The Oldie magazine March issue 410

Page 11

Sixty years ago, the Orpington by-election shook up British politics. By York Membery

ANNIVERSARY

OFFER MARY KILLEN – R.I.

March 2022

The great Liberal comeback

30th

‘You are as old as you feel’

March 2022 | £4.95 £3.96

Things did not get off to the best of starts for the Liberals when their existing candidate, Jack Galloway, turned out to be in a bigamous marriage and had to be asked to step aside. Meanwhile, a carelessly discarded cigarette butt led to the newly established Liberal campaign HQ going up in smoke – thankfully with no casualties. However, in Galloway’s last-minute replacement, Eric Lubbock, the Liberals chanced on a dashing, family-friendly candidate with strong local links, who would wear out five pairs of shoes on the campaign trail. It quickly became a two-horse race between the Tories and Liberals. But the Tory candidate, Peter Goldman, a brilliant party backroom boy turned would-be MP, lacked the common touch and couldn’t match Lubbock’s ‘local man’ credentials. To add to his woes, Harold Macmillan’s government had begun to lose its way – economic problems were mounting, ‘Supermac’ was looking past his sell-by date and a growing number of people thought it was time for a change after a decade of Tory rule. By the time Grimond, with his flair for publicity, hit the streets of Orpington in a gas-guzzling Chevrolet on election day in a bid to get out the vote (imagine the furore if Ed Davey did the same thing today), the Liberals were on course to achieving a political upset of the first order. The by-election win was widely credited with starting a revival in Liberal fortunes. The party went on to win hundreds of seats in that year’s local elections. Still, it did not result in Grimond’s getting a summons from the Palace to form a Liberal administration (a pretty far-fetched scenario anyway). The Liberals’ successor party, the Lib Dems – still a shadow of its former self following the post-coalition hammering it took in the 2015 election – should look for more Lubbock-like figures if it wants to make further by-election gains in the future.

E

– HM the Queen

to subscribers | www.th eoldie.co.uk | Issue 410

30th Anniversa ry Issue

S

ixty years ago, on 14th March 1962, the Liberals overturned a near-15,000 Tory majority to win a sensational by-election in Orpington. Eric Lubbock (1928-2016), later Lord Avebury, won a 7,855 majority and held the seat until 1970, when it reverted to the Conservatives. It has remained Tory ever since. The result sent shivers through the Conservative Party hierarchy. For a brief moment, it looked as if the Liberals might even replace Labour, which had lost three general elections in a row – 1951, 1955 and 1959 – as the main opposition party. The Sunday Times argued that ‘the heady wine of Orpington’ was the Liberals’ ‘most exhilarating beverage since their finest hour of the landslide of 1906’. It suggested that, ‘in his wildest moments’, the party leader Jo Grimond might even ‘see himself driving to Buckingham Palace to form a Liberal administration’. A post-Orpington national opinion poll in the Daily Mail put the Liberals on 33.7 per cent, ahead of both Labour and the Conservatives. The Liberal Party had become something of a music-hall joke by the mid-1950s, largely confined to the Celtic fringes – remote parts of Scotland, Wales and the West Country. But later in the decade the party showed new ‘fight’. The television broadcaster Ludovic Kennedy scored a strong second place for the party at the Rochdale by-election in 1958. Mark Bonham Carter won the Torrington by-election a few months later. The party’s telegenic new leader, Jo Grimond (1913-93), won converts to the cause. Nonetheless, few observers suspected that leafy, true blue Orpington, in suburban south-east London, would return anything other than a Tory – as usual – when a by-election was called in early 1962 after its MP, Donald Sumner, resigned his seat to become a County Court judge.

P. THE ALPHA MAL

ANNE ROBINSON ON NIGEL FARAGE

The Oldie turns 30! Richard Ingrams by Crai g Brown Auberon Waugh by A N Wilson

Farewell, Barry Cryer – Gyles Brandreth and Roger Lewis Return to Oz – Barry Hum phries and Bruce Beres ford 001 Front coverwithspine

410.indd 1 28/01/2022 13:08

TAKE OUT (OR GIVE) A 12-ISSUE SUBSCRIPTION FOR

£30

ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD

Instead of your paying £4.95 per issue, we will deliver The Oldie to your (or your friend’s) door for £2.50. To order your subscription(s), either go to

subscribe.theolde.co.uk, or call 0330 333 0195, or write to Freepost RTYE-KHAG-YHSC, Oldie Publications Ltd, Rockwood House, 9-16 Perrymount Road, Haywards Heath RH16 3DH with your credit-card details and all the addresses. Always quote code 032022 This offer expires 31st March 2022. Subscriptions cannot start later than with the May issue.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Ask Virginia Ironside

5min
pages 106-108

On the Road: Celia Birtwell

4min
pages 94-96

Crossword

3min
pages 97-98

Overlooked Britain: England

7min
pages 90-92

Taking a Walk: London’s

3min
page 93

Edwina Sandys’s Manhattan

7min
pages 88-89

Getting Dressed

6min
pages 84-87

Golden Oldies Rachel Johnson

4min
page 74

Exhibitions Huon Mallalieu

2min
pages 75-76

Television Frances Wilson

4min
page 72

Music Richard Osborne

3min
page 73

Film: Parallel Mothers

3min
page 70

Media Matters Stephen Glover

4min
pages 67-68

Boris – the fall of Falstaff

4min
page 66

Love Marriage, by Monica Ali

4min
page 65

Constable: A Portrait, by James

5min
pages 61-62

Against the Tide, by Roger Scruton, ed Mark Dooley

2min
pages 63-64

The Doctor’s Surgery

3min
page 47

One Party After Another: The Disruptive Life of Nigel Farage, by Michael Crick

2min
pages 55-56

Readers’ Letters

8min
pages 48-49

A Class of Their Own, by

5min
pages 57-58

Postcards from the Edge

4min
page 44

Goodbye to Hollywood

6min
pages 38-40

Pearls of wisdom from The Oldie’s 30-year archive

4min
page 41

Small World Jem Clarke

3min
pages 42-43

Town Mouse Tom Hodgkinson

4min
page 34

Country Mouse Giles Wood

4min
page 35

History David Horspool

4min
page 33

My Irish home is now a ghost

3min
page 32

Do act with your heroes

4min
page 31

A Supreme Court Justice

4min
pages 26-27

Francis Bacon, Queen of

4min
page 30

Thirty years of Oldie laughs

7min
pages 28-29

My true ghost story

7min
pages 18-20

My friend Auberon Waugh

6min
pages 22-24

What happened when I went

4min
page 25

Sport’s golden oldies

4min
page 21

RIP the alpha male Mary Killen

4min
pages 16-17

Bliss on Toast Prue Leith

3min
page 6

The great Liberal comeback

3min
page 11

The Old Un’s Notes

3min
page 5

The strange death of youth

4min
page 13

Gyles Brandreth’s Diary

4min
page 9

Our founding father, Richard

7min
pages 14-15

Barry Cryer remembered

4min
pages 7-8

Grumpy Oldie Man

4min
page 10
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.