Richard Bell (politician)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The founding members of the Derby Labour Movement held meetings at this house. This building, located at Green Lane, is due for demolition, against the wishes of the local community, but with the approval of Derby City Council
The founding members of the Derby Labour Movement held meetings at this house. This building, located at Green Lane, is due for demolition, against the wishes of the local community, but with the approval of Derby City Council

Richard Bell (1859, Merthyr Tydfil1 May 1930) was one of the first two British Labour Members of Parliament elected after the formation of the Labour Representation Committee in 1900.

Bell was a high-profile trade unionist, the general secretary of the Railway Servants union. He was elected for Derby, a two-member constituency, alongside a Liberal in the 1900 general election. He sympathised with the Liberals on most issues, except where issues directly affected his union. This meant that he was not very compatible with the other Labour MP, Keir Hardie, a committed socialist member of the Independent Labour Party.

By 1903, Bell was struggling to adhere to the rules of the LRC group in Parliament, which now had five members following a series of by-elections.[citation needed] By 1904, he was considered to have lapsed from the group and was associated with the Liberal Party.[citation needed] He was re-elected at the 1906 general election.

His supporters in the Derby Trades Council became disillusioned with Bell and he was replaced at the January 1910 general election by Jimmy Thomas, another railway worker. After leaving Parliament, Bell joined the Employment Exchange branch of the Board of Trade. He retired from that in 1920 but continued in local politics and served as a member of the Southgate Urban District Council 1922-29.[citation needed]

Political offices
Preceded by
Edward Harford
General Secretary of the Associated Society of Railway Servants
1883 - 1909
Succeeded by
J. E. Williams
Preceded by
W. Boyd Hornidge
President of the Trades Union Congress
1904
Succeeded by
James Sexton