1967 Brierley Hill by-election

The Brierley Hill by-election of 29 April 1967 was held after the death of Conservative MP (MP) John Ellis Talbot:[1]

The seat was marginal, having been won by Labour during 1950 United Kingdom general election by 4,637 votes, and the Conservatives in the preceding 1966 United Kingdom general election by only 1,567.

Candidates

  • Fergus Montgomery for the Conservatives, was a teacher and councillor in Hebburn prior to becoming Member of Parliament for Newcastle East
  • Derek Forwood was the Labour candidate. He told the Guardian newspaper in 2005 an anecdote from the Brierley Hill by-election at which then foreign secretary George Brown was subject to heckling at a hustings event. When he addressed the crowd and spoke of morality, a woman shouted out, "Hey, George, what do know about morality?" to which he shot back: "Come outside, love, and I'll show you!" [2]
  • Liberal candidate Michael Steed was lecturer in Government at Manchester University at the time of the election. His election addresses included calls to join the EEC and end the VietNam war[3]
  • Writer John Creasey nominated himself as candidate for the All Party Alliance he had created.

Result of the previous general election

General election 1966: Brierley Hill
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Conservative J. E. Talbot 34,026 51.18
Labour K C Rogers 32,459 48.82
Majority 1,567 2.36 -
Turnout 78.95

Result of the by-election

Brierley Hill by-election, 27 April 1967[4]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Conservative Fergus Montgomery 31,371 53.75 +2.57
Labour Derek Forwood 21,151 36.24 -12.58
Liberal Michael Steed 4,536 7.77 N/A
All Party Alliance John Creasey 1,305 2.24 N/A
Majority 10,220 17.51 +15.15
Conservative hold Swing
gollark: Yet according to you if I wrote it -6x² + 12x = 0 the answers would be different.
gollark: Addition is commutative. Switching the order of the terms right cannot possibly change the solutions to the quadratic.
gollark: It is not. Again, a isn't "the first thing" but "the x^2 thing".
gollark: That is also true but not what I mean here.
gollark: This is called commutativity.

References

  1. Full results Archived February 6, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  2. Labour Conference Guardian letters page 2005
  3. Liberal candidate Michael Steed Archived October 10, 2012, at the Wayback Machine Byelections.co.uk
  4. "1967 By Election Results". Archived from the original on 29 March 2012. Retrieved 20 August 2015.


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