Download Thatcher`s Britain: Politics 1979-97

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
Thatcher’s Britain: Politics 1979-97.
Robert Saunders, Jesus College
Thatcherism:
Became leader in 1975, amidst two major crises:
(i) A crisis of Conservatism:. The Conservative Party had lost 4 out of 5 general elections, falling from
nearly 50% of the vote in 1955 to 36% in 1974. Running third among first time voters.
(ii) A crisis of Social Democracy: a conviction, driven by energy shortages and rampant inflation, that
the old forms of economic management had ceased to work.
Thatcher: ‘The Old Testament Prophets did not come out of the wilderness and say, “People of Israel.
We must have a consensus”. They said, “This is what I passionately believe. If you believe it too, come
with me”’.
Her politics defined by what she was against: socialism, strikes and the Soviet Union.
MT: ‘Socialism is what socialists do, and socialists do more or less the same, as the opportunity
permits. [The] GULAG was the consequence of socialism’.
‘the real case against Socialism is not its economic inefficiency, though there is evidence on all sides of
that. Much more fundamental is its basic immorality’.
‘I came into politics because of the conflict between good and evil’.
‘Economics is the method; the object is to change the heart and soul’.
Thatcherism in Government:
1979-81: British manufacturing shrank by 25%. Interest rates hit 17%; inflation 18%. Unemployment
above 3 million.
364 economists wrote to The Times, demanding a change of course.
But Thatcherism about psychological change, not a short term economic recovery.
More than a million council houses sold to their tenants, raising £17 billion for government.
MT on council estates: ‘council estates bring together people who are out of work but enjoy security of
tenure at subsidized rents. They not only have every incentive to stay where they are: they mutually
reinforce each other’s passivity and undermine each other’s initiative. Thus a culture grows up in
which the unemployed are content to remain living mainly on the state with little will to move and find
work’ (The Downing Street Years).
Privatisation: raises more than £19 billion over the 1980s.
MT: ‘Privatisation … was fundamental to improving Britain’s economic performance. But for me it
was … far more than that: it was one of the central means of reversing the corrosive and corrupting
effects of socialism. … Privatisation is at the centre of any programme of reclaiming territory for
freedom’.
Trade union reform: six Trade Union Acts, 1979-97.
Norman Tebbit on the miners’ strike (1984-85): ‘It broke not just a strike, but a spell’.
But the government’s opinion poll ratings fell to 24% by August 1985.
Problems: Council house sales and easing of credit restrictions led to significant rise in personal debt.
1978: £6 billion paid out in mortgages. 1988: £63 billion.
Makes low interest rates a much bigger political priority – even if inflation rising.
When MT resigned, in November 1990, interest rates were at 15%.
Europe: MT had seen the EC as a useful bulwark against socialism; but that changed with the ending
of the Cold War and the demise of socialism in Britain.
By 1990, seemed a vehicle for German influence, rather than a bulwark against the Soviets.
John Major:
Governed for nearly 7 years, and won more electoral votes in 1992 than any other party in British
history.
But took office during a white-collar recession, hitting Tory voters in the South.
1984: 23,000 homes repossessed. 1992, 62,000.
Reputation for competence shattered by exit from the ERM on ‘Black Wednesday’, September 1992.
Tiny majority after 1992, so vulnerable to small groups of rebels.
Scotland and Wales:
Privatisation intended as an alternative to devolution:
‘Not devolution to politicians and bureaucrats – but devolution to the Scottish people themselves.
Devolution of housing, devolution of education, devolution of share-ownership and devolution of staterun industries to individuals … Nationalisation took companies out of Scottish hands and into
Whitehall; privatisation will hand them back to Scotland’ (MT)
Yet support for Scottish independence up from 14% in 1979 to 33% in 1987. No Conservative MPs
elected in Scotland or Wales in 1997.
Some Statistics
ELECTIONS:
1979: Conservatives (44%); Labour (37%); Liberals (14%)
1983: Conservatives (42.5%); Labour (27.5%); Liberal-SDP Alliance (25.5%)
1987: Conservatives (42.3%); Labour (31%); Alliance (22.5%)
1992: Conservatives (42%); Labour (34.5%); Lib Dems (18%)
1997: Conservatives (31%); Labour (43%); Lib Dems (17%)
Majority: 43
Majority: 144
Majority: 102
Majority: 21
Majority: 179
FIGURES:
1979 to 1981: 25% of Britain’s manufacturing capacity shut down.
Inflation peaked at 18%; interest rates at 17% in 1980.
Jan 1982, more than 3 million unemployed – the highest level in relative terms since the 1930s.
Stayed above 3 million until 1987, dropping to 1.8 million by 1990.
Standard rate of income tax down from 33% (1979) to 25% (1990) to 23% (1997).
Top rate of income tax down from 83% (179) to 40% (1988).
However, overall tax burden – direct and indirect – up from 31.1% (1979) to 37.2% (1996).
More than a million council houses sold, raising £17,580 million (1979-89).
Privatisation raised about £19 billion (1979-87).
Housing loans up from £6 billion to £63 billion.
Mortgage Interest Tax Relief up from £1,639 million (1979) to £5,500 million (1989).
