1922 Gorman first tried to enter the
House of Commons at the
1922 general election when he fought
Royton as a Liberal. In a three-cornered contest he was 1,093 votes behind the sitting
Conservative MP, Sir
Wilfrid Sugden. The
Labour candidate Mr J Battle came third with just under 20% of the poll, giving Gorman hope that in a straight fight he might win the seat at a future attempt.
1923 In
1923 Gorman again fought Royton and there was again a three-cornered contest. This time however the effects of Liberal reunion between the
Lloyd George and
Asquithian wings of the Liberal Party gave him a valuable boost and he overtook Sugden to capture the seat with a majority of 2,516 votes. Labour again came bottom of the poll, their candidate the Rev. J B Turner, losing his
deposit.
1924 Labour refused to concede Gorman a straight fight against the
Tories in
1924 either. Their candidate, Mr A E Wood, duly came bottom of the poll again but raised his party's share of the vote to 19%. With the anti-Tory vote thus split again and the Conservatives resurgent in the country after the brief period of
the first Labour government, their new candidate Arthur Davies, defeated Gorman by a majority 2,426. Gorman did not stand for
Parliament again. ==Honours==