In 1889 however, his father’s death plunged him into the world of Parliamentary politics. Bright’s death left a vacancy in the
House of Commons constituency of
Birmingham Central. At the time the alliance of Liberal Unionists and
Conservatives in
Birmingham was delicate. The Tories wished to nominate their own candidate to fight the
by-election in Birmingham Central and the Liberal Unionists, led by the charismatic
Joseph Chamberlain had no desire to cede the seat to them. The Conservatives, distrusting Chamberlain’s former radicalism, immediately put forward
Lord Randolph Churchill as the putative candidate but Chamberlain cleverly prevailed on Bright to step into his father’s shoes. The Birmingham Conservatives and Lord Randolph Churchill came under pressure from the party’s
Chief Whip at Westminster
Aretas Akers-Douglas and from
Arthur Balfour, who was closely associated with Churchill. With great reluctance the Tories accepted that Bright should be the Unionist candidate, although some local Conservatives were so indignant they resigned their party posts. Bright easily won the by-election, held on 15 April 1889, against the
Gladstonian Liberal
William Phipson Beale by 5,621 votes to 2,561, a majority of 3,060 or 37.4% of the total poll. This election was described by the biographer of John Bright as the Liberal Unionists’ first great victory. Bright held Birmingham Central until the
1895 general election when he stood down Later, Bright left the Liberal Unionists, perhaps smarting from Chamberlain’s attitude towards him, and reverted to his father’s original creed of
Liberalism. He was Liberal candidate at
Montgomery Boroughs in the
1900 general election, narrowly failing to gain the seat, losing by just 169 votes. However he was elected as
Member of Parliament for
Oldham at the
1906 election standing on a platform in opposition to the
tariff reform programme of his old Liberal Unionist chief, Joseph Chamberlain. He retired from politics at the general election of
January 1910. Like his father, Bright held strongly
pacifist views. He presided at a meeting held in
Manchester in September 1899 to protest the policy which was leading to the
Boer War. In their assessment of Bright’s contribution to Parliamentary affairs,
The Times reported that he was a useful but inconspicuous member, doing good work in committee, especially in shaping such measures as the
Children Act 1908. ==Death==