Campbell Stephen

Reverend Campbell Stephen (1884 – 25 October 1947) was a Scottish socialist politician.

A native of Bower parish, Caithness, he was educated at Townhead Public School, Allan Glen's School and Glasgow University.

He worked as a barrister, a teacher of science and mathematics and minister of religion. He resigned his charge at the United Free Church in Ardrossan, Ayrshire in 1918 to contest Ayr Burghs in the same year.

He was Independent Labour Party Member of Parliament (MP) for Glasgow Camlachie from November 1922 to 1931 and from 1935 until his death.

He was one of James Maxton's closest political allies within the Independent Labour Party and supported Maxton both in his attempts to foster closer relations with the Communist Party and also during the disaffiliation debate in the early 1930s. Despite his strong support for ILP independence from the Labour Party when Maxton was alive, Stephen resigned the ILP whip to sit as an Independent from July 1947, and rejoined the Labour Party in October, shortly before his death. His death sparked the Glasgow Camlachie by-election, 1948.

In 1945, he married Dorothy Jewson, a former Labour member of parliament for Norwich.

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    Parliament of the United Kingdom
    Preceded by
    Halford John Mackinder
    Member of Parliament for Glasgow Camlachie
    19221931
    Succeeded by
    James Stevenson
    Preceded by
    James Stevenson
    Member of Parliament for Glasgow Camlachie
    19351947
    Succeeded by
    Charles Stuart McFarlane
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