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United Kingdom general election, 1951

United Kingdom general election, 1951
United Kingdom
1950 ←
25 October 1951 → 1955
outgoing members ← → elected members

All 625 seats in the House of Commons
313 seats needed for a majority
Turnout 82.6% (Decrease1.3%)
  First party Second party Third party
  Churchill portrait NYP 45063.jpg Attlee BW cropped.jpg Clement Davies.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 298 seats (total strength) 315 seats 9 seats, 9.1%
Seats won 321 (total strength) 295 6
Seat change Increase 22 Decrease 20 Decrease 3
Popular vote 13,717,850 13,948,385 730,546
Percentage 48.0% 48.8% 2.5%
Swing Increase 5.6% Increase 2.7% Decrease 6.6%

UK Election 1951 Map.png

Colours denote the winning party, as shown in the main table of results. (Map does not show results in Northern Ireland)

PM before election

Clement Attlee
Labour

Subsequent PM

Winston Churchill
Conservative

1945 election MPs
1950 election MPs
1951 election MPs
1955 election MPs

UK Election 1951 Map.png

Clement Attlee
Labour

Winston Churchill
Conservative

The 1951 United Kingdom general election was held twenty months after the 1950 general election, which the Labour Party had won with a slim majority of just five seats. Labour called the election for 25 October 1951 hoping to increase their majority.

Clement Attlee had decided to call the election after the King's concerns over leaving the country to go on his Commonwealth tour in 1952 with a government that had such a slim majority that there was danger of a change of government in his absence. (As it transpired the King became too ill to travel and delegated the tour to his daughter Princess Elizabeth shortly before his death in February 1952.)

The Labour government, which by now had implemented most of its 1945 manifesto, was now beginning to lose many cabinet ministers such as Ernest Bevin and Stafford Cripps due to old age. The Conservatives however, due to the previous year's election, looked fresher, with more new MPs.

As Labour began to have some policy splits during the election campaign, the Conservatives ran an efficient campaign that was well funded and orchestrated. Their manifesto Britain Strong and Free stressed that safeguarding "our traditional way of life" was integral to the Conservative purpose. They did not propose to dismantle the welfare state or the National Health Service which the Labour Government had established. As for the Liberals, the poor election results in 1950 only got worse.


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