United Kingdom general election, 1945

United Kingdom general election, 1945

5 July 1945

All 640 seats in the House of Commons
321 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
Turnout 72.8%, Increase1.7%

  First party Second party
 
Leader Clement Attlee Winston Churchill
Party Labour Conservative
Leader since 25 October 1935 9 October 1940
Leader's seat Limehouse Woodford
Last election 154 seats, 38.0% 386 seats, 47.8%
Seats won 393 197
Seat change Increase239 Decrease189
Popular vote 11,967,746 8,716,211
Percentage 47.7% 36.2%
Swing Increase9.7% Decrease11.6%

  Third party Fourth party
 
Leader Sir Archibald Sinclair Ernest Brown
Party Liberal Liberal National
Leader since 26 November 1935 1940
Leader's seat Caithness & Sutherland (defeated) Leith (defeated)
Last election 21 seats, 6.7% 33 seats, 3.7%
Seats won 12 11
Seat change Decrease9 Decrease22
Popular vote 2,177,938 686,652
Percentage 9.0% 2.9%
Swing Increase2.3% Decrease0.8%

Colours denote the winning party—as shown in § Results[lower-alpha 1]

Prime Minister before election

Winston Churchill
Conservative

Appointed Prime Minister

Clement Attlee
Labour

The 1945 United Kingdom general election was held on 5 July 1945, with polls in some constituencies delayed until 12 July and in Nelson and Colne until 19 July, because of local wakes weeks.[1] The results were counted and declared on 26 July, to allow time to transport the votes of those serving overseas.

The result was an unexpected landslide victory for Clement Attlee's Labour Party, over Winston Churchill's Conservatives.[2] It was the first time the Conservatives had lost the popular vote since the 1906 election; they would not win it again until 1955. Labour won its first majority government, and a mandate to implement its postwar reforms. The 10.7% national swing from the Conservative Party to the Labour Party remains the largest ever achieved in a British general election.

Background

Held less than two months after VE Day, it was the first general election since 1935, as general elections had been suspended during the Second World War. Clement Attlee, Leader of the Labour Party, refused Winston Churchill's offer of continuing the wartime coalition until the Allied defeat of Japan. Parliament was dissolved on 15 June.

Outcome

The caretaker government led by Churchill was heavily defeated; the Labour Party under Attlee's leadership won a landslide victory, gaining a majority of 145 seats.

The result of the election came as a major shock to the Conservatives,[3] given the heroic status of Winston Churchill, but reflected the voters' belief that the Labour Party were better able to rebuild the country following the war than the Conservatives.[4] Ralph Ingersoll reported in late 1940 that "Everywhere I went in London people admired [Churchill's] energy, his courage, his singleness of purpose. People said they didn't know what Britain would do without him. He was obviously respected. But no one felt he would be Prime Minister after the war. He was simply the right man in the right job at the right time. The time being the time of a desperate war with Britain's enemies".[5] Henry Pelling, noting that polls showed a steady Labour lead after 1942, explained the long-term forces that caused the Labour landslide. He pointed to the usual swing against the party in power; the Conservative loss of initiative; wide fears of a return to the high unemployment of the 1930s; the theme that socialist planning would be more efficient in operating the economy; and the mistaken belief that Churchill would continue as Prime Minister regardless of the result.[6]

Though voters respected and liked Churchill's wartime record, they were more distrustful of the Conservative Party's domestic and foreign policy record in the late 1930s. Labour had also been given, during the war, the opportunity to display to the electorate their domestic competence in government, under men such as Attlee as Deputy Prime Minister, Herbert Morrison at the Home Office and Ernest Bevin at the Ministry of Labour.[7] Churchill and the Conservatives are also generally considered to have run a poor campaign in comparison to Labour; Churchill's statement that Attlee's programme would require "some form of a Gestapo" to implement is considered to have been particularly poorly judged.[8]

The Labour manifesto 'Let Us Face the Future' included promises of nationalisation, economic planning, full employment, a National Health Service, and a system of social security. The Conservative manifesto, 'Mr. Churchill's Declaration to the Voters', on the other hand, included progressive ideas on key social issues but was relatively vague on the idea of post-war economic control;[7] having been associated with high levels of unemployment in the 1930s,[9] they failed to convince voters that they could effectively deal with it in a post-war Britain.[10]

This was the first election in which Labour gained a majority of seats, and also the first time it won a plurality of votes. The election was a disaster for the Liberal Party; it lost all its urban seats, while its leader Archibald Sinclair lost his rural seat of Caithness and Sutherland. According to Baines, the defeat marked its transition from being a party of government to a party of the political fringe.[11] The National Liberal Party fared even worse, losing two-thirds of its seats and falling behind the Liberals in seat count for the first time since the parties split in 1931. This was the final election that the Liberal Nationals fought as an autonomous party, as they merged with the Conservative Party two years later, continuing to exist as a subsidiary party of the Conservatives until 1968.

