1924 United Kingdom general election in Scotland

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A general election was held in the United Kingdom on Wednesday 29 October 1924, as a result of the defeat of the Labour minority government, led by Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald, in the House of Commons on a motion of no confidence.[1] It was the third general election to be held in less than two years. Parliament was dissolved on 9 October.[2] Scotland was allocated 74 seats in total, with 71 territorial seats (32 burgh constituencies and 38 county constituencies)[c] which voted using the first past the post voting method, and one university constituency, which elected an additional 3 members using the Single Transferable Vote (STV) method.[3] As voters in university constituencies voted under a different system, and in addition to their territorial vote, the results are compiled separately. All 74 seats were contested.

Quick facts All 74 Scottish seats to the House of Commons, First party ...
1924 United Kingdom general election in Scotland

← 1923
29 October 1924
1929 â†’

All 74 Scottish seats to the House of Commons
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Stanley Baldwin Ramsay MacDonald H. H. Asquith
Party Unionist Labour Liberal
Last election 16[a] 34[a] 23[a]
Seats won 38[a] 26[a] 9[a]
Seat change Increase22[a] Decrease8 Decrease14[a]
Popular vote 688,299[b] 697,146[b] 286,540[b]
Percentage 40.7%[b] 41.1%[b] 16.6%[b]
Swing Increase9.1%[b] Increase5.2%[b] Decrease11.8%[b]

Results of the 1924 election in Scotland for the county and burgh seats
  Unionist
  Labour
  Liberal
  Scottish Prohibition Party
Close

In Scotland the election saw both the Labour Party and the Unionists gain votes at the expense of the Liberals. Labour were slightly (0.4%) ahead of the Unionists in terms of votes cast, however the Unionists managed to secure 12 more Scottish seats than Labour, winning 38 seats in total. The Scottish Liberals saw an 11.8% swing against them and lost more than half their seats to finish third. The only other party represented in parliament from Scotland was the Scottish Prohibition Party, who retained their only seat in Dundee.

When combined with results from across the UK, the Conservatives (with whom the Unionists aligned at Westminster) led by Stanley Baldwin obtained a large parliamentary majority of 209. Labour lost 40 seats. The Liberal Party, led by Asquith, lost 118 of their 158 seats which helped to polarise British politics between the Labour Party and the Conservative Party.

Results

Seats summary

More information Party, Seats ...
Party Seats Last Election Seats change
Unionist 38 16 Increase22
Labour 26 34 Decrease8
Liberal 9 23 Decrease14
Scottish Prohibition Party 1 1 Steady
Total 74 74
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Burgh & County constituencies

More information Party, Seats ...
Party Seats[4] Seats change Votes[4] % % Change
Unionist 36 Increase22 688,299 40.7 Increase9.1
Labour 26 Decrease8 697,146 41.1 Increase5.2
Liberal 8 Decrease14 286,540 16.6 Decrease11.8
Communist 0 - 15,930 0.7 Decrease1.7
Other 1 - 29,193 0.9 Decrease0.8
Total 71 1,717,108 100.0
Turnout: 75.1[5] Increase 7.2
Close

University constituency

The Combined Scottish Universities elected an additional 3 members to the house using the STV voting method. The constituency had not been contested at the previous election in 1923.

More information Party, Candidate ...
General election 1924: Combined Scottish Universities [6]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Unionist Henry Craik 7,188 40.8 N/A
Liberal Dugald Cowan 5,011 28.4 N/A
Unionist George Andreas Berry 3,781 21.5 N/A
Labour John Martin Munro 1,639 9.3 New
Majority 2,142 12.2 N/A
Turnout 17,619
Unionist hold Swing
Liberal hold Swing
Unionist hold Swing
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Votes summary

Popular vote[b]
Labour
 
41.1%
Unionist
 
40.7%
Liberal
 
16.6%
Other
 
1.6%
Parliamentary seats[a]
Unionist
 
51.35%
Labour
 
35.14%
Liberal
 
12.16%
Scottish Prohibition
 
1.35%

Notes

  1. Combined results for burgh, county and university seats
  2. Total and percentage votes given here are for territorial constituencies only
  3. One burgh seat, Dundee, was represented by two members of parliament.

References

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