Glasgow Garscadden by-election, 1978

The Glasgow Garscadden by-election, 1978 was a parliamentary by-election held on 13 April 1978 for the British House of Commons constituency of Glasgow Garscadden, in the north west periphery of the City of Glasgow.

It was won by Donald Dewar of the Labour Party. It was important in that it was widely seen as halting the Scottish National Party (SNP) tide in the 1970s.

Previous Member of Parliament

The by-election was caused by the death of William Watson Small (19 October 1909 18 January 1978) who was a Labour Party politician from Scotland.

Small was an engineer. He was an Ayrshire County Councillor from 1945 to 1951 and an active member of the Amalgamated Engineering Union, serving on its national committee from 1955 to 1957 and as president of the union's West Ayrshire district.

At the 1959 general election, he was elected as Member of Parliament for Glasgow Scotstoun. At the February 1974 election he was elected for Glasgow Garscadden which was largely the same constituency under a new name. He held that seat until his death.

Small never held ministerial office, but served as Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Minister of Power from 1964.

Candidates

Six candidates were nominated for the by-election.

The Labour candidate was Donald Campbell Dewar. He had worked as a solicitor in Glasgow before being elected at the age of 28 in the 1966 general election to Westminster to represent the marginal constituency of Aberdeen South. In his maiden speech in the Commons Dewar railed against a proposed increase on potato tax. This was his first notable success - the tax was repealed in 1967. That year he was made Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Education Secretary Anthony Crosland, who Dewar later confessed to never really establishing a rapport with. He held that position until 1969. In April 1968 he was proposed for a Minister of State position by Roy Jenkins but nothing came of it. He lost his seat to Ian Sproat at the 1970 general election.

Dewar later went on to become Secretary of State for Scotland, and the first First Minister of Scotland.

Representing the Scottish National Party (SNP) was Keith S. Bovey. He had previously contested the neighbouring seat of Glasgow Hillhead in February 1974 and Garscadden in the October 1974 general election. In that contest the SNP replaced the Conservative Party as the runners up to Labour in Glasgow Garscadden. He was also a senior figure in CND.

Bovey went on to contest Glasgow Hillhead in 1983, as well as Monklands West in the 1987 and 1992 general elections.

The Conservative nominee was Iain M. Lawson. He contested Dumbarton for the Tories in 1983. Later he was the SNP candidate for Stirling in 1987 and for Paisley South in the Paisley South by-election, 1990 and the 1992 general election.

Mrs S. Farrell represented the Scottish Labour Party, which was a short lived breakaway party from the Labour Party. She did not contest any other parliamentary election.

Sammy Barr was the Communist candidate. He contested Glasgow Garscadden in February 1974 and 1979, as well as at this by-election.

The Socialist Workers Party stood Peter Porteous, who did not contest any other parliamentary election.

Votes

General Election October 1974: Glasgow Garscadden
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour William Small 19,737 50.9 -1.4
SNP K.S. Bovey 12,100 31.2 +9.4
Conservative J. Corbett 5,004 12.9 -9.4
Liberal M.R. Kibby 1,915 5.0 N/A
Majority 7,637 19.7 -8.3
Turnout 38,756 70.8 -3.3
Labour hold Swing N/A
Registered electors 54,700
By-Election 13 April 1978: Glasgow Garscadden
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Donald Dewar 16,507 45.4 -5.5
SNP K.S. Bovey 11,955 32.9 +1.7
Conservative I.M. Lawson 6,746 18.5 +5.6
Scottish Labour Mrs S. Farrell 583 1.6 N/A
Communist S.A. Barr 407 1.1 N/A
Socialist Workers P. Porteous 166 0.5 N/A
Majority 4,552 12.5 -7.2
Turnout 36,364 69.1 -1.7
Labour hold Swing
Registered electors 57,603

Political context

The by-election was important as it was the first Westminster by-election in Scotland to take place since the October 1974 general election, a lengthy gap. The SNP was widely seen as being on a rise, doing well at the 1977 district council elections.

Although the by-election saw a significant swing from Labour to SNP, because the SNP failed to take the seat it was seen as a defeat for them. Labour did even better, and the SNP worse, shortly after this, in the 1978 regional elections, and Westminster by-elections in Hamilton and Berwick and East Lothian.

See also

References