Future prominent figures who entered Parliament included Harold Wilson, James Callaghan, Barbara Castle, Michael Foot and Hugh Gaitskell. Future Conservative Prime Minister Harold Macmillan lost his seat, returning to Parliament at a by-election later in the year.

Results

393 197 12 11 27
Labour Conservative Lib LN O
UK General Election 1945
Candidates Votes
Party Leader Stood Elected Gained Unseated Net % of total % No. Net %
  Labour Clement Attlee 603 393 242 3 +239 61.4 47.7 11,967,746 +9.7
  Conservative Winston Churchill 559 197 14 204 190 30.8 36.2 8,716,211 11.6
  Liberal Archibald Sinclair 306 12 5 14 9 1.9 9.0 2,177,938 +2.3
  Liberal National Ernest Brown 49 11 0 22 22 1.7 2.9 686,652 0.8
  Independent N/A 38 8 6 0 +6 1.3 0.6 133,191 +0.5
  National N/A 10 2 2 1 +1 0.3 0.5 130,513 +0.2
  Common Wealth C. A. Smith 23 1 1 0 +1 0.2 0.5 110,634 N/A
  Communist Harry Pollitt 21 2 1 0 +1 0.3 0.4 97,945 +0.3
  Nationalist James McSparran 3 2 0 0 0 0.3 0.4 92,819 +0.2
  National Independent N/A 13 2 1 1 0 0.3 0.3 65,171 N/A
  Independent Labour N/A 7 2 2 0 0 0.3 0.3 63,135 +0.2
  Ind. Conservative N/A 6 2 2 0 +2 0.3 0.2 57,823 +0.1
  Ind. Labour Party Bob Edwards 5 3 0 1 1 0.5 0.2 46,769 0.5
  Independent Progressive N/A 7 1 1 0 +1 0.2 0.1 45,967 +0.1
  Independent Liberal N/A 3 2 2 0 +2 0.3 0.1 30,450 +0.1
  SNP Douglas Young 8 0 0 0 0 N/A 0.1 26,707 0.1
  Plaid Cymru Abi Williams 7 0 0 0 0 N/A 0.0 16,017 N/A
  Commonwealth Labour Harry Midgley 1 0 0 0 0 N/A 0.0 14,096 N/A
  Independent Nationalist N/A 4 0 0 0 0 N/A 0.0 5,430 N/A
  Liverpool Protestant H. D. Longbottom 1 0 0 0 0 N/A 0.0 2,601 N/A
  Christian Pacifist N/A 1 0 0 0 0 N/A 0.0 2,381 N/A
  Democratic Norman Leith-Hay-Clark 5 0 0 0 0 N/A 0.0 1,809 N/A
  Agriculturist N/A 1 0 0 0 0 N/A 0.0 1,068 N/A
  Socialist (GB) N/A 1 0 0 0 0 N/A 0.0 472 N/A
  United Socialist Guy Aldred 1 0 0 0 0 N/A 0.0 300 N/A

Votes summary

Popular vote
Labour
47.7%
Conservative
36.2%
Liberal
9.0%
Liberal National
2.9%
Others
4.2%

Seats summary

Parliamentary seats
Labour
61.4%
Conservative
30.8%
Liberal
1.9%
Liberal National
1.2%
Others
4.7%

