1951 United Kingdom general election in England

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The 1951 United Kingdom general election was held on Thursday 25 October 1951 to elect 625 members of the House of Commons, of which 506 constituencies were in England.

1951 United Kingdom general election in England

 1950 25 October 1951 1955 

All 506 English seats in the House of Commons
254 seats needed for English majority
  First party Second party Third party
 
Churchill in 1944 (cropped 3x4).jpg
Clement Attlee.jpg
Clement Davies (cropped).jpg
Leader Winston Churchill Clement Attlee Clement Davies
Party Conservative Labour Liberal
Leader since 9 October 1940 25 October 1935 2 August 1945
Leader's seat Woodford Walthamstow West Montgomeryshire
Last election 253 seats, 43.84% 251 seats, 46.13% 2 seats, 9.39%
Seats won 271 233 2
Seat change Increase18 Decrease18 Steady
Popular vote 11,622,704[1] 11,630,467[1] 537,434[1]
Percentage 48.76% 48.80% 2.26%
Swing Increase 4.92 pp Increase 2.67 pp Decrease 7.13 pp

The Labour Government led by incumbent prime minister Clement Attlee decided to call an election just over one and half years after the previous election in February 1950, primarily because the Labour Party had won a mere majority of 5 seats in the House of Commons. In that election, the Labour Party had won less seats than the Conservative Party in the region of England despite winning a greater share of the vote.

The election produced an interesting anomaly in England as well as the nation at large - despite the Labour Party winning a greater share of the vote, the Conservative Party won an overall majority, both in the Commons and in England. This occurrence would next take place only in 2005 when the Labour Party would a win a majority of seats in England while the Conservative Party would accumulate a greater share of the vote (however, the Labour Party won a greater share of the vote than the Conservatives in the nation as a whole). This election also noted the highest ever voteshare as well as the total number of votes the Labour Party has ever recorded in any election in England as well as the nation at whole.[2]

The narrow victory of the Conservative Party led to the return of Winston Churchill as prime minister and the start of 13 years of Conservative rule (the second longest period of one-party rule in the 20th century).

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