Three candidates were nominated. The list below is set out in descending order of the number of votes received at the by-election. 1. The Liberal Party candidate was
John Wynford Philipps (30 May 1860 – 28 March 1938). He was called to the bar of England and Wales in 1886. Philipps contested
Devizes at the 1886 general election. He was MP for this seat from the by-election until he resigned in 1894. He was subsequently elected MP for
Pembrokeshire at an
1898 by-election. He sat for the Welsh county until he was created the
1st Lord St Davids in 1908. He was advanced in the peerage as the 1st Viscount St Davids in 1918. 2. The Conservative candidate was
William Robert Bousfield (12 January 1854 – 16 July 1943), admitted to the bar of England and Wales in 1880. Bousfield was elected MP for
Hackney North at a
by-election in 1892 and retained that seat until he was defeated in 1906. 3. Representing the Labour interest, as an Independent Labour candidate, was the
Lanarkshire born
(James) Keir Hardie (15 August 1856 – 26 September 1915). Hardie had a background as a manual worker, which was unusual for a political candidate in 1888. Previously some working men, with a trade union background, had been elected to Parliament as
Liberal-Labour candidates but none without Liberal support. Hardie had worked as a miner. He became a trade unionist and then a journalist. At the time of the by-election he was a member of the Liberal Party, but the local Liberal Association rejected him as its candidate at the by-election. Hardie subsequently was a leading figure in the development of the
Labour Party. He was elected Independent Labour MP for
West Ham South in 1892 and sat until defeated in 1895. During this time he was the person who presided over the meeting which created the
Independent Labour Party (ILP) in 1893. Hardie contested
Bradford East for the ILP in a
by-election in 1896 and
Preston at the 1900 general election for the
Labour Representation Committee (LRC). He also contested and won
Merthyr Tydfil in the 1900 election. The LRC was renamed the Labour Party in 1906. Hardie was the Parliamentary Labour Party Chairman (its de facto leader) from 1906 until 1908. He continued to represent Merthyr Tydfil until he died in 1915. == Result ==