Sought re-election as Labour Party candidate having been offered role of Attorney General by Ramsay MacDonald.
Joseph Kenworthy 1926 Kingston upon Hull Central by-election Liberal Sought re-election as Labour Party candidate following disillusion with leadership of Lloyd George.
J. E. B. Seely Conservative Resigned seat in opposition to Conservative policy. Returned unopposed as an independent Conservative and subsequently re-elected in 1906 as a Liberal MP.
Cathcart Wason 1902 Orkney and Shetland by-election Liberal Resigned and successfully re-contested his seat

By-elections resulting from Members resigning on principle[]

  • 2016 Richmond Park by-election: Zac Goldsmith resigned to force a by-election on the issue of the expansion of Heathrow Airport, and contested as an Independent. He was defeated by Sarah Olney of the Liberal Democrats. Goldsmith later regained his seat the following year at the 2017 general election.
  • 2008 Haltemprice and Howden by-election: David Davis resigned to force a by-election on the issue of civil liberties. He was re-elected with neither of the other main parties contesting the seat.
  • 1986 Northern Ireland by-elections: Fifteen Unionist MPs resigned and re-contested their seats in protest at the Anglo-Irish Agreement. All but one was re-elected.
  • 1963 Bristol South East by-election: Malcolm St Clair honoured a pledge to stand down if law changed to allow Tony Benn to disclaim his peerage.
  • 1938 Kinross-shire and Perthshire by-election: The Duchess of Atholl resigned in protest at Neville Chamberlain's appeasement policy and sought re-election. She was defeated.
  • 1927 Southwark North by-election: Leslie Haden-Guest resigned from the Labour Party over its policy on China, and re-contested the seat as an Independent Constitutionalist with Conservative support. He was defeated, finishing bottom of the poll. The Liberals gained the seat.
  • 1927 Leith by-election: William Wedgwood Benn resigned following his resignation from the Liberal party and joining the Labour Party. He did not contest the by-election out of fairness to the existing Labour candidate. The seat was narrowly held by a new Liberal candidate.
  • 1914 Cork City by-election: William O'Brien resigned to submit himself to the voters after the Irish Nationalists had made council gains in Cork. He was returned unopposed.
  • 1912 Bow and Bromley by-election: George Lansbury resigned to contest his seat on the issue of Women's Suffrage, although he was disenchanted with a range of Labour party policies. He was defeated.
  • 1909 Stratford-on-Avon by-election: Thomas Kincaid-Smith resigned from the Liberal Party on the issue of compulsory national service. He stood as an Independent with National Service League support. He was defeated, finishing bottom of the poll.
  • 1906 Mid Cork by-election: D. D. Sheehan resigned and re-contested his seat following his expulsion from the Irish Nationalist group for not signing the party pledge. Re-elected as an independent.

By-elections prompted by Member's desire to contest another seat[]

  • 1918 East Tyrone by-election: William Redmond resigned in order to defend his late father's seat at Waterford City. He was successful.
  • 1914 East Worcestershire by-election: Austen Chamberlain resigned in order to defend his late father's seat at Birmingham West. He was successful.
  • 1911 East Wicklow by-election: John Muldoon resigned in order to contest the East Cork by-election. He was successful.

By-elections caused by the previous result being declared void[]

  • 2011 Oldham East and Saddleworth by-election: The result of the 2010 general election was declared void because the victor was found guilty of knowingly making false statements about a rival candidate.
  • 1997 Winchester by-election: The result of the 1997 general election was declared void because ballot papers which had not received the official mark would have affected the result, if counted. Liberal Democrat Mark Oaten massively increased the minute majority he had achieved in the general election.
  • 1924 Oxford by-election: The result of the 1923 general election was declared void because there were irregularities in the election expenses of the successful candidate.
  • 1923 Berwick-upon-Tweed by-election: The result of the 1922 general election was declared void because there were irregularities in the election expenses of the successful candidate.
  • 1911 North Louth by-election: The result of the December 1910 general election was declared void because of corrupt practices and bribery on the part of the successful candidate.

By-elections prompted by disqualification of the sitting Member[]

  • 1961 Bristol South East by-election: Tony Benn had inherited a Peerage from his father. Although by-elections were routinely called where Members had succeeded to the Peerage, the seat was not considered vacated until the Member had received a Writ of Summons to the House of Lords, and Benn, who refused to accept the Peerage, did not apply for one. The seat was declared vacant by a resolution of the House of Commons.
  • 1956 Mid Ulster by-election: Charles Beattie was found to be disqualified through membership of National Assistance panels. A bill indemnifying him from the consequences of acting as an MP while disqualified was passed by the House of Commons; Beattie did not stand in the by-election.
  • 1955 Mid Ulster by-election: Tom Mitchell was disqualified as a felon (resolution of the House).
  • 1950 Belfast West by-election: Rev James Godfrey MacManaway was found by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council to be disqualified, as a Minister of the Church of Ireland.
  • 1925 Walsall by-election: William Preston was found to be disqualified owing to his holding government contracts. A bill indemnifying him was passed by the House of Commons and Preston was re-elected at the by-election.
  • 1924 Dover by-election: John Astor was disqualified for voting before he took the oath. He was returned unopposed at the by-election.
  • 1913 Whitechapel by-election: Sir Stuart Samuel was found to be disqualified owing to his holding government contracts. A bill indemnifying him was passed by the House of Commons and Samuel was narrowly re-elected at the by-election.
  • 1904 City of London by-election: Alban Gibbs was found to be disqualified owing to his holding government contracts. Gibbs resigned and was re-elected unopposed at the by-election.
  • 1904 St Albans by-election: Vicary Gibbs was found to be disqualified owing to his holding government contracts. Gibbs resigned and was narrowly defeated at the by-election.

By-elections prompted by expulsion from the House[]

  • 1955 South Norfolk by-election: Peter Baker was expelled after being convicted of uttering forged documents.
  • 1947 Gravesend by-election: Garry Allighan was expelled after being found to be in extreme contempt of the House by his peers after selling details of private parliamentary meetings to the Evening Standard.
  • 1922 Hackney South by-election: Horatio Bottomley was expelled after being convicted of fraud, perjury and false accounting.
  • : the seat was declared vacant after Arthur Alfred Lynch was convicted of high treason after fighting on the Boer side in the Second Boer War.

