1972 Labour Party deputy leadership election

The 1972 Labour Party deputy leadership election took place in April 1972 after Roy Jenkins resigned as deputy leader over the decision to hold a referendum on Britain's entry into the Common Market.[1]

1972 Labour Party deputy leadership election
20–25 April 1972 (1972-04-20 1972-04-25)
 
Candidate Edward Short Michael Foot Anthony Crosland
First ballot 111 (42.5%) 89 (34.1%) 61 (23.4%)
Second ballot 145 (55.6%) 116 (44.4%) Eliminated

Deputy Leader before election

Roy Jenkins

Elected Deputy Leader

Edward Short

Edward Short, formerly Education Secretary in the government of Harold Wilson, was regarded as a "unity" candidate,[2] and won the election over his main rival, the left-winger Michael Foot, who had unsuccessfully stood for the deputy leadership in 1970 and 1971.

Candidates

Results

First ballot: 20 April 1972
Candidate Votes %
Edward Short 111 42.5
Michael Foot 89 34.1
Anthony Crosland 61 23.4
Second ballot required

As a result of the first round, Crosland was eliminated. The remaining two candidates would face each other in a second round.

Second ballot: 25 April 1972
Candidate Votes %
Edward Short 145 55.6
Michael Foot 116 44.4
Edward Short elected

References

Sources


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