MPs who lost their seats

Party Name Constituency Office held whilst in power Year elected Defeated by Party
Conservative Maj Henry Adam Procter Accrington 1931 Capt Walter Scott-Elliot Labour
Henry Longhurst Acton 1943 Joseph Sparks
Sir Jonah Walker-Smith Barrow and Furness 1931 Walter Monslow
Sir Richard Wells, 1st Baronet Bedford 1922 Thomas Skeffington-Lodge
John McEwen Berwick and Haddington 1931 John Robertson
Sir Oliver Simmonds Birmingham Duddeston 1931 Edith Wills
Maj Basil Arthur John Peto Birmingham King's Norton 1941 Raymond Blackburn
The Rt Hon Geoffrey Lloyd Birmingham Ladywood Minister for Information 1931 Victor Yates
The Rt Hon Leo Amery Birmingham Sparkbrook Secretary of State for India and Burma 1911 Percy Shurmer
Walter Higgs Birmingham West 1937 Charles Simmons
Sir Edward William Salt Birmingham Yardley 1931 Wesley Perrins
Maj Sir Cyril Entwistle Bolton 1931 John Lewis
Eric Errington Bootle 1935 John Kinley
Violet Bathurst, Lady Apsley Bristol Central 1943 Stan Awbery
The Hon Maj Lionel Berry Buckingham 1943 Aidan Crawley
Capt Nigel Colman Brixton 1927 Lt Col Marcus Lipton
Col The Hon John Gretton Burton 1943 Arthur William Lyne
Col Albert Braithwaite Buckrose 1926 George Wadsworth Liberal
The Hon Oscar Guest Cambridge 1934 Tudor Watkins Labour
Richard Tufnell Camberwell North West (contested Breconshire and Radnorshire) 1935 Arthur Symonds
The Rt Hon Sir Percy James Grigg Cardiff East Secretary of State for War 1942 Hilary Marquand
Arthur Evans Cardiff South 1931 James Callaghan
Maj Gen Sir Edward Spears Carlisle 1931 Edgar Grierson
Capt Leonard Plugge Chatham 1935 Arthur Bottomley
Lt Cdr Robert Tatton Bower Cleveland 1931 George Willey
Oswald Lewis Colchester 1929 Capt George Delacourt-Smith
The Rt Hon Sir Donald Somervell Crewe Home Secretary 1931 Scholefield Allen
Herbert Williams Croydon South 1932 Lt Col David Rees-Williams
Charles Peat Darlington Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Pensions 1931 David Hardman
Paul Emrys-Evans South Derbyshire Under-Secretary of State for Dominion Affairs 1931 Arthur Champion
Bracewell Smith Dulwich 1932 Maj Wilfrid Vernon
The Rt Hon Florence Horsbrugh Dundee Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Health 1931 Thomas Fotheringham-Cook
Lt Col Sir John Mayhew East Ham North 1931 Percy Daines
Robert Cary Eccles Lord of the Treasury 1935 William Proctor
Frank Watt Edinburgh Central 1941 Andrew Gilzean
Alexander Erskine-Hill Edinburgh North 1935 George Willis
Thomas Levy Elland 1931 Frederick Arthur Cobb
Bartle Brennen Bull Enfield 1935 Enfield Davies
Roy Wise Smethwick (contested Epping) 1931 Leah Manning
The Hon William Astor Fulham East 1931 Capt Michael Stewart
Walter Elliot Glasgow Kelvingrove 1924 John Lloyd-Williams
Leslie Boyce Gloucester 1929 Moss Turner-Samuels
Sir Irving Albery Gravesend 1924 Garry Allighan
Sir Walter Womersley, 1st Baronet Great Grimsby Minister of Pensions 1924 The Hon Maj Kenneth Younger
Sir Austin Hudson, 1st Baronet Hackney North Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Fuel, Light and Power 1924 Henry Edwin Goodrich
Gilbert Gledhill Halifax 1931 Dryden Brook
Ronald Tree Harborough 1933 Humphrey Attewell
Col Thomas George Greenwell The Hartlepools 1943 David Thomas Jones
James Wootton-Davies Heywood and Radcliffe 1940 John Edmondson Whittaker
The Hon Seymour Berry Hitchin 1941 Philip Asterley Jones
Col Sir Lambert Ward, 1st Baronet Hull North West 1918 Kim Mackay
The Rt Hon Richard Law Hull South West Minister of Education 1931 Sydney Smith
Maj Geoffrey Hutchinson Ilford (contested Ilford North) 1937 Mabel Ridealgh