By-elections prompted by lunacy[]

  • 1916 Colne Valley by-election: Charles Leach was adjudged a lunatic and his seat declared vacant.

By-elections prompted by bankruptcy[]

  • 1928 Ashton-under-Lyne by-election: Cornelius Homan lost his seat after being declared bankrupt.
  • 1922 Camberwell North by-election: Henry Newton Knights lost his seat after being declared bankrupt.
  • 1914 North Galway by-election: Richard Hazleton resigned before being declared bankrupt. He discharged his bankruptcy and was returned in the by-election.
  • 1912 Hackney South by-election: Horatio Bottomley resigned after filing a bankruptcy petition.
  • 1909 South Kilkenny by-election: Nicholas Joseph Murphy was declared bankrupt.

By-elections prompted for miscellaneous reasons[]

  • 1916 Widnes by-election: William Hall Walker resigned to permit him to donate his thoroughbred racing stock to create a National Stud in an "arms-length" transaction. He was returned unopposed at the by-election.

By-elections prompted by death of member on wartime active service[]

Second World War[]

  • 1945 Chelmsford by-election: John Macnamara was killed in action fighting in Italy.
  • 1944 Berwick-upon-Tweed by-election: George Charles Grey was killed in action fighting in Normandy, France.
  • 1944 Bury St Edmunds by-election: Frank Heilgers was killed in a train crash in Ilford.
  • 1943 Acton by-election: Hubert Duggan died of tuberculosis contracted on active service. a
  • 1943 Darwen by-election: Stuart Russell died of fever on active service in Egypt.
  • 1943 Chippenham by-election: Victor Cazalet was killed in a plane crash in Gibraltar while escorting General Sikorski.
  • 1943 Birmingham Aston by-election: Edward Orlando Kellett was killed in action fighting in North Africa.
  • 1943 Buckingham by-election: John Whiteley was killed in a plane crash in Gibraltar while escorting General Sikorski.
  • 1943 Bristol Central by-election: Lord Apsley was killed in action in a plane crash in the Middle-East.
  • 1943 King's Lynn by-election: Somerset Maxwell died of wounds received at the Battle of El Alamein.
  • 1942 Salisbury by-election: James Despencer-Robertson died suddenly, apparently from overwork as military secretary at Southern Command Headquarters. b
  • 1942 Llandaff and Barry by-election: Patrick Munro died while taking part in an exercise for the Home Guard at Westminster.
  • 1941 The Wrekin by-election: James Baldwin-Webb drowned when the SS City of Benares was torpedoed.
  • 1941 Dudley by-election: Dudley Joel was killed in action while serving with the Royal Navy.
  • 1941 Bodmin by-election: John Rathbone was killed in action on bombing operations over Germany.
  • 1941 Hitchin by-election: Sir Arnold Wilson was killed in action over northern France while a gunner in Bomber Command
  • 1941 King's Norton by-election: Ronald Cartland was killed in action during the retreat to Dunkirk.
  • 1940 Manchester Exchange by-election: Peter Eckersley was killed in action in a plane crash while serving with the Fleet Air Arm.
  • 1940 Heywood and Radcliffe by-election: Richard Porritt was killed in action fighting in Belgium.
  • 1939 Wells by-election: Anthony Muirhead committed suicide owing to his fear that a leg-injury might prevent his service in the War. b
Notes: The above list is of those members either mentioned as having died on War Service in a written Commons answer from Prime Minister Winston Churchill on 19 January 1945, or who appear in the House of Commons Book of Remembrance unveiled in 1949.
a Mentioned in the written Commons answer, but does not appear in the House of Commons Book of Remembrance.
b Not mentioned in the written Commons answer, but does appear in the House of Commons Book of Remembrance.
NB: The above list does not include the names of three members whose deaths on active service were overtaken by the 1945 general election. For a complete list see Records of members of parliament of the United Kingdom#Second World War

First World War[]

  • October 1918 Prestwich by-election: Oswald Cawley had been killed in action in France.
  • 1918 Bath by-election: Lord Alexander Thynne had been killed in action in France.
  • 1918 Canterbury by-election: Francis Bennett-Goldney had been killed by an on-duty car accident in France.
  • 1918 Ross by-election: Percy Clive had been killed in action in France.
  • 1918 Manchester South by-election: Philip Glazebrook had been killed in action in Palestine.
  • 1917 Wisbech by-election: The Hon Neil Primrose died of wounds received in Palestine.
  • 1917 Spalding by-election: The Hon Francis McLaren had been killed in a flying accident serving with the Royal Flying Corps.
  • 1917 East Clare by-election: Willie Redmond had been killed in action in Belgium.
  • 1917 Henley by-election: Valentine Fleming had been killed by shell fire in France.
  • 1916 North Ayrshire by-election: Duncan Frederick Campbell had died in England of wounds received from a landmine on the Western Front.
  • 1916 Winchester by-election: The Hon Guy Baring had been killed in the Battle of the Somme in France.
  • 1916 Tewkesbury by-election: Michael Hicks Beach, Viscount Quenington had died of wounds in Egypt.
  • 1915 St Austell by-election: The Hon Thomas Agar-Robartes had died of wounds received in the Battle of Loos in France.
  • 1915 Cardiff by-election: Lord Ninian Crichton-Stuart had been killed in action in France.
  • 1915 Uxbridge by-election: The Hon Charles Thomas Mills had been killed in action in France.
  • 1915 Heywood by-election: Harold Thomas Cawley had been killed in action in the Battle of Gallipoli.
  • 1915 Kilmarnock Burghs by-election: William Glynne Charles Gladstone had been killed in action in France.
  • 1915 Mid Antrim by-election: The Hon Arthur O'Neill had been killed in action in the Ypres Salient in Belgium.

Miscellaneous records[]

Incumbents fall directly from first place to third place[]

1 Bruce Douglas-Mann had been re-elected as Labour MP for the seat in the 1979 general election. In 1981, along with several other MPs, he defected to the newly formed Social Democratic Party. Against his new colleagues' advice, he honoured a pledge to face his electors under his new party colours and precipitated a by-election. He came second in the by-election which was won by the Conservatives. The new Labour candidate finished third.
2 the Liberal MP, Lt-Commander the Hon. Joseph Montague Kenworthy, defected to Labour and sought re-election under his new colours. He was successful, and the new Liberal candidate lost his deposit.

