1933 Normanton by-election

{{Short description|UK parliamentary by-election}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2019}}

{{More citations needed|date=January 2017}}

{{Infobox election

| election_name = 1933 Normanton by-election

| type = By-election

| country = United Kingdom

| seats_for_election = The Normanton seat in the House of Commons.
Triggered by death of incumbent

| ongoing = no

| previous_election = 1929 United Kingdom general election

| previous_year = 1933

| next_election = 1935 United Kingdom general election

| next_year = 1935

| election_date = {{Start date|1933|05|08|df=y}}

| candidate1 = Tom Smith

| image1 =

| party1 = Labour Party (UK)

| last_election1 =

| popular_vote1 =

| percentage1 =

| title = MP

| posttitle = Subsequent MP

| before_election = Frederick Hall

| before_party = Labour Party (UK)

| after_election = Tom Smith

| after_party = Labour Party (UK)

}}

The 1933 Normanton by-election was a parliamentary by-election held for the British House of Commons constituency of Normanton on 8 May 1933. The seat had become vacant on the death of the Labour Member of Parliament Frederick Hall, who had held the seat since a previous by-election in 1905.

Following Labour's declaration of former Pontefract MP Tom Smith as their candidate, the Communist Party of Great Britain declared unemployed Castleford engineer John William Malkin as their competing candidate. However, as the Communist Party was at the time opposed to the requirement of a £150 deposit, their candidate was declared to be invalid and Labour's candidate was returned unopposed.Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, Tuesday 9 May 1933, "NO CONTEST Socialist Returned for Normanton". Smith represented the constituency until he resigned his seat in 1947, triggering another by-election.

References

See also