Buckle was an official in the
National Union of Boot and Shoe Operatives, and was the first Labour
alderman on
Leeds City Council. In 1908 he was one of three members of the union who were nominated as parliamentary candidates. In the event he did not in fact contest an election until 1922. By 1915 he had become president of the Shoe and Boot Operatives. By 1919 he had moved to
Leicester. In that year he was appointed by the
Minister of Labour to the Trade Board for the Shoe and Boot Repairing Trade as a workers' representative. In 1922 he was the travelling organiser for his union and the society's principal negotiator. A minority
Labour government that was formed following the election collapsed in October 1924, necessitating a further
general election. Although he managed to increase his vote, Buckle was defeated in a straight fight by the Conservative candidate
Albert Bethel by over 2,000 votes. He died in the following year. ==References==