The1902 Cleveland by-electionwas a parliamentaryby-electionheld for the BritishHouse of Commonsconstituency ofClevelandin theNorth Riding of Yorkshireon 5 November 1902.
| ||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||
|
Vacancy
editThe by-election was caused by the resignation on the grounds of ill-health of the sittingLiberalMP,Alfred Pease.[1]Pease had held the seat since winning it at a by-election in 1897. He had previously served as MP forYorkfrom1885until1892.Pease had apparently indicated that he was in declining health before thegeneral election of 1900but was pressed by his local Liberal Association to contest that election. He did so on condition that if his condition made it impossible for him to sit for the whole Parliament he would be allowed to resign and he now felt he had to step down.[1]Despite this plea of poor health, Pease actually lived for another 37 years and spent much of the rest of his life inBritish East Africahunting game and entertaining travellers who came for thesafaris.
Electoral history
editThe seat had been Liberal since creation in 1885. Pease held the seat at the last election, unopposed. At the previous election, he had won comfortably;
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Liberal | Alfred Pease | 5,508 | 57.4 | +4.1 | |
Conservative | Robert Ropner | 4,080 | 42.6 | −4.1 | |
Majority | 1,428 | 14.8 | +8.2 | ||
Turnout | 9,588 | 83.7 | +2.4 | ||
Liberalhold | Swing | +4.1 |
Candidates
editLiberal Party
editThe Liberals had a large number of potential candidates to choose from, including officials from the local Miners' Association. The miners had always supported the Liberal candidates in the Cleveland Division[4]and the Liberals wished to ascertain the attitude of the Miners before selecting a candidate.[5]The local Association resolved to wait for the outcome of a conference called by the miners on 11 October before deciding on their candidate.[6]In the event, the miners were unable to make a decision in time. The delay meant that the Liberals had to press ahead with the selection of a candidate. At a meeting atGuisboroughon 18 October 1902, two possible candidates were put forward, theHon. Philip Stanhopewho had been Liberal MP forWednesburyandBurnleyandHerbert Samuel.[7]Stanhope was said by his proposer,Joseph Walton MPto be acceptable to Labour leaders, includingKeir Hardie.Samuel, who had been left a fortune by his father, a partner in the banking firm of Samuel and Montagu, had taken more or less full-time interest in Liberal politics since before going toBalliol College, Oxford.He had tried unsuccessfully to enter the House of Commons twice before atSouth Oxfordshire.[8]Samuel was supported at the meeting by the retiring Liberal MP, Alfred Pease and emerged the victor by a majority of about three-to-one.[7]
Independent Labour Party
editIt was reported that theironstoneminersin the Cleveland Division were minded to bring forward anIndependent Labour Partycandidate.[1]A visit to the constituency byJohn Bruce Glasier,the chairman of the Independent Labour Party took place on 17 September 1902. Glasier said that if the miners wanted a labour candidate the ILP would assist but that if they decided to combine with the Liberals in support of a progressive representative, (as had traditionally been the case) the ILP would oppose that, raising the prospect of a split in the anti-Toryvote.[9]The Cleveland Miners held a meeting atMiddlesbroughon 29 September to discuss their approach. While they were not opposed in principle to supporting a Liberal if a candidate sympathetic to the cause of labour could be found, probably to stand as aLib-Lab,the officials felt the time had come for labour to be more directly represented.[4]On 23 September, ILP LeaderKeir Hardiemade a speech atMarske-by-the-Seaand urged the miners and othertrade unioniststo bring forward their own candidate. Rather hectoringly, he said that if they failed in their obvious duty, the ILP would stand a candidate.[10]The miners resolved to stand their own man and called on theLabour Representation Committeeto hold a conference on 11 October to discuss the matter.[11]Despite Keir Hardie's presence, and the moving of a resolution welcoming the prospect of a labour candidate, reservations were expressed about the timing and cost of standing such a candidate and the conference outcome was inconclusive.[12]There was a call for the Cleveland Miners to take their own vote and a meeting was to be held atSaltburnon 23 October.[7]In the end however no labour candidate of any description was put forward at the by-election. The decision not to put forward a distinctively labour candidate and, in effect to maintain the traditional collaboration with the Liberals upset Keir Hardie and other ILP leaders.Philip Snowdenof the Independent Labour Party is said to have dismissed Samuel as 'a plutocratic Jew.'[13]
Conservative Party
editTheUnionistsheld a meeting on 22 October and choseGeoffrey Drage,formerly MP forDerbyfrom1895to1900.[14]Drage had qualified as abarristerand was a member ofLincoln's Innand theMiddle Templebut never practised. Like Herbert Samuel, he seems to have dedicated himself full-time to political and public affairs.[15]
Issues
editEducation
editSamuel raised the question of education in his election address. He called the Conservative governmentEducation Billreactionary and mischievous. He claimed it would make the system of education more complicated, weaken the control of the people over theBoard Schools,deprive women of their right of election to the educational authorities and throw the whole of the cost of theChurchand other denominational schools onto the rates and taxes while leaving the local control including the appointment of teachers in the hands of sectarian managers.[16]