Incumbent government gains seats[]

These records show the rare occasions when the government won a seat they had not won at the previous general election.

Party By-election Losing party
Conservative 2021 Hartlepool by-election Labour
2017 Copeland by-election
1982 Mitcham and Morden by-election
1961 Bristol South-East by-election1
1960 Brighouse and Spenborough by-election
1953 Sunderland South by-election
1926 Combined English Universities by-election Liberal
1923 Berwick-upon-Tweed by-election3 National Liberal
1922 Hackney South by-electionb Independent
1921 Woolwich East by-electionb Labour
1920 Stockport by-election2b Coalition Labour
Laboura 1929 Liverpool Scotland by-election4 Irish Nationalist
1929 Preston by-election5 Liberal
1924 Liverpool West Toxteth by-election Conservative
Liberal 1913 Chesterfield by-election Labour
1913 Londonderry City by-election Irish Unionist
1912 Hanley by-election Labour
1912 Hackney South by-election Independent

Notes[]

1 Seat awarded by Election Court to Conservative runner-up because Labour victor deemed ineligible.
2 An arguable gain; Stockport was a two-member seat; in the 1918 general election it was won by two supporters of the Coalition Government, one a Liberal and one a Labour member. After a death and a resignation, a by-election was held for both seats. The seats were again won by two Coalition Government supporters, but this time a Conservative and a Liberal, while a Labour candidate who did not support the government was unsuccessful.
3 National Liberal elected in 1922 election had his election declared void (electoral fraud). Resulting by-election was a gain for the Conservatives.
4 Uncontested gain from Irish Nationalist.
5 Liberal MP defected to Labour and was re-elected as Labour at a by-election the Liberals did not contest.
aLabour won both the 2000 West Bromwich West by-election and 2009 Glasgow North East by-election, regarded as a gain from the contest at the United Kingdom general elections in 1997 and 2005 respectively as those seats had been contested by the then Speakers of the House of Commons. Prior to assuming the Speakership they had both been elected as Labour MPs.
bThe Conservatives were in Coalition government, led by the Liberal Prime Minister, David Lloyd George.

Principal Opposition loses seats[]

These records show the rare occasions when the official Opposition failed to hold on to a seat they had won at the previous General election.

Lost by Gained by By-election
Conservative Liberal Democrats 2000 Romsey by-election
Unity 1969 Mid Ulster by-election (from Ulster Unionist)
Liberal 1965 Roxburgh, Selkirk and Peebles by-election
Empire Crusade 1930 Paddington South by-election1
Labour 1924 Liverpool West Toxteth by-election
Labour Conservative 2021 Hartlepool by-election
2017 Copeland by-election
Respect 2012 Bradford West by-election
SNP 1988 Glasgow Govan by-election
SDP 1987 Greenwich by-election
Liberal 1983 Bermondsey by-election
Conservative 1982 Mitcham and Morden by-election
SNP 1973 Glasgow Govan by-election
Democratic Labour 1973 Lincoln by-election
Liberal 1972 Rochdale by-election
Conservative 1961 Bristol South East by-election2
Conservative 1960 Brighouse and Spenborough by-election
Conservative 1953 Sunderland South by-election
Liberal 1927 Southwark North by-election
Liberal 1923 Anglesey by-election3
Unionist 1921 Woolwich East by-election4
1A confused situation, where the victorious Empire Free Trade Crusade candidate was effectively a right-wing unofficial Conservative, who subsequently took the whip and was re-elected as official Conservative candidate.
2seat awarded by Election Court to Conservative runner-up because Labour victor Viscount Stansgate was deemed ineligible.
3Sir Owen Thomas had been elected as Independent Labour, took the whip for a while, before reverting to Independent Labour.
4Lost to Coalition Conservatives (see Coalition Coupon)

By-election holds overturned at next general election[]

On rare occasions a party has failed to overturn an incumbent in the by-election yet has gone on to gain the seat at the subsequent general election.

By-election Held by Gain by General election
2019 Peterborough by-election Labour Conservative 2019
2013 Eastleigh by-election Liberal Democrats Conservative 2015
2011 Inverclyde by-election Labour SNP 2015
2006 Blaenau Gwent by-election Independent Labour 2010
1986 South Down by-election UUP SDLP 1987
1983 Darlington by-election Labour Conservative 1983
1973 Dundee East by-election Labour SNP February 1974
1960 Bolton East by-election Conservative Labour 1964
1928 Carmarthen by-election Liberal Labour 1929
1905 New Forest by-election Conservative Liberal 1906

By-election victors had not contested previous general election[]

It is unusual for a political party which has not contested a seat at a general election to take it at a subsequent by-election. Independent candidates are not included.

By-election Gain by Majority percentage
2014 Rochester and Strood by-election UKIP 7.3
2014 Clacton by-election UKIP 35.1
2000 South Antrim by-election DUP 2.7
1995 North Down by-election UK Unionist 10.6
1982 Glasgow Hillhead by-election SDP1 6.8
1981 Crosby by-election SDP1 9.2
April 1981 Fermanagh and South Tyrone by-election Anti H-Block 2.4
1973 Isle of Ely by-election Liberal 3.3
1973 Lincoln by-election Democratic Labour2 35.0
1969 Mid Ulster by-election Unity 6.6
1967 Hamilton by-election SNP 4.5
1958 Torrington by-election Liberal 0.6
1945 Chelmsford by-election Common Wealth 15.0
1945 Motherwell by-election SNP 2.8
1944 Skipton by-election Common Wealth 12.4
1943 Eddisbury by-election Common Wealth 2.7
1943 Belfast West by-election NI Labour 12.8
1936 Ross and Cromarty by-election National Labour 16.5
1936 Combined Scottish Universities by-election National Labour 25.3
1934 Merthyr by-election Labour 23.0
1930 Paddington South by-election Empire Crusade 4.7
1929 Liverpool Scotland by-election Labour unopposed
1926 Kingston upon Hull Central by-election Labour 15.3
1921 Kirkcaldy Burghs by-election Labour 6.8
1921 Woolwich East by-election Unionist3 2.6

Notes:

1 Alliance partner the Liberal party had contested the seat.
2 the victor was the sitting MP, who had left the Labour party.
3 candidate endorsed by the coalition government

Additional victories by minor parties[]

In addition to the above section, other minor party successes include the following. For a complete list, see the list of UK minor party and independent MPs elected.

