UNITED KINGDOM GENERAL ELECTION, 1945
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The United Kingdom 'General Election of 1945' was one of the most significant general elections of the 20th century. It was held on 5 July 1945, with delayed polls taking place on 12 July and in Nelson and Colne on 19 July. It was ultimately counted and declared on 26 July, due in part to the time it took to transport the votes of those serving overseas.
Held just months after VE Day, it was the first general election to be held since 1935, as general elections had been suspended during World War II. It resulted in the shock election defeat of the Conservatives led by Winston Churchill and the landslide victory of the Labour Party led by Clement Attlee, who won a majority of 145 seats.
The result of the election was almost totally unexpected, given the heroic status of Winston Churchill, but reflected the voters' belief that the Labour Party were better able to rebuild the country following the war than the Conservatives. Churchill and the Conservatives are also generally considered to have run a poor campaign in comparison to Labour; Churchill's statement that Attlee's program would require a Gestapo-esque body to implement is considered to have been particularly poorly-judged. Equally, whilst voters respected and liked Churchill's wartime record, they were more broadly distrustful of the Conservative Party's domestic and foreign policy record in the late thirties. (It is worth remembering that the last election had been held in 1935, and voters had been given no opportunity, due to the war, to "let off steam" electorally between then and 1945.) Labour had also been given, during the war, the opportunity to display to the electorate their domestic competence in government under men such as Attlee, Herbert Morrison and Ernest Bevin at the Ministry of Labour.
The Labour Party ran on promises to create full employment, a tax funded universal National Health Service, and a cradle-to-grave welfare state, with the sensational campaign message of 'let us face the future.'
This was the first election in which Labour gained a majority of seats, and also the first time it won a plurality of votes. If it had won another 68,767 or 0.3% of votes it would have had over 50% of all those cast: the closest any party has come a majority of all votes since 1931.
| Contents |
| Results |
| Reason for Labour victory |
| See also |
| Bibliography |
| Manifestos |
Results
|}
''Total votes cast: 24,073,025. All parties shown. Conservative total includes Ulster Unionists.''
Reason for Labour victory
With the Second World War coming to an end in Europe, the Labour Party decided to pull out of the wartime national government, necessitating a new election set for July of 1945. King George VI dissolved Parliament, which had been sitting for ten years without an election. What followed was perhaps one of the greatest swings of public confidence of the 20th century. Labour won overwhelming support while 'Churchill... was both surprised and stunned' by the crushing defeat suffered by the Conservatives. How this swing of opinion came about is not only due the failings of the Conservative Party but also to Labour's manifesto of social reform, and particularly an apparent wartime change in the attitudes of the British public as a whole.
The single greatest factor in Labour's dramatic win appeared to be the policy of social reform. In one opinion poll, 41% of respondents considered housing to be the single most important issue that faced the country, 15% stated the Labour policy of full employment, 7% mentioned social security, 6% nationalisation and just 5% international security, which was emphasised by the Conservatives. The Beveridge Report, published in 1942, proposed the creation of a Welfare State. It called for a dramatic turn in British social policy, with provision for nationalised health care, expanded education, national insurance and a new housing policy. The report was extremely popular, and copies of its findings were widely purchased, turning it into a best-seller. The Labour Party adopted the report eagerly, whereas the Conservatives largely dismissed many of its suggestions, claiming they could not be afforded. Labour offered a new comprehensive welfare policy, reflecting a general consensus that social improvements were needed. The Conservatives were not willing to make the same concessions that Labour proposed, and hence appeared disjointed with public support.
With the war drawing to an end by 1945, the National Government sought to call an election in a bid to return to a two party system. As Churchill's personal popularity remained high, Conservatives were confident of victory and based much of their election campaign on this, rather than propose new programmes. However people distinguished between Churchill and his party, a contrast which Labour repeatedly emphasised throughout the campaign.
In addition to the poor Conservative election strategy, Churchill went so far as to accuse Attlee of seeking to behave as a dictator, in spite of Attlee's service in Churchill's war cabinet. In the most famous incident of the campaign, Churchill's first election broadcast on June 4th backfired dramatically and memorably. Denouncing his former coalition partners in bombastic and truculent tones, he declared that Labour "would have to fall back on some form of a Gestapo" to impose socialism on Britain. Typically Churchillian in style and delivery, it seems people couldn’t but reflect that it was a shame that a voice that had so inspired and unified the nation was now being used to make grubby political attacks on his former colleagues, comparing to them the very people they had fought against so effectively together. In Attlee's typically mild-mannered response the next night, he ironically thanked the prime minister for demonstrating to people the difference between Churchill the great wartime leader and peacetime politician, and argued the case for public control of industry.
Another blow to the Conservative campaign was the memory of the 1930s policy of appeasement, which had been conducted by Churchill's Conservative predecessors, Neville Chamberlain and Stanley Baldwin, and was at this stage widely discredited for allowing Hitler to become too strong. The inter-war period had been dominated by Conservatives. Excepting two brief minority Labour governments in 1924 and from 1929 to 1931, they had been in power for its entirety. As a result the Conservatives were generally blamed for the era's mistake, not for merely appeasement but for the inflation and unemployment of the Great Depression. There was a feeling that the while the war of 1914-1918 had been won, the peace that followed had been lost. Labour played to the concept of "winning the peace" that would follow the second war.
Possibly for this reason, there was especially strong support for Labour in the armed services, who feared returning to the unemployment and homelessness to which the soldiers of the First World War had returned. Government commissioned civics classes organised by the Army Bureau of Current Affairs were heavily influenced by left-wing teachers, organisers and students who supported for Labour's socialist policies.
Labour was also as much if not more part of the wartime coalition government that had led the country for the last five years than the Conservatives, and experience which had gained them respectability and affection. Clement Attlee had been the country's Deputy Prime Minister and Ernest Bevin its Minister of Labour.
The effects of 'common experiences' shared in the Second World War were so vast, such as the evacuation of primary school children, that they had brought a change in opinion of many middle-class voters. After observing the physical conditions of the working-class children, many voters began to question the State's responsibility, and thus all focusing upon Labour. The "wartime ethos" of preceding years could also have fostered a more socially-orientated electorate.
See also
★ MPs elected in the United Kingdom general election, 1945
Bibliography
★ The British General Election of 1950, Nicholas, H., , , Macmillan, 1951,
Manifestos
★ Mr. Churchill's Declaration of Policy to the Electors- 1945 Conservative manifesto.
★ Let Us Face the Future - 1945 Labour Party manifesto.
★ 20 Point Manifesto of the Liberal Party - 1945 Liberal Party manifesto.
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