词条 | 1913 Londonderry City by-election |
释义 |
The Londonderry City by-election was a Parliamentary by-election. It returned one Member of Parliament to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom, elected by the first past the post voting system. VacancyThe sitting Unionist MP, the James Hamilton succeeded his father on his death as the Duke of Abercorn, so vacated his seat in the House of Commons to take up his seat in the House of Lords. He had been MP here since 1900. Previous result{{Election box begin | title=General Election December 1910Electorate 5,068}} {{Election box candidate with party link||party = Irish Unionist Party |candidate =James Hamilton |votes =2,415 |percentage =51.1 |change = }}{{Election box candidate with party link| |party = Irish Parliamentary Party |candidate = Shane Leslie |votes = 2,310 |percentage =48.9 |change = }}{{Election box majority| |votes = |percentage =1.2 |change = }}{{Election box turnout| |votes = |percentage = |change = }}{{Election box hold with party link| |winner = Unionist Party (UK) |swing = }}{{Election box end}} CandidatesThe Unionist candidate was 50-year-old Antrim born, London based soldier, Hercules Pakenham. The Catholic clergy, whose authority on the choice of nationalist candidate was total, surprisingly selected Liberal David Hogg, a 73-year-old local shirt manufacturer and a Protestant.[1] CampaignThe date of poll was set at 30 January, just 27 days after the death of the old Duke. This left little time for campaigning. Hogg's election address said he was a Liberal and a supporter of the government's Home Rule Bill; he did not canvass during the election.[2] Result{{Election box begin | title=Londonderry City by-election, 1913Electorate}} {{Election box candidate with party link||party = Liberal Party (UK) |candidate = David Cleghorn Hogg |votes = 2,699 |percentage =50.5 |change =+50.5 }}{{Election box candidate with party link| |party = Irish Unionist Party |candidate =Hercules Pakenham |votes =2,642 |percentage =49.5 |change =-1.6 }}{{Election box majority| |votes =57 |percentage =1.0 |change =n/a }}{{Election box turnout| |votes = |percentage = |change = }}{{Election box gain with party link| |winner = Liberal Party (UK) |loser = Irish Unionist Party |swing =n/a }}{{Election box end}} AftermathHogg died in August 1914 causing another by-election at which the Liberal, Sir James Brown Dougherty was returned unopposed. References1. ^Siege city: the story of Derry and Londonderry by Brian Lacy 2. ^{{cite web|url=http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1913/jun/10/government-of-ireland-bill#S5CV0053P0_19130610_HOC_375|title=GOVERNMENT OF IRELAND BILL.|author=|date=|work=millbanksystems.com}}
6 : 1913 elections in the United Kingdom|1913 in Ireland|20th century in Derry (city)|By-elections to the Parliament of the United Kingdom in County Londonderry constituencies|Elections in Derry (city)|1910s elections in Ireland |
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