Macau Daily Times

this day in history 1962 LIBERALS ORPINGTON SEIZE

- Courtesy BBC News

The Liberals have seized Orpington from the government in their first by-election victory for four years.

Eric Lubbock won the seat with a majority of 7,855, marking a swing of nearly 22% away from the Conservati­ves. It brings the number of Liberal MPS to seven.

It is the first seat the Government has lost since the general election in October 1959 and is probably its biggest humiliatio­n since 1951, when the Tories returned to power.

The election was caused by the appointmen­t of Donald Sumner, formerly Conservati­ve MP for Orpington, to be a county court judge.

The Liberal victory crowns a long series of by-elections in the past two-and-a-half years in which their candidates have captured second place.

Mr Lubbock, 33, an engineerin­g consultant, told the jubilant crowd: “We want more Liberal councils, more Liberal candidates. We must not stop in our efforts to overthrow Tory blunder. There is not a safe Tory seat in the country.”

Liberal leader Jo Grimond was delighted. “It is an incredible result. I must say the first thing that I should like to do is to congratula­te Mr Lubbock. It is a wonderful victory,” he said.

Lord Aldington, vice-chairman of the Conservati­ve Party, who was with Mr Grimond, said: “I am quite certain the Conservati­ve Party will not be shaken by [this result]. We shall march on and win the next general election.”

Today’s result follows the collapse yesterday of the safe government seat at North Blackpool into a marginal.

In today’s other by-election in Middlesbro­ugh, an experience­d Labour front-bencher, Arthur Bottomley, was returned to Westminste­r. He lost his seat of Rochester and Chatham in 1959.

In this election too, the Liberals came a strong second.

There is to be another by-election at Pontefract on 22 March.

The seat was held with a Labour majority of more than 24,000 at the general election.

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