Candidate Party By-election Votes Percentage
George Galloway Respect 2012 Bradford West by-election 18,341 52.8
Dai Davies Independent 2006 Blaenau Gwent by-election 12,543 46.7
James Kilfedder UPUP 1986 North Down by-election 30,793 79.2
Owen Carron Anti H-Block August 1981 Fermanagh and South Tyrone by-election 31,278 49.1
George Forrest Independent Unionist 1956 Mid Ulster by-election 28,605 48.4
James Carmichael Ind. Labour Party 1946 Glasgow Bridgeton by-election 6,351 34.3

Victory from third or lower place[]

  • 2012 Bradford West by-election, gained by Respect, from fifth place
  • 2004 Leicester South by-election, gained by the Liberal Democrats
  • 2003 Brent East by-election, gained by the Liberal Democrats
  • 1988 Glasgow Govan by-election, gained by the SNP, from fourth place
  • 1987 Greenwich by-election, gained by the SDP
  • 1985 Brecon and Radnor by-election, gained by the Liberals
  • 1983 Bermondsey by-election, gained by the Liberals
  • 1981 Croydon North West by-election, gained by the Liberals
  • 1973 Glasgow Govan by-election, gained by the SNP
  • 1973 Berwick-upon-Tweed by-election, gained by the Liberals
  • 1973 Ripon by-election, gained by the Liberals
  • 1972 Sutton and Cheam by-election, gained by the Liberal
  • 1966 Carmarthen by-election, gained by Plaid Cymru
  • 1962 Orpington by-election, gained by the Liberals
  • 1929 Holland with Boston by-election, gained by the Liberals

Incumbent party did not contest[]

  • 2016 Richmond Park by-election (incumbent Conservative MP ran as an Independent with party backing)
  • 1995 North Down by-election (Ulster Popular Unionist Party disintegrated before by-election)
  • 1963 Bristol South East by-election (Conservative candidate awarded seat after 1961 by-election had agreed to stand aside, if law changed to permit disqualified Labour candidate to take his seat)
  • 1942 Cardiff East by-election (Conservatives stood aside to allow election of National Government minister)
  • 1940 City of London by-election (Conservatives stood aside to allow election of National Government minister)
  • February 1940 Southampton by-election (National Liberals stood aside to allow election of National Government minister)
  • 1938 Combined Scottish Universities by-election (National Labour stood aside to allow election of National Government minister)
  • 1936 Ross and Cromarty by-election (National Liberals stood aside to allow election of National Government minister from National Labour)
  • 1936 Combined Scottish Universities by-election (Conservatives stood aside to allow election of National Government minister from National Labour)
  • 1935 Perth by-election (Conservatives stood aside to allow election of National Liberal)
  • 1929 Liverpool Scotland by-election (lone mainland Irish Nationalist was essentially a Labour supporter)
  • 1929 Preston by-election (Liberals acquiesced to William Jowitt becoming Labour's Attorney General)

Losers had been unopposed at previous election[]

  • 1930 Paddington South by-election Conservative loss, gained by Empire Free Trade Crusade.
  • 1929 Liverpool Scotland by-election Irish Nationalist loss, gained by Labour.1
  • 1928 Halifax by-election Speaker loss, gained by Labour.2
  • 1921 Kirkcaldy Burghs by-election Coalition Liberal loss, gained by Labour.
  • 1921 Woolwich East by-election Labour loss, gained by Conservative.
  • February 1920 The Wrekin by-election Coalition Liberal loss, gained by Independent.

Notes:

1 the Nationalists did not contest the by-election
2 the Speaker had originally been a Liberal MP.

Major party did not run[]

Great Britain[]

The Conservatives declined to run a candidate in the 2016 Richmond Park by-election, instead backing Conservative incumbent Zac Goldsmith, who was designated as an Independent.

The Conservatives, Liberal Democrats, UKIP, and Green Party declined to run candidates in the 2016 Batley and Spen by-election, due to the circumstances regarding the killing of the previous MP, Jo Cox.

Neither the Liberal Democrat nor the Labour Party stood candidates in the 2008 Haltemprice and Howden by-election. The by-election was a single-issue election in regards to government security policy, in which the Liberal Democrats supported the Conservative candidate.

The Conservative Party did not run a candidate in the 1963 Bristol South East by-election, the 1957 Carmarthen by-election, the 1948 Paisley by-election or the 1946 Ogmore by-election.

The Labour Party did not run in the 1945 City of London by-election, the 1945 Kensington South by-election or the 1946 Combined English Universities by-election.

Prior to 2008, the last by-election without an official Liberal Democrat, Liberal or SDP candidate had been the 1994 Newham North East by-election; the Lib Dems nominated a candidate, but he joined the Labour Party before the election. No official Liberal candidate was nominated for the 1980 Glasgow Central by-election, whilst no Liberal stood in either the 1973 Westhoughton by-election or the 1973 West Bromwich by-election, both held on 24 May 1973.

The last Scottish by-elections without official Scottish National Party candidates were the 1965 Roxburgh, Selkirk and Peebles by-election and the 1964 Rutherglen by-election.

Plaid Cymru did not stand a candidate for the 2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election, choosing instead to endorse the Liberal Democrat candidate in a "Stop Brexit" alliance. Prior to that, the last Welsh by-elections without official Welsh Nationalist candidates were the 1950 Abertillery by-election, the 1946 Pontypool by-election and the 1945 Monmouth by-election.

Northern Ireland[]

The more fluid nature of politics in Northern Ireland makes it harder to define all major parties. In addition many by-elections have not been contested by parties holding other seats in the House of Commons, whether due to agreements with other parties, poor organisation in the constituency or the particular circumstances on the by-election. However, for the period since 1981 (which saw the first by-elections in twelve years, during which time several major political realignments had occurred) the main parties are usually considered to be the Democratic Unionist Party, Sinn Féin, the Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) and the Ulster Unionist Party.

