Misplaced Pages

1951 Labour Party Shadow Cabinet election

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Elections to the Labour Party's Shadow Cabinet (more formally, its "Parliamentary Committee") occurred in November 1951. In addition to the 12 members elected, the Leader (Clement Attlee), Deputy Leader (Herbert Morrison), Labour Chief Whip (William Whiteley), and Labour Leader in the House of Lords (Christopher Addison) were automatically members.

Uniquely, in 1951, the voting tallies were not released, only the ranks of the successful candidates.

The results of the election are listed below:

Colour
key
Member of Cabinet when Labour Party lost office following the 1951 election
Rank Candidate Constituency Votes
1 Jim Griffiths Llanelli
2 Glenvil Hall Colne Valley
3 Hugh Gaitskell Leeds South
4 Alfred Robens Blyth
5 James Chuter Ede South Shields
6 Richard Stokes Ipswich
7 James Callaghan Cardiff South-East
8 Hugh Dalton Bishop Auckland
9 Philip Noel-Baker Derby South
10 Edith Summerskill Fulham West
11 Manny Shinwell Easington
12 Arthur Greenwood Wakefield

References

  1. Haseler, Stephen (1969). The Gaitskellites: Revisionism in the British Labour Party 1951–64. p. 37.
  2. Butler, David (1986). British Political Facts 1900–1985. Springer. p. 147. ISBN 1349180831.
Labour Party
History
Main
Topics
Leadership
Leaders
Deputy Leaders
General Secretaries
Treasurers
Leaders in the Lords
Scottish Labour Leaders
PLP Chairs
EPLP Leaders
* = wartime, in opposition
^ Interim/Acting
Internal elections and selections
Leadership elections
Deputy Leadership elections
Shadow Cabinet elections and reshuffles
Party structure
Constitution
Executive
Parliamentary
Conference
Subnational
Directly elected city mayoral authorities
CLPs
Miscellaneous
Associated organisations
List
Sectional groups
Factional groups
Media publications
Party alliances
Current
Categories: