National Party photograph

National Party

Use attributes for filter !
Presidents J. B. M. Hertzog
Frederik Willem de Klerk
Founders J. B. M. Hertzog
Henry Page Croft, 1st Baron Croft
Sir Richard Cooper, 2nd Baronet
FoundedAugust 1917
Ceased operationsApril 9, 2005
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID733313
Send edit request

About National Party


The National Party was a short-lived British political party created in August 1917 as a right-wing split from the Conservative Party.

Scotch on the Rocks: The TV drama locked away for 50 years

Scotch on the Rocks: The TV drama locked away for 50 years
Nov 29,2023 7:11 pm

... They agreed the use of the Scottish National Party name and logo in the drama created the risk that viewers might think the real SNP was involved in violence and that this constituted " unfair treatment"...

New Zealand smoking ban: Health experts criticise new government's shock reversal

New Zealand smoking ban: Health experts criticise new government's shock reversal
Nov 27,2023 1:51 am

... Despite a the centre-right National Party has struggled for weeks over policy in its negotiations to form coalition government with the two minor parties...

Chris Mason: Brexit means buck now stops with government on immigration

Chris Mason: Brexit means buck now stops with government on immigration
Nov 23,2023 6:00 pm

... The Scottish National Party lashed out at what it sees as Westminster s obsession with driving the numbers down...

Keir Starmer considers Labour Gaza conflict motion

Keir Starmer considers Labour Gaza conflict motion
Nov 14,2023 9:51 am

... Labour s position is set to come under significant strain on Wednesday, with the Scottish National Party likely to secure a vote calling for a ceasefire...

PM facing tough week on Braverman and Rwanda

PM facing tough week on Braverman and Rwanda
Nov 12,2023 9:21 pm

... The vote is the idea of the Scottish National Party, who favour a ceasefire in Gaza...

Hussain departure makes things awkward for Labour frontbench

Hussain departure makes things awkward for Labour frontbench
Nov 8,2023 4:21 am

... The Scottish National Party, which wants a ceasefire, is also likely to push for a vote too...

Israel Gaza: How much trouble is Keir Starmer in over Middle East stance?

Israel Gaza: How much trouble is Keir Starmer in over Middle East stance?
Oct 25,2023 9:11 pm

... The Scottish National Party has a different position: they do advocate a ceasefire...

By-elections: Is it back to the 1990s for Keir Starmer's Labour?

By-elections: Is it back to the 1990s for Keir Starmer's Labour?
Oct 20,2023 1:31 pm

... 4% Labour managed from the Scottish National Party in...

By-elections: Is it back to the 1990s for Keir Starmer's Labour?

Oct 18,2023 9:21 am

By Chris MasonPolitical editor, BBC News

I type these words having just strode across Tamworth FC's artificial grass pitch, amid The red placards and cheering smiles of a second Labour victory rally in just one morning.

Yes, governments often get a kicking in by-elections.

But where these two Labour victories happened - and The kind of numbers involved - are worth a closer look.

As, this corner of Staffordshire has a rich political history.

In 1996, a similar seat, including Tamworth, had a by-election. Labour took it from The Conservatives with a 22% swing.

A year later, Labour - or New Labour as it had been rebranded by leader Tony Blair - won a landslide general election victory.

Brian Jenkins, who won The Tamworth by-election in 1996, was alongside Sir Keir in The Stands This Morning , to cheer Sarah Edwards, The New Town 's new Labour MP.

Ms Edwards won on a colossal 23. 9% swing from The Conservatives to Labour.

In Mid Bedfordshire, Labour won with a swing of 20. 5%, overturning a 24,664 vote Conservative majority - The largest such reversal in by-election history.

Sir Keir told me he'd allowed himself a jig around his front room in The Middle of The Night when The results came in.

At his first victory rally of The Morning , in Marston Moretaine near Bedford, The red placards and Labour smiles amid The greenery of The Home Counties were quite a spectacle.

Even The Place names sound double-barrelled here.

As he addressed activists, Sir Keir seemed to say The Word " change" in every other sentence. Victories like these proved Labour could now win anywhere, he told them.

The Swing in Mid Beds was almost identical to The 20. 4% Labour managed from The Scottish National Party in.

It was similar too in in The summer.

The only recent exception to this trend was Uxbridge and South Ruislip , where Labour failed to take The seat on a more modest seven point swing, as a row raged over The London Labour Mayor's Ultra Low Emissions Zone (Ulez).

The parallels with The 1990s are Clear - 20% by-election swings, a Conservative Party trailing badly in The polls, beset by angst and bickering after More Than a decade in government.

(And talking of angst, my WhatsApps contain some spiky private reflections from Conservatives about their prospects in next year's general election. " Annihilation" is one such fear. )

But there are two very big reasons why things in The 2020s are very different from The 1990s.

One is economic. The Other is political.

By The Time of The 1997 general election, despite, The economic backdrop was benign - The economy was growing.

Things are rather different now: The economy has been flatlining and The tax burden is at a record modern high.

Politically, Labour was starting from a much stronger position in The 1997 general election, having closed The Gap on The Tories at The previous general election.

Labour's performance in The 2019 general election was their worst since 1935, leaving them with a colossal mountain to climb to even win a very small majority to call their own.

Keir Starmer needs a bigger swing than Tony Blair managed in 1997 to gain The Keys to Downing Street.

Not as Big A swing as he has managed in some of these by-elections. But by-elections are not general elections, and plenty on all sides expect The opinion polls to tighten.

All That said, days like this explain why Labour now believe they can actually win and even more Conservatives are increasingly resigned to being doomed.

Related Topics

Source of news: bbc.com

National Party Photos

Related Persons

Next Profile ❯