At the 2013 Mid Ulster by-election. a single "unity" candidate was backed by the withdrawal of the Democratic Unionist Party, Ulster Conservatives and Unionists and Traditional Unionist Voice. Prior to Mid Ulster in 2013, the most recent examples of by-elections without official Democratic Unionist candidates were the 1995 North Down by-election and the 1990 Upper Bann by-election. They also did not stand in the twelve seats held by other Unionist parties in the 15 by-elections in 1986.

The last by-election without official candidates from either Sinn Féin or the SDLP was the 1995 North Down by-election. Both parties also declined to stand in the eleven Unionist majority seats in the 15 by-elections in 1986. The SDLP also did not contest either the April or August 1981 by-elections in Fermanagh and South Tyrone.

The last by-elections without official Ulster Unionist candidates prior to Mid Ulster in 2013 were North Antrim, East Belfast, Mid Ulster and North Down in the 15 by-elections in 1986.

The main British parties have generally not stood in seats in Northern Ireland. The by-election exceptions are the 1990 Upper Bann by-election (NI Conservatives and continuing SDP) and the 1995 North Down by-election (NI Conservatives). Prior to the 1970s the Ulster Unionists were effectively the local Conservatives, whilst the Liberals contested some but not all seats. The SDLP has traditionally seen itself as a "sister party" to the British Labour party, and its MPs usually accept the Labour whip in Parliament.

Minor parties other strong performance[]

Parties without representation in the House of Commons which saved their deposit:

Party By-election Candidate Votes Percentage Position Notes
Alliance 1986 Belfast East by-election Oliver Napier 5,917 17.4 2 Party historically represented at Westminster
Alliance 1986 Belfast North by-election Paul Maguire 5,072 16.7 2 Party historically represented at Westminster
Alliance 1982 Belfast South by-election David Cook 11,726 26.9 2 Party historically represented at Westminster
Alliance 1986 Belfast South by-election David Cook 7,635 25.0 2 Party historically represented at Westminster
Alliance 1986 East Antrim by-election Seán Neeson 5,405 15.1 2 Party historically represented at Westminster
Alliance 1986 North Down by-election John Cushnahan 8,066 20.8 2 Party historically represented at Westminster
Alliance 1995 North Down by-election Oliver Napier 6,970 25.4 3 Party historically represented at Westminster
Alliance 2000 South Antrim by-election David Ford 2,031 6.6 5 Party represented in the Northern Ireland Assembly and historically at Westminster
All Party Alliance 1968 Oldham West by-election John Creasey 3,389 13.2 3
Brexit Party 2019 Peterborough by-election Mike Greene 9,801 28.9 2 Party represented in the European Parliament
Brexit Party 2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election Des Parkinson 3,331 10.5 3 Party represented in the European Parliament
BNP 1994 Dagenham by-election John Tyndall 1,511 7.0 4
BNP 2011 Barnsley Central by-election Enis Dalton 1,463 6.0 4 Party represented in the European Parliament
BNP 2007 Sedgefield by-election Andrew Spence 2,494 8.9 4
BNP 2012 Rotherham by-election Marlene Guest 1,804 8.5 3 Party represented in the European Parliament
English Democrat 2008 Haltemprice and Howden by-election Joanne Robinson 1,714 7.2 3
Green 2008 Haltemprice and Howden by-election Shan Oakes 1,758 7.4 2 Party represented in the European Parliament and subsequently at Westminster
Green 2009 Norwich North by-election Rupert Read 3,350 9.7 5 Party represented in the European Parliament and subsequently at Westminster
Green 1989 Vauxhall by-election Henry Bewley 1,767 6.1 4 Party represented in the House of Lords
Independent 2013 Mid Ulster by-election Nigel Lutton 12,781 34.4 2 DUP, UUP and TUV did not stand candidates and supported Lutton's candidacy[12][13]
Independent 1946 Combined English Universities by-election Mary Stocks 5,124 28.0 2
Independent 1946 Combined English Universities by-election Ernest Simon 4,028 22.0 3
Independent 2021 Hartlepool by-election Sam Lee 2,904 9.7 3
Independent 1986 East Londonderry by-election Peter Barry 2,001 6.1 2 Fictitious paper candidate running as "For the Anglo-Irish Agreement"
Independent 2013 South Shields by-election Ahmed Khan 1,331 5.4 4
Independent 2011 Barnsley Central by-election Tony Devoy 1,266 5.2 5
Independent 1999 Hamilton South by-election Stephen Mungall 1,075 5.5 5
Independent 2007 Sedgefield by-election Paul Gittins 1,885 6.7 5
Independent 1986 South Antrim by-election Peter Barry 1,870 5.9 2 Fictitious paper candidate running as "For the Anglo-Irish Agreement"
Independent 1986 Strangford by-election Peter Barry 1,993 5.8 2 Fictitious paper candidate running as "For the Anglo-Irish Agreement"
Independent Labour 1946 Combined English Universities by-election S. Wormald 3,414 18.7 4
Independent Labour 1991 Liverpool Walton by-election Lesley Mahmood 2,613 6.5 3
Independent Unionist 1946 Down by-election J. Hastings-Little 16,895 17.1 3
Independent Unionist 1995 North Down by-election Alan Chambers 2,170 7.9 4
Anti-Partition 1948 Armagh by-election James O'Reilly 16,284 40.3 2 Party later represented at Westminster
Irish Labour 1950 Belfast West by-election Jack Beattie 30,833 49.2 2 Party previously and later represented at Westminster
Lincolnshire Independent 2016 Sleaford and North Hykeham by-election Marianne Overton 2,892 8.8 5
National Fellowship 1963 Bristol South East by-election Edward Martell 4,834 19.0 2
National Front 1973 West Bromwich by-election Martin Webster 4,789 16.0 3
NI Labour 1959 Belfast East by-election James Gardner 14,264 42.2 2 Party represented in the Parliament of Northern Ireland and previously at Westminster
NI Labour 1952 Belfast South by-election Samuel Napier 7,655 24.9 2 Party previously represented at Westminster
NI Labour 1963 Belfast South by-election Norman Searight 7,209 25.8 2 Party represented in the Parliament of Northern Ireland and previously at Westminster
NI Labour 1946 Down by-election Desmond Donnelly 28,846 29.3 2 Party represented in the Parliament of Northern Ireland and previously at Westminster
Peace 2012 Middlesbrough by-election Imdad Hussain 1,060 6.3 5
Plaid Cymru 1946 Aberdare by-election Wynne Samuel 7,090 20.0 2 Party later represented at Westminster
Plaid Cymru 1954 Aberdare by-election Gwynfor Evans 5,671 16.0 2 Party later represented at Westminster
Plaid Cymru 1972 Merthyr Tydfil by-election Emrys Roberts 11,852 37.0 2 Party previously and later represented at Westminster
Plaid Cymru 1946 Ogmore by-election T. R. Morgan 5,685 29.4 2 Party later represented at Westminster
People Before Profit 2011 Belfast West by-election Gerry Carroll 1,751 7.6 3 Two members elected to the Dáil in 2011
Respect 2004 Birmingham Hodge Hill by-election John Rees 1,282 6.3 4 George Galloway MP was a party member, but was usually considered Independent Labour in Parliament at the time
Respect 2004 Leicester South by-election Yvonne Ridley 3,724 12.7 4 George Galloway MP was a party member, but was usually considered Independent Labour in Parliament at the time
SDLP 2018 West Tyrone by-election Daniel McCrossan 6,254 17.9 3 Party represented in the Northern Ireland Assembly and historically at Westminster
SNP 1946 Glasgow Bridgeton by-election M. Wood 2,575 13.9 4 Party previously and later represented at Westminster
SNP 1961 Glasgow Bridgeton by-election Ian MacDonald 3,549 18.7 3 Party previously and later represented at Westminster
SNP 1967 Glasgow Pollok by-election George Leslie 10,884 29.2 3 Party previously and later represented at Westminster
SNP 1970 South Ayrshire by-election Sam Purdie 7,785 19.9 3 Party previously and later represented at Westminster
SNP 1962 West Lothian by-election William Wolfe 9,750 23.3 2 Party previously and later represented at Westminster
Scottish Socialist 2000 Falkirk West by-election Iain Hunter 989 5.1 4 Party represented in the Scottish Parliament
Scottish Socialist 2000 Glasgow Anniesland by-election Charlie McCarthy 1,441 7.2 5 Party represented in the Scottish Parliament
Scottish Socialist 1999 Hamilton South by-election Shareen Blackall 1,847 9.5 3 Party represented in the Scottish Parliament
SDP 1991 Neath by-election John Warman 1,826 5.3 5 Party of same name which was dissolved in 1990 was represented in Parliament
Socialist Alliance 2000 Preston by-election Terry Cartwright 1,210 5.7 4
Socialist Alliance 2000 Tottenham by-election Weyman Bennett 885 5.4 4
Socialist Labour 1996 Barnsley East by-election Ken Capstick 949 5.3 4
Socialist Labour 1996 Hemsworth by-election Brenda Nixon 1,193 5.4 4
Socialist Labour 2002 Ogmore by-election Christopher Herriot 1,152 6.3 5
UKIP 2004 Hartlepool by-election Stephen Allison 2,347 10.2 3 Party represented in the European Parliament
UKIP 2006 Bromley and Chislehurst by-election Nigel Farage 2,347 8.1 3 Party represented in the European Parliament
UKIP 2009 Norwich North by-election Glenn Tingle 4,068 11.8 4 Party represented in the European Parliament
UKIP 2011 Oldham East and Saddleworth by-election Paul Nuttall 2,029 5.8 4 Party represented in the European Parliament
UKIP 2011 Barnsley Central by-election Jane Collins 2,953 12.2 2 Party represented in the European Parliament
UKIP 2011 Feltham and Heston by-election Andrew Charalambous 1,276 5.5 4 Party represented in the European Parliament
UKIP 2012 Cardiff South and Penarth by-election Simon Zeigler 1,179 6.1 5 Party represented in the European Parliament
UKIP 2012 Corby by-election Margot Parker 5,108 14.3 3 Party represented in the European Parliament
UKIP 2012 Rotherham by-election Jane Collins 4,648 21.8 2 Party represented in the European Parliament
UKIP 2012 Middlesbrough by-election Richard Elvin 1,990 11.8 2 Party represented in the European Parliament
UKIP 2012 Croydon North by-election Winston McKenzie 1,400 5.7 3 Party represented in the European Parliament
UKIP 2013 Eastleigh by-election Diane James 11,571 27.8 2 Party represented in the European Parliament
UKIP 2013 South Shields by-election Richard Elvin 5,988 24.2 2 Party represented in the European Parliament
UKIP 2014 Wythenshawe and Sale East by-election John Bickley 4,301 18.0 2 Party represented in the European Parliament
UKIP 2014 Newark by-election Roger Helmer 10,028 25.9 2 Party represented in the European Parliament
UKIP 2014 Heywood and Middleton by-election John Bickley 11,016 38.7 2 Party represented in the European Parliament, and also represented in the House of Commons following the Clacton by-election the same day.
UUP 2018 West Tyrone by-election Chris Smyth 2,909 8.3 4 Party represented in the Northern Ireland Assembly and historically at Westminster
Workers' Party 1986 Belfast North by-election Seamus Lynch 3,563 11.8 3
Workers' Party 1986 Lagan Valley by-election John Lowry 3,328 9.3 2
Workers' Party 1986 Upper Bann by-election Tom French 6,978 19.2 2
Workers Party 2021 Batley and Spen by-election George Galloway 8,264 21.9 3

Miscellaneous notable results[]

It is unusual for one of the major parties to finish outside of the top three in England and Wales (or outside of the top four in Scotland). It is also unusual for the principal opposition party to suffer a significant reverse in its share of the vote or ranking.