Thelma Cazalet-Keir Islington East 1931 Eric Fletcher
James Duncan Kensington North 1931 George Rogers
Maj John Profumo, 5th Baron Profumo Kettering Baby of the House 1940 Maj Gilbert Mitchinson
Sir John Wardlaw-Milne Kidderminster 1922 Louis Tolley
Alec Douglas-Home Lanark Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs 1931 Tom Steele
Maj William Anstruther-Gray North Lanarkshire Assistant Postmaster-General 1931 Margaret Herbison
John Craik-Henderson Leeds North East 1940 Alice Bacon
Vyvyan Adams Leeds West 1931 Thomas William Stamford
Maj Abraham Montagu Lyons Leicester East 1931 Terence Donovan
Capt Charles Waterhouse Leicester South Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Trade 1924 Herbert Bowden
Lt Col Sir Assheton Pownall Lewisham East 1918 Herbert Morrison
Henry Brooke Lewisham West 1938 Arthur Skeffington
Sir Walter Liddall Lincoln 1931 George Deer
Col Sir John Joseph Shute Liverpool Exchange 1933 Bessie Braddock
Sir Edmund Brocklebank Liverpool Fairfield 1931 Arthur Moody
Reginald Purbrick Liverpool Walton 1929 James Haworth
Cyril Lakin Llandaff and Barry 1942 Lynn Ungoed-Thomas
Maj Lawrence Kimball Loughborough 1935 Mont Follick
Pierse Loftus Lowestoft 1934 Edward Evans
John Lees-Jones Manchester Blackley 1931 John Diamond
Thomas Hewlett Manchester Exchange 1940 Harold Lever
William Duckworth Manchester Moss Side 1935 William Griffiths
Frederick Cundiff Manchester Rusholme 1944 Lester Hutchinson
The Rt Hon Sir Malcolm Robertson Mitcham 1940 Tom Braddock
Alfred Denville Newcastle upon Tyne Central 1931 Lyall Wilkes
William Nunn Newcastle upon Tyne West 1940 Ernest Popplewell
Ronald Bell Newport 1945 Peter Freeman
Sir Thomas Cook North Norfolk 1931 Edwin Gooch
Somerset de Chair South West Norfolk 1935 Sidney Dye
Spencer Summers Northampton Secretary for Overseas Trade 1940 Reginald Paget
Henry Strauss Norwich Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Town and Country Planning 1935 Lucy Noel-Buxton, Baroness Noel-Buxton
Lt Col Duncan Sandys Norwood First Commissioner of Works 1935 Ronald Chamberlain
The Rt Hon AVM Sir Frederick Sykes Nottingham Central 1940 Geoffrey de Freitas
Col Louis Gluckstein Nottingham East 1931 James Harrison
Hamilton Kerr Oldham 1931 Frank Fairhurst
The Rt Hon Brendan Bracken Paddington North First Lord of the Admiralty 1929 Lt Gen Sir Noel Mason-MacFarlane
Maj Maurice Petherick Penryn and Falmouth Financial Secretary to the War Office 1931 Lt Col Evelyn King
John Hely-Hutchinson, Viscount Suirdale Peterborough 1943 Stanley Tiffany
Maj Ralph Beaumont Portsmouth Central 1931 Julian Snow
Maj Randolph Churchill Preston 1940 Sqn Ldr Samuel Segal
Capt Edward Cobb Preston (contested Eton and Slough) 1936 Benn Levy
Henry Scrymgeour-Wedderburn West Renfrewshire 1931 Thomas Scollan
The Rt Hon Sir Ronald Cross, 1st Baronet Rossendale High Commissioner to Australia 1931 George Henry Walker
The Rt Hon Ralph Assheton Rushcliffe Chairman of the Conservative Party 1934 Florence Paton
Allen Chapman Rutherglen Under-Secretary of State for Scotland 1935 Gilbert McAllister
The Hon John Grimston St Albans 1943 Cyril Dumpleton
Robert Grant-Ferris St Pancras North 1937 George House
Sir Alfred Beit, 2nd Baronet St Pancras South East 1931 Santo Jeger
Sir James Frederick Emery Salford West 1935 Charles Royle
William Craven-Ellis Southampton 1931 Ralph Morley
Malcolm McCorquodale Sowerby 1931 John Belcher
Peter Thorneycroft Stafford 1938 Stephen Swingler
Horace Trevor-Cox Stalybridge and Hyde 1937 Gordon Lang
