1847 United Kingdom general election|
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Turnout | 482,429 |
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The 1847 United Kingdom general election was held from 29 July to 26 August 1847. It saw the Conservatives win the most seats but remain divided between Protectionists and Peelites. This allowed the Whigs, led by Prime Minister Lord John Russell, to retain power.[2]
The general election was held amid the Great Irish famine.[3] The Irish Repeal group won more seats than in the previous general election, while the Chartists gained the only seat they were ever to hold, Nottingham's second seat, held by Chartist leader Feargus O'Connor.
The election also witnessed the election of Britain's first Jewish MP, the Liberal Lionel de Rothschild in the City of London. Members being sworn in were however required to swear the Christian Oath of Allegiance, meaning Rothschild was unable actually to take his seat until the passage of the Jews Relief Act in 1858. The constituency of Sudbury, which elected two members, was disfranchised for this election. This accounts there being two fewer seats in the House of Commons as compared to the previous election, though no redistribution took place.
Results
UK General Election 1847
Party
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Seats
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Gains
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Losses
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Net gain/loss
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Seats %
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Votes %
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Votes
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+/−
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Whig
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292[b]
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+21
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44.51
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53.75
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259,311
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+6.9
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Conservative
|
325
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−42
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49.54
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42.59
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205,481
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−8.2
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Irish Repeal
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36
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+16
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5.49
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2.93
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14,128
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+1.0
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Chartist
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1
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1
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0
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+1
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0.15
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0.59
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2,848
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0
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Irish Confederation
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2
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2
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0
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+2
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0.30
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0.14
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661
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N/A
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Total votes cast: 482,429.
[4]
Voting summary
Popular vote |
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Whig |
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53.75% |
Conservative |
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42.59% |
Irish Repeal |
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2.93% |
Chartist |
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0.59% |
Others |
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0.14% |
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Seats summary
Parliamentary seats |
|
|
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Whig |
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44.51% |
Conservative |
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49.54% |
Irish Repeal |
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5.49% |
Chartist |
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0.15% |
Others |
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0.3% |
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Regional results
Great Britain
England
Scotland
Party
|
Candidates
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Unopposed
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Seats
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Seats change
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Votes
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%
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% change
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Whig
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48
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21
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33
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+2
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20,092
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81.7
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+20.9
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Conservative & Liberal Conservatives
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23
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16
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20
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−2
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3,509
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18.3
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−20.0
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Total
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71
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37
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53
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23,601
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100
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Wales
Ireland
Universities
Notes
- ^ a b Several country and university seats held by Conservatives were uncontested, and many urban multi-member constituencies that tended to vote Liberal had multiple candidates, so this is an misleading figure. Therefore, national swing is not applicable to elections in this era.
- ^ a b The seat and vote count figures for the Whigs given here include the Speaker of the House of Commons
References
Further reading
External links