Labour With such a large Labour majority, there was a great deal of attention on the selection of a Labour candidate for the by-election. The procedure did not begin until the end of the summer but on 24 August it was reported that two nominations had been received by the
Constituency Labour Party. They were from Ron Evans (a steelworker, Bevan's former agent and a
Monmouthshire County Councillor), and from
Gordon Parry, a schoolteacher and
Pembrokeshire County Councillor. On 29 August the branch of the
Iron and Steel Trades Confederation at
Richard Thomas and Baldwins steelworks nominated
Michael Foot, who had been a prominent left-wing Labour MP for
Plymouth Devonport from 1945 to 1955 and the influential editor of unofficial Labour journal
Tribune since losing his seat. Foot had been one of Bevan's close friends and strongest supporters; for Foot, it was a cause of pride that he could follow Bevan. Foot also had a following among the local party members. Foot's main rival for the nomination was
Alderman Frank Whatley, who was nominated by the local branch of the
National Union of Mineworkers on 29 August. Three further nominees were identified the following day: Dengar Evans (a 49-year-old
chemist from
Trethomas),
Thomas Williams (barrister and former
member of parliament for
Hammersmith South and
Barons Court) and George Viner (a journalist from Cardiff). Dr Kamalakant G. Pendse, president of the
Socialist Medical Association for South Wales, was the ninth candidate to be nominated, and two more had appeared by the time nominations closed on 5 September: Glyn Lewis, a steelworkers' union official, and
Denis Howell, former MP for
Birmingham All Saints. A shortlist of five was agreed by the executive committee of Ebbw Vale Divisional Labour Party on 8 September:
Fred Evans (a headmaster and President of
Caerphilly Labour Party), Ron Evans, Gordon Parry, Dr K. G. Pendse, and Thomas Williams. The absence of both Michael Foot and Frank Whatley caused an uproar both among Foot's supporters and the miners who were supporting Whatley, and their supporters checked the rule books to see how the shortlist could be changed. At a meeting of the General Management Committee of the local party on 17 September, there was a
motion of no confidence in the Executive; the party chairman Ivor Parton suggested a simpler way out which was to add both Foot and Whatley to the shortlist as proposed. His suggestion was accepted unanimously. The selection contest followed on 25 September; Foot lead clearly from the first ballot: Thomas Williams, Fred Evans and Dr Pendse were eliminated. On the second ballot Whatley was bottom and was eliminated; the miners, without their own candidate, did not unite around any single one of the remaining candidates. On the third ballot the result was: The announcement of Foot's selection victory was greeted by the singing of "
The Red Flag". Immediately after the result, Ron Evans congratulated Foot on his victory and offered to act as Foot's agent just as he had for Bevan; the offer was accepted. Foot's biographer notes that Evans remained Foot's strongest supporter in the constituency until his death.
Conservatives The Conservative Party confirmed very early on that it would definitely field a candidate. Five names were submitted to the Ebbw Vale Conservative Association for interview in the first week of September: Anthony Arnold (aged 31) had fought two previous Parliamentary elections and worked in the insurance industry; Humphrey Crum Ewing (aged 36) was a company secretary who had fought
Swansea East in 1959;
Paul Dean (aged 36) was head of the home affairs section of the
Conservative Research Department; Ronald Maddocks (aged 50) was a barrister based in Swansea; and Sir
Brandon Rhys-Williams (aged 33) worked for
I.C.I. as a commercial assistant.
Liberals It was initially thought unlikely that a Liberal candidate would stand in the byelection; the last time the Liberals had fought the seat was in 1929. At the end of August the Welsh Liberal Party decided to send an organiser to the constituency for a month to see if the party could win support. At the same time a willing potential candidate appeared: Lieutenant-Colonel Patrick Lort-Phillips, (aged 49) who was a farmer, author and journalist and had twice previously campaigned in
Gloucester. Although the national headquarters of the Liberal Party was still unsure, At the 1960
Liberal Assembly held at the end of September, he caused a stir by moving an amendment calling for unilateral nuclear disarmament which was defeated by 607 votes to 78.
Plaid Cymru and others The Welsh nationalist party
Plaid Cymru made it clear that it would stand in the byelection, and on 7 September the Ebbw Vale area committee of the party chose
Emrys Roberts (aged 28) as their candidate. Roberts had fought two previous elections in
Newport and
Cardiff North, and was organising secretary of the party. No other candidate appeared by the time nominations closed on 7 November. ==Campaign==