The Rt Hon Harold Macmillan Stockton-on-Tees Secretary of State for Air 1931 Capt George Chetwynd
Sir George Jones Stoke Newington 1924 David Weitzman
Robert Morgan Stourbridge 1931 Arthur Moyle
Flt Lt Ralph Etherton Stretford 1939 Herschel Austin
Sir Walter Perkins Stroud 1931 Ben Parkin
Henry Burton Sudbury 1924 Roland Hamilton
Samuel Storey Sunderland 1931 Richard Ewart
Lt Col Edward Wickham Taunton 1935 Victor Collins
Sir Derrick Gunston, 1st Baronet Thornbury 1924 Joseph Alpass
Sir Alexander Russell Tynemouth 1922 Grace Colman
Col The Rt Hon John Jestyn Llewellin Uxbridge Minister of Food 1929 Flt Lt Frank Beswick
Irene Ward Wallsend 1931 John McKay
Donald Scott Wansbeck Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Agriculture and Fisheries 1940 Alfred Robens
Noel Goldie Warrington 1931 Edward Porter
Air Cdre William Helmore Watford 1943 John Freeman
Wg Cdr Sir Archibald James Welingborough 1931 George Lindgren
Sir Richard Pilkington Widnes Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty 1935 Maurice Orbach
Samuel Hammersley Willesden East 1938 Cdr Christopher Nyholm Shawcross
Gerald Parmer Winchester 1935 George Jeger
William Ernest Gibbons Bilston 1944 Will Nally
Francis Beech Woolwich West 1943 Henry Berry
Arthur Colegate The Wrekin 1941 Ivor Owen Thomas
Charles Wood, Lord Irwin City of York 1937 John Corlett
Liberal National Percy Jewson Great Yarmouth 1941 Ernest Kinghorn
The Rt Hon William Mabane Huddersfield Minister of State for Foreign Affairs 1931 Joseph Mallalieu
The Rt Hon Ernest Brown Leith Leader of the Liberal National Party and Minister of Aircraft Production 1927 James Hoy
The Rt Hon Sir Geoffrey Shakespeare, 1st Baronet Norwich 1929 James Paton
Maj John Samuel Dodd Oldham 1935 Leslie Hale
The Rt Hon Leslie Hore-Belisha Plymouth Devonport 1923 Michael Foot
William Stanley Russell Thomas Southampton 1940 Tommy Lewis
William Woolley Spen Valley 1940 Granville Maynard Sharp
Stephen Furness Sunderland 1935 Frederick Willey
Lt Col Sir George Schuster Walsall 1938 Maj William Wells
Liberal Sir William Beveridge Berwick-upon-Tweed 1944 Robert Thorp Conservative
The Rt Hon Sir Percy Harris, 1st Baronet Bethnal Green South West Liberal Chief Whip 1922 Percy Holman Labour
The Rt Hon Sir Archibald Sinclair, 4th Baronet Caithness and Sutherland Leader of the Liberal Party and Secretary of State for Air 1922 Eric Gandar Dower Conservative
The Rt Hon Henry Graham White Birkenhead East 1929 Frank Soskice Labour
Seaborne Davies Caernarfon 1945 Lt Col David Price-White Conservative
Lt Col Goronwy Owen Caernarvonshire 1923 Goronwy Roberts Labour
Dingle Foot Dundee Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Economic Warfare 1931 Sqn Ldr John Strachey
Thomas Magnay Gateshead 1931 Konni Zilliacus
James Armand de Rothschild Isle of Ely 1929 Maj Harry Legge-Bourke Conservative
Col The Hon Henry Guest Plymouth Drake 1937 Hubert Medland Labour
Sir Geoffrey Mander Wolverhampton East 1929 Capt John Baird
Labour Moelwyn Hughes Carmarthen 1941 Rhys Hopkin Morris Liberal
John Eric Loverseed Eddisbury 1943 Sir John Barlow, 2nd Baronet Liberal National
Daniel Frankel Mile End 1935 Phil Piratin Communist
National Labour Harold Nicolson Leicester West 1935 Barnett Janner Labour
Frank Markham Nottingham South 1935 Norman Smith
Cdr Stephen King-Hall Ormskirk 1939 Harold Wilson
Independent Labour Andrew MacLaren Burslem 1935 Albert Edward Davies
George Leonard Reakes Wallasey 1942 Ernest Marples Conservative
Ind. Conservative Capt Alec Cunningham-Reid St Marylebone 1932 Wavell Wakefield
SNP Robert McIntyre Motherwell 1945 Alexander Anderson Labour

