Sydney Hope (1905 – 20 December 1959) was a British solicitor and politician, who represented Stalybridge and Hyde for the Conservative Party between 1931 and 1935.
[2] In October 1930, Hope was adopted as the Conservative prospective parliamentary candidate for Stalybridge and Hyde,[2] and contested it at the 1931 general election.
The seat had been traditionally Conservative, but had been taken by Edmund Walter Hanbury Wood, a Labour candidate, at the previous general election.
He did not, however, stand for re-election, and as part of an overall Conservative landslide victory, Hope took the seat with a comfortable majority of 13,300 votes over the Liberal and Labour candidates.
He did not make his maiden speech until 1934, when he objected to proposals to move Cheadle and Gatley into Greater Manchester.