Elections and Registration Act 1915

The Elections and Registration Act 1915 (5&6 Geo.5 c.76) was a war time act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom that postponed local elections and the preparation of registers of electors. Initially the postponement was for one year, but the Act was renewed annually until the electoral cycle was resumed in 1919 following the cessation of hostilities.

The Elections and Registration Act 1915
Long titleAn Act to postpone Elections of local authorities and other bodies and the preparation of the Parliamentary and Local Government Registers, and for purposes incidental thereto.
Citation5 & 6 Geo.5 c. 76
Introduced byWalter Long
Dates
Royal assent29 July 1915
Status: Repealed

Background

Elections to local authorities in the United Kingdom were held annually in either April or November. In August 1914 war broke out, although this did not initially effect the municipal elections which were duly held in November 1914 and April 1915.

A coalition government was formed in May 1915, and in June it was announced that the cabinet intended to introduce legislation to both extend the life of Parliament by a year to 1917, and also to postpone the November 1915 borough elections. The postponement of elections would also mean that local authorities would not need to compile new electoral registers.[1]

The Elections and Registration Bill was duly introduced to the Commons only 22 July.[2] The bill passed all stages in both houses rapidly, and received the royal assent on 29 July.[3]

Provisions

The Act was a short document containing only four sections.

  • Section 1 provided that the..

"next statutory elections of county and borough councillors, district councillors, guardians, and parish councillors, shall be postponed for a year, and the term of office of the existing councillors and guardians shall accordingly be extended by one year.'"

Elections were no longer to be required to fill casual vacancies occurring in the membership of local councils and boards. Instead a vacant seat was to "be filled by means of the choice by the council or board of a person"... and "a councillor or guardian so chosen shall hold office in the same manner in all respects as if he had been elected to fill the vacancy".

  • Section 2 exempted the Common Council of the City of London from the Act.
  • Section 3 provided that the parliamentary and local government register of electors in force at the time of the passing of the Act, should remain in force until 31 December 1916.
  • Section 4 dealt with the application of the Act to Scotland and Ireland.

Renewal

With the continuation of the war until November 1918, the provisions of the 1915 legislation had to be renewed on three occasions by the Parliament and Local Elections Acts of 1916, 1917 and the Parliament and Local Elections (No. 2) Act, 1917.[4]

gollark: Sad.
gollark: It *would* be funny.
gollark: What stops them from deciding to apply law to you for blatantly... I don't even know... in their building?
gollark: This can NEVER go wrong.
gollark: You were just talking about that.

See also

References

  1. "The Next General Election. No Dissolution During the War". The Times. 19 June 1915. p. 8.
  2. "Elections and Registration Bill". Hansard 1803 2005. Parliament of the United Kingdom. 22 July 1915. Retrieved 2 September 2009.
  3. "Royal Assent". Hansard 1803 2005. Parliament of the United Kingdom. 29 July 1915. Retrieved 2 September 2009.
  4. 6&7 Geo.5. C.44, 7&8 Geo.5. C.13, 7&8 Geo.5 C.50
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.