Transfers of seats

  • This differs from the above list in including seats where the incumbent was standing down and therefore there was no possibility of any one person being defeated. The aim is to provide a comparison with the previous election. All comparisons are with the 1935 election.
    • In some cases the change is due to the MP defecting to the gaining party. Such circumstances are marked with a *.
    • In other circumstances the change is due to the seat having been won by the gaining party in a by-election in the intervening years, and then retained in 1945. Such circumstances are marked with a †.
From To No. Seats
Communist Labour 1 Mile End
Labour Independent Labour 1 Gorbals*
National Labour 8 Kilmarnock, Derby (one of two)†, Ormskirk, Leicester West, Nottingham South, Lichfield†, Leeds Central, Cardiff C
Liberal 9 Dundee (one of two), Paisley, Birkenhead East, Bristol North6, Bethnal Green South-West, Wolverhampton East, Middlesbrough West, Bradford South, Carnarvonshire
Independent 1 Mossley
National 1 Brecon and Radnor
Conservative 182 Dundee (one of two), Kelvingrove, Dunbartonshire†, Lanark, Lanarkshire N, Renfrewshire W, Rutherglen, Edinburgh North, Edinburgh Central, Midlothian S & Peebles, Berwick & Haddington, Bedford, Reading, Buckingham, Wycombe, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, Birkenhead West, Crewe, Stalybridge and Hyde, Penryn and Falmouth, Carlisle, Derby (one of two), Belper, Derbyshire South, Derbyshire West2, Drake, Sutton, Darlington, Stockton-on-Tees, Sunderland (one of two), The Hartlepools, Leyton East, Colchester, East Ham N, Epping, Essex SE, Ilford N (from Ilford), Maldon5, Walthamstow E, Bristol Central, Gloucester, Stroud, Thornbury, Portsmouth Central, Portsmouth North, Southampton (one of two), Winchester, Dudley, Kidderminster, Stourbridge, Hitchin, St Albans, Watford, Hull North West, Hull South West, Chatham, Chislehurst, Dartford†, Dover, Faversham, Gillingham, Gravesend, Accrington, Barrow-in-Furness, Blackburn (both seats), Chorley, Clitheroe, Preston (both seats), Rossendale, Bolton (both seats), Eccles, Heywood and Radcliffe, Blackley, Manchester Exchange, Hulme, Moss Side, Rusholme, Oldham (one of two), Salford North, Salford South, Salford West, Stretford, Bootle, Edge Hill, Liverpool Exchange, Fairfield, Kirkdale, Walton, Warrington, Widnes, Harborough, Leicester East, Leicester South, Loughborough, Grimsby, Lincoln, Balham and Tooting, Battersea South, Brixton, Camberwell North-West, Clapham, Dulwich, Fulham East, Greenwich, Hackney North, Hammersmith South, Islington East, Kensington North, Lewisham East, Lewisham West, Norwood, Paddington North, Fulham West†, Islington North†, Kennington†, Peckham†, St Pancras North, St Pancras South East, St Pancras South West, Stoke Newington, Wandsworth Central†, Woolwich West, King's Lynn, Norfolk North, Norfolk South, Norfolk South West, Norwich (one of two), Kettering, Northampton, Peterborough, Wellingborough, Newcastle upon Tyne Central, Newcastle upon Tyne West, Tynemouth, Wallsend, Wansbeck, Nottingham Central, Nottingham East, Rushcliffe, The Wrekin, Frome, Taunton, Burton, Smethwick, Stafford, Bilston, Wolverhampton West, Ipswich†, Lowestoft, Sudbury, Croydon South, Mitcham, Wimbledon, Duddeston, Coventry East (replaced Coventry), Aston, Deritend, Erdington, King's Norton, Ladywood, Yardley, Sparkbrook, Birmingham West, Swindon, York, Cleveland, Leeds North East, Sheffield Central, Bradford North, Sowerby, Elland, Leeds West, Halifax, Bradford East, Newport, Llandaff & Barry, Cardiff E8, Cardiff S
Liberal National 17 Greenock†, Leith, Luton, Devonport4, Gateshead, Sunderland (one of two), Southampton (one of two), Oldham (one of two), Bosworth, Southwark North†, Great Yarmouth, Norwich (one of two), Newcastle upon Tyne East, Walsall, Huddersfield, Spen Valley, Swansea West
NEW SEAT 10 Eton and Slough, Ilford South, Barking, Dagenham, Hornchurch, Thurrock, Barnet, Bexley, Acock's Green, Coventry West
Independent Labour Labour 1 Hammersmith North*
UUP 1 Belfast West
Common Wealth Conservative 1 Chelmsford*
Liberal Labour 1 Carmarthen
Conservative 2 Dorset North, Buckrose
Liberal National 2 Eye*, Montgomeryshire*
Independent Progressive Conservative 1 Bridgwater
Independent 3 Grantham†, City of London (one of two)†, Rugby
National Independent 1 Cheltenham7
Conservative Liberal 5 Caithness and Sutherland, Isle of Ely, Barnstaple3, Berwick-upon-Tweed, Carnarvon
Speaker 1 Daventry
NEW SEAT 8 Bucklow, Woodford, Orpington, Blackpool North, Carshalton, Sutton and Cheam, Worthing, Solihull
Ind. Conservative Conservative 1 Galloway*
Independent Liberal Liberal National 1 Ross and Cromarty1
Independent Unionist UUP 1 Down (one of two)*
Speaker Conservative 1 Hexham*

