There was a 1962 by-election in the Lincoln (UK Parliament constituency) on 8 March 1962[1] following the resignation of the sitting member, Sir Geoffrey de Freitas, on 20 December 1961 to take up the appointment of High Commissioner to Ghana. The by-election was won by Dick Taverne of the Labour Party. Taverne came to wider attention after he fell out with the Labour Party in 1973, winning a second controversial by-election.

Electoral history

General election 1959: Lincoln
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Geoffrey de Freitas 23,629 55.1 -1.1
Conservative Leslie Herbert Priestley 19,240 44.9 +1.1
Majority 4,389 10.2 -2.2
Turnout 42,869 84.1 -1.8
Labour hold Swing

Candidates

The local Liberal Party selected 35-year-old Patrick Furnell to contest the seat. He was a lecturer and tutor in economics and the British constitution.[2] He was educated at Godalming County Grammar School and Trinity College, Oxford (where he was Kitchener Scholar). He joined the R.A.F. in 1948, was commissioned three months later, and served at the R.A.F. station near Cardiff. His earliest political activity came while he was at Oxford University; in 1947 he was President of Oxford University Liberal Club for the Michaelmas term. He first contested Cardiff South East at the 1950 general election while only 22 years of age. In a bad election for the Liberals nationwide, he polled 8% and came third.[3] At the 1959 general election he contested East Grinstead. On this occasion he polled 18% and came third.[4]

Result

The Labour Party held the seat with an increased majority.

1962 Lincoln by-election[5]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Dick Taverne 19,038 50.51 -4.59
Conservative Percy Grieve 11,386 30.21 -14.69
Liberal Patrick Arthur Thomas Furnell 6,856 18.19 New
Independent Capt. A. Taylor 412 1.09 New
Majority 7,652 20.30 +10.10
Turnout 37,692
Labour hold Swing

References

  1. By-elections.co.uk Archived 20 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  2. The Times Guide to the House of Commons, 1959
  3. The Times Guide to the House of Commons, 1950
  4. The Times Guide to the House of Commons, 1959
  5. "1962 By Election Results". Archived from the original on 5 February 2012. Retrieved 15 August 2015.


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