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'''William Nathaniel Jones''' (1858 – 24 May 1934) was a Welsh [[Liberal Party (UK)|Liberal]] politician, businessman and soldier.
{{IPsock|1=Nimbley6|evidence=[[Wikipedia:Suspected sock puppets/Nimbley6 (5th)]]}} [[User:This_flag_once_was_red|<span style="background-color: #000; color: #fff">&nbsp;This flag once was <span style="color: red">red</span>&nbsp;</span>]] 19:25, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

Jones who served as a [[Justice of the Peace]] in [[Carmarthenshire]] married Margaret Francis of [[Llandilo]]. In 1923 he was nominated as one of the Sheriffs of Carmarthenshire.<ref>The Times, 13.11.23</ref> In business, he was a director of the [[Ammanford]] Gas Company and the Duke Anthracite Collieries Ltd and the owner of Birchgrove Steelworks, [[Swansea]].<ref>The Times, 13.6.29</ref>


==Parliamentary candidate==
In 1926, Sir [[Alfred Mond]] the Liberal MP for [[Carmarthen (UK Parliament constituency)|Carmarthen]] defected to the [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservatives]] over the issue of land policy and the proposal by [[David Lloyd George]] that some agricultural land be nationalised. The policy had been set out in the publication ''Land and the Nation'' or the ''Green Book'' in October 1925 but it caused great debate in the Liberal Party and another MP, [[Hilton Young, 1st Baron Kennet|Hilton Young]], who sat for [[Norwich (UK Parliament constituency)|Norwich]] also left the party for the Tories along with a couple of former MPs.<ref>Roy Douglas, ''Liberals: The History of the Liberal and Liberal Democrat Parties''; Hambledon and London, 2005 p212</ref> Mond decided not to resign and fight a by-election but there was an election to choose a successor to him to stand as a Liberal at the next election. This was initially contested by six candidates but four withdrew and the choice was between Jones and [[Richard Thomas Evans]] of Cardiff. Jones won in a close contest by 149 votes to 147, having made clear he was an opponent of the ''Green Book'' land policy whereas Evans, who had worked closely with Lloyd George on other Liberal policies, was in favour.<ref>The Times, 8.3.26</ref> Evans however was later become MP for Carmarthen, sitting from 1931-35. At the time of the by-election, and in other sources referring to him in 1882, Jones was described variously as Lieutenant-Colonel or Colonel Jones but no indication of his army history is available in those sources.

==Carmarthen by-election, 1928==
In the event Jones did not have to wait until the next general election as Mond accepted a [[peerage]] in 1928 and caused a [[by-election]] in Carmarthen. At the previous general election in [[United Kingdom general election, 1924|1924]] the Conservatives had not fielded a candidate and Mond had won easily in a straight fight with [[Labour Party (UK)|Labour]]. However this time, they put up the barrister , Sir Courtenay Mansel, another escapee from the Liberal Party in 1926 who had been MP for [[Penryn and Falmouth (UK Parliament constituency)|Penryn and Falmouth]] from 1922-23 but who had local connections in Carmarthenshire and was also a [[Justice of the Peace]] there. The Labour candidate was the Welsh barrister (and future MP) Dan Hopkin. There was briefly the prospect of a four-cornered contest when the [[Plaid Cymru|National Party of Wales]] announced their intention to stand a candidate but in the end they decided not to fight.<ref>The Times, 7.5.28</ref> The by-election took place on 28 June 1928 and Jones emerged as the narrow winner. Jones had made his opposition to the land policy a feature of the campaign in an attempt to retain the support of the division’s farmers, many of whom shared Mond’s concern about the nationalisation proposals. In any event the ''Green Book'' had by this time been withdrawn as a full statement of Liberal land policy.<ref>The Times, 28.6.28</ref> Instead, Jones promoted as the main object of Liberal land policy the desire to give security of tenure to tenant farmers. Many of those reliant on the land for their livelihood seemed to prefer the less radical solution of the government of [[Stanley Baldwin]] for the relief of rates on agricultural land.<ref>The Times, 27.6.28</ref>

==Polling==
Polling day itself was affected by bad weather with heavy rain dampening the candidates’ enthusiasm on the day and, it was reported, having a detrimental effect on turnout.<ref>The Times, 29.6.28</ref> However the official figures showed a turnout of 76.6% an improvement over the previous general election when only 68% had turned out to vote.<ref>C Cook & J Ramsden, ''By-elections in British Politics''; UCL Press, 1997 p275</ref> In the end, Jones had majority of just 47 votes over his Labour opponent, polling 10,201 to Hopkins’s 10,154 with Mansel for the Tories on 8,361. The drastic reduction in the size of the majority, even taking into account the fact that the Tories contested the seat, was a disappointment to the Liberals. Perhaps Liberal supporters felt they had been taken for granted by their party. Of their two previous MPs one had resigned to cause a by-election to find a seat for Sir Alfred Mond and then Mond himself had defected to the Tories without standing down to seek a mandate for his new party.

==Later elections==
The by-election did presage a change in political fortunes in the constituency. At the [[United Kingdom general election, 1929|1929 general election]] Jones lost the seat to Dan Hopkin in another three-cornered fight. Evans regained it for the Liberals in [[United Kingdom general election, 1931|1931]] but lost to Hopkin in [[United Kingdom general election, 1935|1935]]. The seat returned to the Liberals in [[United Kingdom general election, 1945|1945]] when it was won Sir [[Rhys Hopkin Morris]] but was recaptured for Labour in 1957 at the by-election which was caused by Hopkin Morris’ death; the successful Labour candidate being Lady [[Megan Lloyd George]] who had herself defected from Liberal to Labour.

==Death==
Jones died suddenly at [[Llanwrtyd Wells]] on 24 May 1934. He died intestate, leaving an estate of gross value £75,950.<ref>The Times, 27.7.34</ref>

==References==
{{Reflist}}

==Other sources==
* ''Who was Who'', OUP 2007
* [http://www.terrynorm.ic24.net/aberlash.htm Ammanford, Carmarthenshire web site - An Aberlash Millionaire<!-- bot-generated title -->] at www.terrynorm.ic24.net ''An Aberlash Millionaire: The Rags To Riches Life of David Davies, Aberlash''

[[Category:1858 births|Jones, William Nathaniel]]
[[Category:1934 deaths|Jones, William Nathaniel]]
[[Category:Liberal MPs (UK)|Jones, William Nathaniel]]
[[Category:Members of the United Kingdom Parliament for Welsh constituencies|Jones, William Nathaniel]]
[[Category:UK MPs 1924-1929|Jones, William Nathaniel]]
[[Category:Liberal Party politicians (UK)]]

Revision as of 19:25, 10 October 2008

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