1917 Inverness-shire by-election

The Inverness-shire by-election, 1917 was a parliamentary by-election held for the House of Commons constituency of Inverness-shire in the Scottish Highlands on 2 January 1917.

Vacancy

The by-election was caused by the elevation to the peerage of the sitting Liberal MP, John Dewar.[1] Dewar had held the seat since 1900 and had been unopposed at the previous election in December 1910.

Candidates

Thomas Morison

The Inverness-shire Liberals adopted Thomas Brash Morison KC as their new candidate. Morison was a barrister who had been serving as Solicitor General for Scotland since 1913.[2]

There was at this time no tradition of candidates from organised labour contesting Parliamentary elections in this constituency. No nominations were received from the Conservatives who were partners in the wartime Coalition and were presumably content to honour the wartime electoral truce. Morison was therefore returned unopposed.[3]

The result

Inverness-shire by-election, 1917
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Liberal Thomas Brash Morison Unopposed N/A N/A
Liberal hold Swing N/A
gollark: Even if, somehow (not that I believe this) our mind is computed on "souls" or something instead of the matter in our brains, you can still study it.
gollark: Wait, how is that even related? Please define materialism.
gollark: I mean, humans are irrational but our behavior can be studied like other things.
gollark: Should we *not* do that?
gollark: Unfortunately, we can't yet perfectly simulate large groups of humans either.

References

  1. The Times, 31 January 1917 p9
  2. The Times, 28 December 1916 p3
  3. F W S Craig, British Parliamentary Election Results, 1885-1918; Macmillan Press, 1974 p543

See also

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