  • The 2021 Hartlepool by-election, with a 16% swing to the Conservatives, was the Labour Party's worst result in a Labour-held seat while the party was in Opposition, since the 1912 Hanley by-election. It was effectively the party's worst-ever result since it became a major party.
  • The 2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election saw Labour finish fourth behind the Liberal Democrats, Conservatives and Brexit Party. In addition, UKIP fell to last place, behind the Official Monster Raving Loony Party – a result compared to the continuing SDP's defeat in the 1990 Bootle by-election.[14][15]
  • The 2016 Richmond Park by-election was the first Liberal Democrat gain since 2010, showing tentative signs of recovery for the party. It also gave them a female MP for the first time in the 56th parliament. In addition it was the first occasion in more than a century of Labour losing their deposit in a London by-election.
  • The 2014 Clacton by-election saw the election of the first UKIP MP on the largest swing ever against the Conservative Party. It was also the first time that a party had gained a seat not having contested the previous election since the 1973 Isle of Ely by-election. The Liberal Democrat's 1.4% of the vote was their worst result in an English seat since 1924.
  • The 2013 Eastleigh by-election delivered several records. It was the first time in an English seat that both Labour and Conservative finished outside of the top two. For the first time, UKIP came close to winning a seat. It was the closest three-cornered English by-election since the 1921 Penistone by-election, and, aside from the 1946 Combined English Universities by-election, it was won with the lowest winning share of the vote since 1918. Aside from the contrived example of the 1989 Richmond (Yorks) by-election it was also the first time Labour had finished fourth in a by-election while in Opposition.
  • At the 2012 Rotherham by-election, the Conservative party fell from second to fifth place (equalling its previous lowest position in a by-election in mainland Britain) while the Liberal Democrats fell from third place to eighth, the lowest ranking ever achieved by a major party in a by-election. This followed the 2011 Barnsley Central by-election, where the Liberal Democrats took sixth place, dropping from second at the 2010 general election. The Rotherham by-election was also the first recorded by-election result to have women in the top four places.
  • In the 2009 Glasgow North East by-election and 1999 Hamilton South by-election the Liberal Democrats came sixth in both cases, equalling the worst ever placing by a major party in the UK. In 1999 the party had 634 votes while in Glasgow the party won 474 votes.
  • At the 2008 Henley by-election the Labour Party finished in fifth place, the worst ranking for the party in its history, and a record low for any government in a UK mainland constituency. The lowest ever for an incumbent government was the 1990 Upper Bann by-election when the Conservatives came sixth, although they had not previously contested the seat.
  • At the 2006 Blaenau Gwent by-election, held on the same day as Bromley and Chislehurst, the Conservative Party's fifth-place ranking equalled the worst-place achieved by a major party in England or Wales, a feat the Conservatives had first achieved in the same seat in the 2005 general election. The Blaenau victor, Dai Davies was the first independent to hold a seat previously occupied by an independent since Sir C.V.F. Townshend held The Wrekin in 1920.
  • The drop in the Conservative share of the vote, 11.1%, at the 2006 Bromley and Chislehurst by-election was their worst result in a Conservative-held seat while in opposition since 19301. At the same by-election, the Labour Party's fall from second to fourth place was the first time the party had suffered such a reverse in an English seat.
  • The Conservative Party fell from second to fourth place in the 2004 Hartlepool by-election and the 1983 Bermondsey by-election, and fell from third to fourth place in the 1991 Liverpool Walton by-election. At the time their worst ranking in an English by-election since at least 1945 was the drop from third place to fourth place in the 1974 Newham South by-election.
  • The Labour party fell from second to fourth place in the 2000 Ceredigion by-election.
  • At the Bootle by-election, 1990 the "continuing" SDP finished seventh out of eight candidates, behind the Monster Raving Loony Party, in a seat parts of which had once been in adjoining Crosby, scene of the party's greatest triumph only eight years previously.
  • The Labour Party achieved fourth place in the 1989 Richmond (Yorks) by-election although this was contrived somewhat by the Social and Liberal Democrats and Social Democratic Party parties running separate candidates.
  • At the 1976 Walsall North by-election, the Liberal Party could take only fifth place. Beaten by an independent and a minor party candidate, at the time, this was the worst placing for any major party in an English by-election since at least 1945.
  • The last time the Liberals lost a by-election they were defending was at the 1957 Carmarthen by-election, defeated by the former Liberal MP turned Labour candidate, Lady Megan Lloyd George. The Liberal parliamentary contingent was thus reduced to five MPs, its lowest ever level.

Notes 1Excluding the 1931 Westminster St George's by-election and the 1930 Paddington South by-election, which were essentially intra-Conservative contests, the previous worst result was, ironically, the 1930 Bromley by-election

By-elections having national significance[]

  • 2017 Copeland by-election: A Conservative win in a previously safe Labour seat confirmed the party's strong opinion poll lead and prompted an early election.
  • 2016 Richmond Park by-election: After losing most of its seats in the 2015 general election, a Lib Dem gain on a large swing in a strongly Remain seat marked the beginning of a turnaround for the party and demonstrated the political effects of Brexit.
  • 2014 Clacton by-election: The first by-election victory for the United Kingdom Independence Party
  • 2008 Crewe and Nantwich by-election: A Conservative gain (from Labour in this case) at a by-election for the first time since 1982, and the first time as an opposition party since 1978, demonstrated the Conservatives were back in contention to possibly win the next general election.
  • 2003 Brent East by-election: A Lib Dem gain of a Labour safe seat on a 29% swing demonstrated the political effect of public dissatisfaction with the Iraq War.
  • 1997 Wirral South by-election: A Labour gain on a large swing just weeks before a general election confirmed the move in the party's favour was real and meant the Conservatives became a minority government.
  • 1991 Liverpool Walton by-election: The Militant group, as Walton Real Labour, opposed a Labour candidate for the first time; their showing led to the decision to re-organise as Militant Labour without using entryist tactics.
  • May 1990 Bootle by-election: Abysmal showing of the 'continuing SDP' led to the party being wound up.
  • 1987 Greenwich by-election: Defeat of a left-wing Labour candidate demonstrated the party's vulnerability.
  • 1983 Darlington by-election: Labour's successful defence of a marginal seat stabilised the party, and secured the position of Leader Michael Foot.
  • 1981 Crosby by-election: Victory of the Social Democratic Party in a rock-solid Conservative seat showed the national appeal of the party.
  • April 1981 Fermanagh and South Tyrone by-election: Election of Maze prison hunger-striker Bobby Sands demonstrated that nationalist voters could support violent Republican candidates; taken by the Republican movement as a vindication of their stance, it led to the return of Sinn Féin as a major force in Northern Irish politics.
  • 1977 Birmingham Stechford by-election: The loss of the seat to the Conservatives tipped Labour under James Callaghan into minority government status, necessitating the Lib–Lab pact.
  • 1967 Hamilton by-election: Scottish National Party victory massively boosted the prospects of the party.
  • 1966 Kingston upon Hull North by-election: Easy Labour victory in a marginal seat demonstrated to Prime Minister Harold Wilson that he would probably win a snap general election, and led to the construction of the Humber Bridge.
  • 1965 Roxburgh, Selkirk and Peebles by-election: Rare Conservative loss in Opposition leads to resignation of leader Sir Alec Douglas-Home and election of Edward Heath as first democratically elected Conservative leader.
  • 1965 Leyton by-election: Foreign Secretary Patrick Gordon-Walker, who was found the seat after losing Smethwick in 1964, is again defeated; he is forced to resign from the Government.
  • 1963 Kinross and Western Perthshire by-election: Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home successfully returned to the House of Commons after disclaiming his peerage.
  • 1962 Orpington by-election: A Liberal gain in a suburban seat led to a national revival for the party.
  • 1961 Bristol South East by-election: Incumbent Labour MP Tony Benn re-elected after inheriting a peerage; the seat was awarded to the defeated Conservative, but the circumstances led to the Peerage Act 1963 allowing hereditary peerages to be disclaimed.
  • 1938 Oxford by-election: After a campaign dominated by appeasement and the Munich agreement, the government candidate won.
  • 1935 Liverpool Wavertree by-election: Intervention of Independent Conservative Randolph Churchill, on platform of rearmament and anti-Indian Home Rule, hands safe seat to Labour on largest ever swing (30%). Indication of hostility to National Government, and Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald resigns within months.
  • 1933 Fulham East by-election: Unexpected Labour gain in a previously safe Conservative constituency, ascribed to pacifism.
  • 1922 Newport by-election: Election of an anti-Coalition Conservative in a tight three-way contest spurred on Conservative MPs to end their coalition with David Lloyd George.
  • 1920 Dartford by-election: massive swing to Labour prefigures the party's eclipse of the Liberals.

