1979 United Kingdom general election in Wales
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All 38 Welsh seats to the House of Commons | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The 1979 United Kingdom general election in Wales saw the Labour Party win the most votes and seats in Wales.[1]
Background
The Labour party won the most votes in Wales, although the Conservatives won most votes UK-wide.[1]
John Morris, Baron Morris of Aberavon was under the impression that Prime Minister James Callaghan would call a general election in the autumn of 1978, but called it off. A Welsh devolution referendum was held in March 1979, two months prior. A Welsh Assembly was rejected, with regional distrust as a potential factor.[2]
MPs elected
References
- ^ a b "UK Election Statistics: 1918-2022, A Long Century of Elections" (PDF). House of Commons Library. p. 22.
- ^ WalesOnline (2011-10-02). "Lord Morris of Aberavon lifts the lid on the disastrous 1979 devolution referendum". WalesOnline. Retrieved 2022-12-09.
- v
- t
- e
- MPs elected
- Scotland
- Wales
- Opinion polling
- Incumbent prime minister: James Callaghan (Labour)
- Appointed prime minister: Margaret Thatcher (Conservative)
the House of Commons
- Conservative (Margaret Thatcher)
- Labour (James Callaghan)
- Liberal (David Steel)
- Ulster Unionist Party (Harry West)
- Democratic Unionist Party (Ian Paisley)
- Scottish National Party (William Wolfe)
- Plaid Cymru (Gwynfor Evans)
- Social Democratic and Labour Party (Gerry Fitt)
- United Ulster Unionist Party (Ernest Baird)
- Ulster Popular Unionist Party (James Kilfedder)
- England
- Northern Ireland
- Scotland
- Wales