University of Oxford Chancellor election, 1987

The 1987 University of Oxford election for the position of Chancellor was called upon the death of the incumbent Chancellor, Harold Macmillan, 1st Earl of Stockton on 29 December 1986.

Electorate

The electorate consisted of all members of the University holding the rank of MA. Votes had to be cast in person at Oxford in academic dress. The election was by first past the post. To stand a candidate had to be nominated by two MAs.

Candidates

The election generated much interest and numerous names were raised in the press as potential candidates, including:[1]

A notable feature was the decision of the university dons and authorities to not agree a preferred candidate in advance, thus increasing the possibility of a long list of candidates being nominated.[2]

Eventually four candidates were nominated:

Course of the election

The election attracted huge levels of publicity, at times likened to a parliamentary by-election.[3] Much of the attention focused upon the Jenkins and Heath campaigns, whilst Blake was seen as a non-political candidate. Payne was regarded as an outsider.

Much attention was focused on the issue of government funding for universities, with Oxford facing the effects of cuts in its funding, leading to several chairs being left unfilled.[4]

The requirement for those voting to do so in academic dress resulted in the local tailor selling out. One tactic of the supporters of Jenkins was to lend gowns to voters lacking them.[4]

Result

Polling ran until 14 March 1987. The results were as follows:[5]

Candidate Votes %
Roy Jenkins 3,249 39.1
Lord Blake 2,674 32.2
Edward Heath 2,348 29.3
Mark Payne 38 0.5
Turnout 8,309
Roy Jenkins elected

See also

Notes

  1. "Finding a dark blue horse". The Guardian. 10 January 1987.
  2. "The buzz begins on an Oxford successor". The Guardian. 21 January 1987.
  3. "Oxford's scholarly voters catch by-election fever". The Times. 8 March 1987.
  4. 4.0 4.1 "What a swell party this is ..And, by the way, we also elected a chancellor – The triumph of Roy Jenkins". The Times. 15 March 1987.
  5. "Jenkins wins the Oxford vote". The Times. 15 March 1987.