1969 Weston-super-Mare by-election

The Weston-super-Mare by-election of 27 March 1969 was held after the death of Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) David Webster.[4] The Labour Party selected 27 year-old Nicholas Bosanquet, an economic adviser at the National Board of Prices and Incomes.[5] The result was one of three Conservative wins in by-elections held that day, with the party also retaining Brighton Pavilion and gaining Walthamstow East from Labour.Across the three contests there was an average swing of 16% from Labour to Conservative, which Conservative Shadow Home Secretary Quintin Hogg noted would give his party a comfortable majority in the House of Commons if repeated at the next general election.[7] The next day's Glasgow Herald reported that the "dispiriting performance" by Labour in these first by-elections of 1969 raised questions as to when the tide would turn for the party and noted that "some Labour MPS feel in their bones" that the party could not recover to win the general election which would come within the next two years.
Weston-super-Mareby-electionConservativeMember of ParliamentDavid WebsterGeneral election 1966LabourLiberalTurnoutAlfred William (Jerry) WigginEton CollegeTrinity College, CambridgeWorcestershirePeeblesshireMontgomeryshireThe Law SocietyUppingham SchoolClare College, CambridgeNicholas BosanquetWinchester CollegeJerry Wigginretaining Brighton Paviliongaining Walthamstow EastShadow Home SecretaryQuintin Hoggthe next general electionGlasgow HeraldWho's Who & Who Was WhoWho's WhoThe Glasgow HeraldBy-elections44th Parliament of the United KingdomCarmarthenGlasgow PollokNuneatonRhondda WestHonitonBrierley HillCambridgeWalthamstow WestHamiltonLeicester South WestManchester GortonWest DerbyshireKensington SouthDudleyMeridenWarwick and LeamingtonOldham WestSheffield BrightsideNelson and ColneCaerphillyBassetlawNew ForestBrighton PavilionWalthamstow EastMid UlsterChichesterBirmingham LadywoodGlasgow GorbalsIslington NorthNewcastle-under-LymePaddington NorthSwindonWellingboroughBridgwaterSouth Ayrshire1801–18061806–18181818–18321832–18471847–18571857–18681868–18851885–19001900–19181918–19311931–19501950–19791979–20102010–presentHereditary peersParliament of the United Kingdom