1 Seat had been won by National Labour in a by-election
2 Seat had been won by Independent Labour candidate in a by-election, who fought and won the 1945 election as a Labour candidate
3 Candidate had defected to the Common Wealth party
4 Candidate had moved to 'National' label
5 Seat had been won by Independent candidate in a by-election, who fought and won the 1945 election as a Labour candidate
6 Candidate had defected to National Liberal party
7 Seat had been won by Independent Conservative candidate in a by-election, who fought and won the 1945 election as a National Independent candidate
8 Seat had been won by Independent candidate in a by-election

Reasons for Labour victory

Attlee meeting King George VI after Labour's 1945 election victory

With the Second World War coming to an end in Europe, the Labour Party decided to pull out of the wartime national coalition government, precipitating an election which took place in July 1945. King George VI dissolved Parliament, which had been sitting for ten years without an election. What followed was perhaps one of the greatest swings of public confidence of the twentieth century. In May 1945, the month in which the war in Europe ended, Churchill's approval ratings stood at 83%, although the Labour Party held an 18% lead as of February 1945.[9] Labour won overwhelming support while Churchill "was both surprised and stunned" by the crushing defeat suffered by the Conservatives.

The greatest factor in Labour's dramatic win appeared to be the policy of social reform. In one opinion poll, 41% of respondents considered housing to be the most important issue that faced the country, 15% stated the Labour policy of full employment, 7% mentioned social security, 6% nationalisation and just 5% international security, which was emphasised by the Conservatives. The Beveridge Report, published in 1942, proposed the creation of a welfare state. It called for a dramatic turn in British social policy, with provision for nationalised healthcare, expansion of state-funded education, National Insurance and a new housing policy. The report was extremely popular, and copies of its findings were widely purchased, turning it into a best-seller. The Labour Party adopted the report eagerly.[3] The Conservatives accepted many of the principles of the report (Churchill did not regard the reforms as socialist), but claimed that they were not affordable.[13] Labour offered a new comprehensive welfare policy, reflecting a consensus that social changes were needed.[4] The Conservatives were not willing to make the same concessions that Labour proposed, and hence appeared out of step with public opinion.

As Churchill's personal popularity remained high, the Conservatives were confident of victory and based much of their election campaign on this, rather than proposing new programmes. However, people distinguished between Churchill and his party—a contrast which Labour repeatedly emphasised throughout the campaign. Voters also harboured doubts over Churchill's ability to lead the country on the domestic front.[4]

In addition to the poor Conservative general election strategy, Churchill went so far as to accuse Attlee of seeking to behave as a dictator, in spite of Attlee's service as part of Churchill's war cabinet. In the most famous incident of the campaign, Churchill's first election broadcast on 4 June backfired dramatically and memorably. Denouncing his former coalition partners, he declared that Labour "would have to fall back on some form of a Gestapo" to impose socialism on Britain. Attlee responded the next night by ironically thanking the Prime Minister for demonstrating to people the difference between Churchill the great wartime leader and Churchill the peacetime politician, and argued the case for public control of industry.

Another blow to the Conservative campaign was the memory of the 1930s policy of appeasement, which had been conducted by Churchill's Conservative predecessors, Neville Chamberlain and Stanley Baldwin, and was at this stage widely discredited for allowing Adolf Hitler's Germany to become too powerful.[4] Labour had strongly advocated appeasement until 1938. The inter-war period had been dominated by Conservatives. With the exception of two brief minority Labour governments in 1924 and 1929–1931, the Conservatives had been in power for its entirety. As a result, the Conservatives were generally blamed for the era's mistakes, not merely for appeasement but for the inflation and unemployment of the Great Depression.[4] Many voters felt that while the war of 1914–1918 had been won, the peace that followed had been lost. Labour played to the concept of "winning the peace" that would follow the Second World War.

Possibly for this reason, there was especially strong support for Labour in the armed services, who feared the unemployment and homelessness to which the soldiers of the First World War had returned. It has been claimed that the pro left-wing bias of teachers in the armed services was a contributing factor, but this argument has generally not carried much weight, and the failure of the Conservative governments in the 1920s to deliver a "land fit for heroes" was likely more important.[4] The role of propaganda films produced during the war, which were shown to both military and civilian audiences, is also seen as a contributory factor due to their general optimism about the future, which meshed with the Labour Party's campaigning in 1945 better than with that of the Conservatives.[14] Writer and soldier Anthony Burgess remarked that Churchill—who often wore a colonel's uniform at this time—himself was not nearly as popular with soldiers at the front as with officers and civilians: he noted that Churchill often smoked cigars in front of soldiers who had not had a decent cigarette in days.[15]

The differing strategies of the two parties during wartime also gave Labour an advantage. Labour continued to attack pre-war Conservative governments for their inactivity in tackling Hitler, reviving the economy, and re-arming Britain,[16] while Churchill was less interested in furthering his party, much to the chagrin of many of its members and MPs.[9]

See also

Notes

  1. Insert shows results in the Parliamentary County of London. Map excludes Northern Ireland.
  2. All parties shown. Conservative total includes Ulster Unionists. The 8 seats won by National Labour in 1935 were not defended.