Drage also referred to the Education Bill in his address. He said that its passing was vital to every branch of industry in the country. He claimed it was designed to create a ladder up which the poorest child could climb to the top of the tree. It also provided systematically for technical education, without which British workers could not hope to compete with foreign rivals.[16]
Social reform
editDrage took up the language ofsocial reformin his election address. He argued for legislation for the protection of infant life and for wage-earning andvagrantchildren. He claimed that labour andwelfare reformswere more likely under a Unionist than a Liberal government. He wanted the law on all labour questions to becodifiedand administered by a separate department of state.[16]This was daring given his opponent's well known advanced position on the need for social and welfare reforms. Samuel was a prominent member of theRainbow Circle,a grouping of Liberals,FabiansandSocialistsin favour of working together for the cause of political, industrial and social reform.[17]
Samuel took his message on social reform to the mining and industrial districts. He supported the extension of the compensation a worker could recover from an employer in case of accident and the introduction a Bill which would limit the time a miner could be forced to work to eight hours a day. Samuel made it a priority to meet the miners and their leaders to try remove their disappointment at not having a candidate of their own and persuade them that the Liberal Party remained the party of progress and labour.[18]At one point he announced he would stand as a 'Liberal and Labour' candidate but this backfired as he was attacked by Glasier of the ILP who denounced it a 'vulgar piece of electioneering which ought to be strongly resented by all respectable working men.'[19]Samuel found it hard to gain endorsements from labour leaders in the country at large but local officials likeJoseph Toynworked hard to keep the Cleveland miners on the Liberal side.[20]In the end even Glasier had to acknowledge that a Liberal MP, even one like Samuel of whom he disapproved, was better than another Tory. While he denounced Samuel's candidacy as 'discreditable' he nevertheless wanted him to win saying, “I don't want to see the working class vote Tory – there is no hope in such folly.” Glasier himself was obliged to vote Liberal in theHigh Peakby-election in 1909 to support thePeople's Budgetand for traditionalRadical causessuch asFree Tradeandanti-militarism.[21]
Result
editThe result was a win for Samuel; (The change in vote and swing relates to 1897)
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Liberal | Herbert Samuel | 5,834 | 60.6 | +3.2 | |
Conservative | Geoffrey Drage | 3,798 | 39.4 | −3.2 | |
Majority | 2,036 | 21.2 | +6.4 | ||
Turnout | 9,632 | 77.9 | −5.8 | ||
Liberalhold | Swing | +3.2 |
It was reported that the result was a surprise to both the Liberals and Conservatives. The Unionists had high and realistic hopes of gaining the seat, albeit narrowly, based on their canvass returns. The Liberals were said to have expected to hold on but by a reduced majority and Samuel himself recorded that there was considerable local nervousness about the result given that the former member had been well-established and he was an outsider.[23] In the event, the Liberals increased their vote and the Tory vote went down. The deciding factor was thought to be the Education Bill and the opposition fromnonconformistvoters to the idea of Church andRoman Catholicschools financed by therates.[22]
Aftermath
editThe seat had become so safe now for the Liberals that in 1906, not only was there no socialist candidate, but there was no unionist candidate either and Samuel was returned unopposed.
References
edit- ^abcThe Times, 15 September 1902 p6
- ^British parliamentary election results 1885-1918 by Craig
- ^abThe Constitutional Year Book,1904, published byConservative Central Office,page 155 (179 in web page)
- ^abThe Times, 19 September 1902 p5
- ^The Times, 27 September 1902 p10
- ^The Times, 6 October 1902 p4
- ^abcThe Times, 20 October 1902 p8
- ^Bernard Wsserstein,Herbert Louis Samuelin Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online, OUP 2004-10
- ^The Times, 18 September 1902 p5
- ^The Times, 24 September 1902 p8
- ^The Times, 30 September 1902 p9
- ^The Times, 13 October 1902 p7
- ^David Howell,Respectable radicals: studies in the politics of railway trade unionism;Ashgate, 1999 p180
- ^"Election intelligence".The Times.No. 36906. London. 23 October 1902. p. 8.
- ^Who was Who,OUP 2007
- ^abcThe Times, 25 October 1902 p7
- ^https://liberalhistory.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/38-Rathbone-Rainbow-Circle-and-New-Liberalism.pdfThe Rainbow Circle & the New Liberalismby Mark Rathbone: Journal of Liberal History, Issue 38, Spring 2003 pp. 24–28
- ^The Times, 29 October 1902 p8
- ^Bernard Wasserstein,Herbert Samuel: A Political Life;Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1992 p66
- ^Bernard Wasserstein,Herbert Samuel: A Political Life;Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1992 p67
- ^David Howell,British workers and the Independent Labour Party: 1888-1906;Manchester University Press, 1992 p363
- ^abThe Times, 7 November 1902 p8
- ^Herbert Samuel,Memoirs;London, The Cresset Press, 1945 p38