Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

1950 United Kingdom general election in Scotland

1950 United Kingdom general election

← 1945 23 February 1950 1951 →

All 71 Scottish seats to the House of Commons
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Clement Attlee Winston Churchill Clement Davies
Party Labour Unionist Liberal
Last election 37 seats, 47.9% 27 seats, 40.3% 0 seats, 5.6%
Seats won 37 31[a] 2
Seat change Steady Increase4 Increase2
Popular vote 1,259,410 1,222,010 180,270
Percentage 46.2% 44.8% 6.6%
Swing Decrease1.7 Increase4.5 Increase1.0

Results of the 1950 election in Scotland
  Conservative/Unionist
  Labour
  Liberal
  National Liberal
  Independent Liberal

A general election was held in the United Kingdom on Thursday 23 February 1950, and all 71 seats in Scotland were contested.[1] The Labour Party won a plurality of votes and a majority of seats within Scotland. When combined with results from across the UK the Labour government of Clement Attlee was returned to power with a slim majority of only 5. This proved unworkable, and a further election was held the following year.

The Liberals gained two seats in Scotland, having been unrepresented north of the border in the previous parliament. Scotland's only Communist MP, Willie Gallacher, was defeated in his West Fife seat, which went to Labour. Only one independent MP, John MacLeod was returned (as member for Ross and Cromarty standing as an "Independent Liberal").

Results

Party Seats Seats change Votes % % Change
  Labour Party 37 Steady 1,259,410 46.2 Decrease 1.7
  Conservative and Unionist (Total) 31 Increase4 1,222,010 44.8 Increase4.5
  Unionist 26 Increase 2 1,013,909 37.2 Increase 0.5
  National Liberal & Conservative 5 Increase 2 208,101 7.6 Increase 4.0
  Liberal 2 Increase 2 180,270 6.6 Increase 1.0
  SNP 0 Steady 9,708 0.4 Decrease 0.9
  Communist 0 Decrease 1 27,559 1.0 Decrease 0.4
  Other 1[b] Decrease 2 27,727 1.0 Decrease 0.7
Total 71 2,726,684 100

Votes summary

Popular vote[a]
Labour
46.2%
Unionist
44.8%
Liberal
6.6%
Other
2.4%
Parliamentary seats[a]
Labour
37 seats
Unionist
31 seats
Liberal
2 seats
Independent Liberal
1 seats


Notes

  1. ^ a b c The seat and vote count figures for the Unionists given here include the National Liberals.
  2. ^ John MacLeod won Ross and Cromarty standing as an "Independent Liberal".

References

  1. ^ "Commons results report" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 12 November 2020.