Macdonald's campaigning led him to his later career in politics. In addition to his trade union activism, Macdonald also campaigned through journalism. He wrote many articles for the
Glasgow Sentinel, a newspaper in which he invested and in which he later gained a controlling interest. In 1868, Macdonald was briefly selected to be one of the candidates to contest the parliamentary constituency of
Kilmarnock Burghs. However he chose to withdraw from the race to enable another advanced
Liberal candidate to have a better chance of success against the more moderate sitting Liberal
MP,
Edward Pleydell-Bouverie. In 1874, Macdonald was invited to stand as the Lib–Lab candidate for
Stafford at the
1874 general election. Macdonald won the seat and with
Thomas Burt was among the first working-class members of the
House of Commons. In Parliament Macdonald tended to concentrate on trade union matters but he was also a strong supporter of
Irish Home Rule. Macdonald's views had always been moderate and he chose to work for reform within the parliamentary system rather than try to change things by radical direct action. This had previously led to challenges to his leadership of the miners when in 1864 the radical journalist John Towers, and the former
Chartist lawyer
W. P. Roberts, withdrew from Macdonald's National Association and established the Practical Miners' Association which tried to pursue a more aggressive industrial policy. They also accused Macdonald of being politically too close to the coal owners. Later, some socialists, such as
Karl Marx and
Friedrich Engels, criticised Macdonald for his close relationship with
Benjamin Disraeli and the
Conservative Party. Macdonald was re-elected for Stafford in the
1880 general election. ==Death==