Hastings by-election, 1908

The Hastings by-election 1908 was a Parliamentary by-election. Hastings returned one Member of Parliament to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom, elected by the first past the post voting system.

Vacancy

The seat had become vacant following the resignation of the sitting Unionist MP, Harvey Du Cros, on grounds of ill health. He had been the MP for the seat of Hastings since the 1906 General Election.

Electoral history

The seat had been Conservative since they gained it in 1906 against the national swing, having surprisingly lost it to the Liberals in 1900.

General Election January 1906

Electorate 8,758

Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Conservative William Harvey du Cros 4,348 52.5
Liberal Freeman Freeman-Thomas 3,935 47.5
Majority 413 5.0
Turnout 94.6
Conservative gain from Liberal Swing

Candidates

Arthur Du Cros in 1913

The Conservatives quickly adopted 37-year-old Arthur Du Cros, son of the former MP, as their new candidate. He had been born and raised in Dublin before entering the family rubber tyre manufacturing business in the Birmingham area. In 1906 Du Cros unsuccessfully contested the London seat of Bow & Bromley as a Conservative candidate.

The Liberals had no local candidate because their previous candidate Freeman Freeman-Thomas had since been elected at a by-election. There was a delay in selecting 30-year-old Robert Vernon Harcourt, the son of Sir William Harcourt as their man.[1] Harcourt was educated at Eton College and Trinity College, Cambridge where he took honours in the History Tripos.[2][3] At Cambridge, he was a committee member of Cambridge University Liberal Club from 1899 to 1900.[4] Harcourt went into the Foreign Service, serving as a Clerk on the diplomatic establishment of the Foreign Office from 1900 to 1906.[5] He was then briefly engaged in journalism, being parliamentary correspondent of the magazine Tribune. He stood unsuccessfully for the London County Council seat of Mile End in 1907,as a Progressive. He was standing for parliament for the first time.

Campaign

Polling Day was fixed for the 3 March 1908. The themes raised in the by-election ranged over many issues of the day and the clash between what was seen as the local man (Du Cros) versus the government incomer (Harcourt), even though they were both outsiders to the area.

Harcourt promoted his candidacy as that of a strong supporter of Free Trade.

Members of the militant Women's Social and Political Union were in Hastings campaigning for the Conservative candidate, even though he was an opponent of women's suffrage, while the Liberal candidate was a supporter.[6]

Result

The Conservatives held the seat and managed an increased majority;

Hastings by-election, 1908

Electorate 8,707

Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Conservative Arthur Philip Du Cros 4,495 56.4 +3.9
Liberal Robert Venables Vernon Harcourt 3,477 43.6 -3.9
Majority 1,018 12.8 +7.8
Turnout 91.6 -3.0
Conservative hold Swing +3.9

Both the Sussex Express and The Times newspapers were agreed that the Unionist victory was ‘first and foremost [due] to Tariff Reform and particularly to the colonial preference side of the question’.

Aftermath

Harcourt had to wait only a few more weeks to get into Parliament. He was adopted as Liberal candidate at a by-election at Montrose Burghs following the elevation to the peerage of the sitting member there, the veteran Liberal John Morley, was elected on 12 May 1908, and served as Member for Montrose until 1918. Du Cros held Hastings at the subsequent General Election.

General Election January 1910

Electorate 9,027

Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Conservative Arthur Philip Du Cros 4,634 54.7 -1.7
Liberal R.Tweedy-Smith 3,833 45.3 +1.7
Majority 801 9.4 -3.4
Turnout 93.8 +2.2
Conservative hold Swing -1.7

Du Cros held the seat until 1918 when he transferred to stand as a Coalition Conservative in Clapham, a seat he held until 1922.

References

  1. Ian Ivatt, The 1908 Hastings By-Election in Journal of Liberal History, Issue 59 – Summer 2008
  2. "Harcourt, Robert Vernon (HRCT897RV)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  3. Who was Who, OUP 2007
  4. http://keynessociety.wordpress.com/about-the-keynes-society/
  5. The Times House of Commons 1910; Politico’s Publishing, 2004 p97
  6. http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1912/mar/28/parliamentary-franchise-women-bill
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