1975 Woolwich West by-election * * * | <- Oct. 1974 | 26 June 1975 | 1979 -> | | * * * Constituency of Woolwich West Turnout| 46.43% ( 27.46%) | | First party | Second party | Third party | | | | | Lab Lib Candidate | Peter Bottomley | Joseph Stanyer | Sheilagh Hobday Party | Conservative | Labour | Liberal Popular vote | 17,280 | 14,898 | 1,884 Percentage | 48.78% | 42.06% | 5.32% Swing | 10.19% | 5.03% | 8.99% * * * | MP before election William Hamling Labour | Elected MP Peter Bottomley Conservative | The 1975 Woolwich West by-election was a parliamentary by-election held on 26 June 1975 for the British House of Commons constituency of Woolwich West in South East London. The seat had become vacant when the constituency's Labour Member of Parliament (MP), William Hamling died on 20 March 1975. He had held the seat since winning it from the Conservatives at the 1964 general election. It was the first by election since the general election the previous October.[1] ## Contents * 1 Results * 2 Votes * 3 See also * 4 References ## Results[edit] The result of the contest was a victory for the Conservative candidate, Peter Bottomley, who held the seat until its abolition for the 1983 general election; he had contested the seat in both 1974 general elections. He then sat for Eltham, the successor seat and since 1997 has represented Worthing West, a safe Tory seat in Sussex. As the result of the by-election was a Conservative gain from Labour, the result reduced the Labour majority in the House of Commons from 3 seats to 1 seat as their number of seats fell from 319 to 318 in a House of 635 members. However the position of the Labour Government was made worse by the fact one of its MPs John Stonehouse, was absent from the country.[1] This was the first by-election the Conservatives fought under the leadership of Margaret Thatcher, who abandoned a precedent that party leaders did not campaign in by-elections, by personally canvassing in support of Bottomley.[1] Writing in The Glasgow Herald political correspondent John Warden stated that the victory would boost Mrs Thatcher by silencing "mutterings about her leadership" for at least a few months.[1] ## Votes[edit] Woolwich West by-election, 1975[2] Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | | | | | Conservative | Peter Bottomley | 17,280 | 48.78 | +10.19 | Labour | Joseph Stanyer | 14,898 | 42.06 | -5.03 | Liberal | Sheilagh Hobday | 1,884 | 5.32 | -8.99 | National Front | Ruth Robinson | 856 | 2.42 | New | Fellowship | Ronald Mallone | 218 | 0.61 | New | English National | Frank Hansford-Miller | 140 | 0.39 | New | C'tive, Anti-Common Market | Reginald Simmerson | 104 | 0.29 | New | Independent | Peter Bishop | 41 | 0.12 | New Majority | 2,382 | 6.72 | N/A Turnout | 35,421 | 46.43 | -27.46 | Conservative gain from Labour | Swing | | ## See also[edit] * 1943 Woolwich West by-election * Woolwich West (UK Parliament constituency) * Woolwich * List of United Kingdom by-elections ## References[edit] 1. ^ a b c d Warden, John (27 June 1975). "Mrs Thatcher secures her maiden win". The Glasgow Herald. Retrieved 1 August 2018. 2. ^ "1975 By Election Results". Archived from the original on 14 March 2012. Retrieved 17 September 2015. * v * t * e « 46th Parliament « By-elections to the 47th Parliament of the United Kingdom » 48th Parliament » 1975| * June: Woolwich West 1976| * March: Coventry North West * Carshalton * Wirral * June: Rotherham * July: Thurrock * November: Newcastle-upon-Tyne Central * Walsall North * Workington * December: Cambridge 1977| * February: City of London and Westminster South * March: Birmingham Stechford * April: Ashfield * Great Grimsby * July: Saffron Walden * August: Birmingham Ladywood * November: Bournemouth East 1978| * March: Ilford North * April: Glasgow Garscadden * Lambeth Central * Epsom and Ewell * Wycombe * May: Hamilton * July: Manchester Moss Side * Penistone * October: Berwick and East Lothian * Pontefract and Castleford 1979| * March: Clitheroe * Knutsford * Liverpool Edge Hill Lists of UK by-elections 1801–1806 1806–1818 1818–1832 1832–1847 1847–1857 1857–1868 1868–1885 1885–1900 1900–1918 1918–1931 1931–1950 1950–1979 1979–2010 2010–present Northern Ireland Hereditary peers *[v]: View this template *[t]: Discuss this template *[e]: Edit this template