References

  1. General Election (Polling Date): 31 May 1945: House of Commons debates, They Work For You
  2. Rowe 2004, p. 37.
  3. 1 2 1945: Churchill loses general election, BBC, retrieved 22 February 2009
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Lynch 2008, p. 4.
  5. Ingersoll 1940, p. 127.
  6. Pelling 1980, pp. 399–414.
  7. 1 2 Thomas & Willis 2016, pp. 154–155.
  8. Marr 2008, pp. 5–6.
  9. 1 2 3 Addison, Paul (29 April 2005), Why Churchill Lost in 1945, BBC, retrieved 22 February 2009
  10. Bogdador, Vernon (23 September 2014), The General Election, 1945 (Lecture), Museum of London, retrieved 26 May 2018
  11. Baines 1995.
  12. Voter turnout at UK general elections 1945–2015, UK Political Info
  13. Lynch 2008, p. 10.
  14. Spurr, Sean, "1945 General Election", HistoryEmpire.com, retrieved 4 April 2012
  15. Burgess 1987, p. 305.
  16. Lynch 2008, pp. 1–4.

Sources

  • Burgess, Anthony (1987), Little Wilson and Big God, Heinemann, ISBN 1446452557, retrieved 1 September 2014
  • Ingersoll, Ralph (1940), Report on England, November 1940, New York: Simon and Schuster
  • Lynch, Michael (2008), "1. The Labour Party in Power 1945–51", Britain 1945–2007, Access to History, Hodder Headline, ISBN 0-340-96595-9
  • Marr, Andrew (2008), A History of Modern Britain, Pan Macmillan Ltd., pp. 5–6, ISBN 978-0-330-43983-1
  • Pelling, Henry (1980), "The 1945 general election reconsidered", Historical Journal, 23 (2): 399–414, JSTOR 2638675
  • Rowe, Chris (2004), Britain 1929–1998, Heinemann, ISBN 978-0-435-32738-5
  • Thomas, Jo; Willis, Michael (2016), Wars and Welfare: Britain in Transition 1906–1957, Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-8354-598

Further reading

  • Addison, Paul (1975), The Road to 1945: British politics and the Second World War, London: Cape
  • Baines, Malcolm (1995), "The liberal party and 1945 general election", Contemporary Record, 9 (1): 48–61
  • Brooke, Stephen (1992), Labour's war: the Labour party during the Second World War, Oxford University Press
  • Burgess, Simon (1991), "1945 Observed – A History of the Histories", Contemporary Record, 5 (1): 155–170, historiography
  • Craig, F. W. S. (1989), British Electoral Facts: 1832–1987, Dartmouth: Gower, ISBN 0900178302
  • Fielding, Steven (1992), "What did 'the people' want?: the meaning of the 1945 general election", Historical Journal, 35 (3): 623–639, JSTOR 2639633
  • Fry, Geoffrey K. (1991), "A Reconsideration of the British General Election of 1935 and the Electoral Revolution of 1945", History, 76 (246): 43–55
  • Gilbert, Bentley B. (1972), "Third Parties and Voters' Decisions: The Liberals and the General Election of 1945", Journal of British Studies, 11 (2): 131–141
  • Kandiah, Michael David (1995), The conservative party and the 1945 general election, pp. 22–47
  • McCallum, R. B.; Readman, Alison (1947), The British general election of 1945, the standard scholarly study
  • McCulloch, Gary (1985), "Labour, the Left, and the British General Election of 1945", Journal of British Studies, 24 (4): 465–489, JSTOR 175476
  • Nicholas, H. (1951), The British general election of 1950, London: Macmillan, ISBN 0-333-77865-0
  • Pelling, Henry (1980), "The 1945 general election reconsidered", Historical Journal, 23 (2): 399–414, JSTOR 2638675
  • Toye, Richard (2010), "Winston Churchill's 'Crazy Broadcast': Party, Nation, and the 1945 Gestapo Speech" (PDF), Journal of British Studies, 49 (3): 655–680, JSTOR 23265382

Manifestos

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