Firsts and lasts[]

  • First by-election to be called via the provisions of the Recall of MPs Act 2015: 2019 Peterborough by-election
  • Last Conservative gain in a by-election: 2021 Hartlepool by-election
  • Last Labour gain at a by-election: 2012 Corby by-election
  • Last Liberal Democrat gain at a by-election: 2021 Chesham and Amersham by-election
  • First UK Independence Party gain at a by-election: 2014 Clacton by-election
  • Last UK Independence Party gain at a by-election: 2014 Rochester and Strood by-election
  • First by-election gain by a Northern Ireland party: 1943 Belfast West by-election (Northern Ireland Labour Party from Ulster Unionist Party)
  • Last by-election gain by a Northern Ireland party: 2000 South Antrim by-election (Democratic Unionist Party from Ulster Unionist Party)
  • First by-election gain by the Social Democratic Party (SDP): 1981 Crosby by-election
  • Last by-election gain by the Social Democratic Party (SDP): 1987 Greenwich by-election
  • Last by-election gain by the Liberal Party: 1986 Ryedale by-election
  • First by-election gain by the Scottish National Party: 1945 Motherwell by-election
  • Last by-election gain by the Scottish National Party: 2008 Glasgow East by-election
  • First and last by-election gain by Plaid Cymru: 1966 Carmarthen by-election
  • Last unopposed by-election in England, Scotland or Wales: 1946 Hemsworth by-election
  • Last by-election in a university constituency: 1946 Combined Scottish Universities by-election
  • Last by-election caused by appointment to ministerial office: 1926 East Renfrewshire by-election
  • Last by-election from what was to become the Irish Free State: 1919 Dublin University by-election
  • Last double member by-election: 1920 Stockport by-election
  • Last by-election result to be declared undue: 1961 Bristol South East by-election
  • Last by-election result to be declared void: 1892 Cirencester by-election
  • First by-election subject to the Corrupt and Illegal Practices Prevention Act 1883:
  • First by-election to be held using the secret ballot: 1872 Pontefract by-election

See also[]

  • List of United Kingdom by-elections
  • United Kingdom European Parliament election records
  • Swing (United Kingdom)
  • Records of members of parliament of the United Kingdom
  • United Kingdom general election records

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k Colin Rallings and Michael Thrasher, British electoral facts, 1832-2006 (Parliamentary Research Services)
  2. ^ "Labour holds in Cardiff and Manchester but turnout is low". Channel 4 News. Retrieved 16 November 2012.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Craig, F. W. S. (1968). British Parliamentary Election Statistics 1918-1968. Glasgow: Political Reference Publications. p. 38. ISBN 0900178000.
  4. ^ South Shields by-election UK Polling Report
  5. ^ Roy Jenkins Churchill (Macmillan, 2001), page 325 ISBN 0-333-78290-9
  6. ^ Since the Reform Act 1832; of those whose age can be verified.
  7. ^ Chris Pond, Parliament and Religious Disabilities Archived September 28, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ John M. Clarke (November 1993). "Charles Bradlaugh". Necropolis News. Retrieved 20 April 2017.
  9. ^ "Manchester Gorton by-election cancellation confirmed". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 20 April 2017.
  10. ^ "Baronetage". Leighrayment.com. Archived from the original on May 1, 2008. Retrieved 1 October 2016.CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  11. ^ A verdict of accidental death was recorded at the inquest. Clitherow was a medical doctor and had taken seven barbitone tablets, described by the pathologist as a "bold dose". See The Times, 19 June 1947, p. 2.
  12. ^ "Mid Ulster TUV Chair Signs Lutton's Nomination Papers". 18 February 2013. Archived from the original on 24 April 2013.
  13. ^ Purdy, Martina (14 February 2013). "Mid Ulster by-election: Lutton chosen as unionist candidate - BBC News". BBC News. Retrieved 1 October 2016.
  14. ^ Forrest, Adam (2 August 2019). "Brecon and Radnorshire by-election result: Ukip beaten by Monster Raving Loony party". The Independent. Retrieved 5 August 2019.
  15. ^ Read, Jonathon (2 August 2019). "Monster Raving Loony Party 'finishes off' UKIP by beating them in by-election". The New European. Retrieved 5 August 2019.

Further reading[]

Retrieved from ""