MAJOR TRADE UNION LEGISLATION:
1980 Employment Act: provided public funds for strike ballots
1982 Employment Act: provided for compensation from public funds for employees dismissed under
‘closed shop’ arrangements.
1984 Trade Union Act: required ballots before strikes, and ten yearly votes on the continuation of
political funds.
1988 Employment Act: legislated against dismissal for non-membership of a trade union; made it
illegal for trade unions to discipline members for crossing picket lines or refusing to strike.
1990 Employment Act: banned the pre-entry ‘closed shop’ and made it illegal to refuse employment to
someone for belonging or not belonging to a trade union. Removed legal immunity of trade unions
from civil lawsuits claiming damages for secondary action.
1993 Trade Union Reform and Unemployment Rights Act: restricted union deductions from employees
wages, tightened rules on strike ballots, abolished wages councils and gave workers the right to join
any union, even if not organised in their workplace.
[Source: Twentieth Century British Political Facts, 1900-2000]
Further Reading
General Studies:
A. Gamble,
The Free Economy and the Strong State: the Politics of Thatcherism (1988) The book that set
the agenda for the study of Thatcherism, with an important Marxist inflection.
E. H. H. Green, Thatcher (2006). The most historically informed discussion of Thatcherism, emphasising its
origins in grass-roots Toryism.
R. Vinen,
Thatcher’s Britain: the Politics and Social Upheaval of the 1980s (2009) A revisionist account,
playing down Thatcher’s radicalism and emphasising the Cold War context.
B. Jackson and R. Saunders (eds), Making Thatcher’s Britain (2012 – new). A collection of essays setting
Thatcherism within a historical perspective, exploring its origins, impact and global
relationships. Also includes statistical tables, timeline and extended bibliography.
Biographies:
J. Campbell, Margaret Thatcher, 2 vols (2001/2003)
H. Young,
One of Us (1991)
Thatcherism:
C. Hay,
‘Chronicles of a Death Foretold: The Winter of Discontent and Construction of the Crisis of
British Keynesianism’, Parliamentary Affairs (2010)
F. Sutcliffe-Braithwaite, ‘Neo-Liberalism and Morality in the Making of Thatcherite Social Policy’, Historical
Journal (2012)
*E.H.H. Green, ‘Thatcherism: an Historical Perspective’, TRHS (1999). A seminal essay.
Essays by Saunders (the 1970s), Jackson (neo-liberalism and think tanks), Grimley (morality), Tomlinson
(monetarism) in Making Thatcher’s Britain.
Thatcherism and British Society:
A. McSmith, No Such Thing as Society: A History of Britain in the 1980s (2011)
D. Cannadine, Class in Britain (1988) – final chapters.
Essays by Beers (the women’s vote), Lawrence/Sutcliffe-Braithwaite (class), Howell (the miners strike) in
Making Thatcher’s Britain.
Policy:
D. Kavanagh, and A. Seldon (eds),
The Thatcher Effect (1989) and The Major Effect (1994)
S. Letwin (ed.), The Anatomy of Thatcherism (1992)
J. Tomlinson, ‘Thatcher, Monetarism and the Politics of Inflation’, in Making Thatcher’s Britain.
Europe, America and the Cold War:
R. Aldous,
Reagan and Thatcher (2012)
Essays by Gamble, (‘Europe and America’) and Vinen (‘The Cold War’), in Making Thatcher’s Britain.
H. Young,
This Blessed Plot (1998) (chapter: ‘Deutschland über alles’, on Thatcher and Europe)
The Union:
D. Torrance, ‘We in Scotland’: Thatcherism in a Cold Climate (2009).
Essays by Finlay (Scotland and Wales) and Mulholland (Northern Ireland) in Making Thatcher’s Britain.
Labour and the SDP:
R. Hefferman, New Labour and Thatcherism: Political Change in Britain (2000)
I. Crewe and A. King, SDP: The Birth, Life and Death of the Social Democratic Party (1995)
For the Blair perspective in 1982, see his Australian lecture of August 1982 in:
P. Richards (ed), Tony Blair in His Own Words, (2004), pp.4-25.
Contemporary:
M. Thatcher, The Downing Street Years (1993)
Margaret Thatcher: the Complete Public Statements on CD-ROM, accessible on OXLIP.
Thatcher Foundation Website: www.margaretthatcher.org offers a treasure trove of speeches, letters
and other primary sources – invaluable for thesis work.
Suggested Listening:
No other Prime Minister left such a mark on the pop charts. Try the following:
‘I’m in Love with Mrs Thatcher’
The Notsensibles (1979)
‘Stand Down Margaret’
The Beat (1980)
‘Ghost Town’
The Specials (1981)
‘Shipbuilding’
Elvis Costello/Robert Wyatt (1982) [but best version by Suede]
‘Tory! Tory! Tory! For Election Glory’
Lynsey de Paul (1983 – not her finest hour)
‘Between the Wars’
Billy Bragg (1985)
‘Margaret on the Guillotine’ Morrissey (1988)
‘Tramp the Dirt Down’
Elvis Costello (1989)
‘Merry Christmas Maggie Thatcher’ Elton John (Billy Elliot the Musical, 2005)
All these - except the de Paul track – can be found on YouTube.
YouTube Viewing:
Search for:
‘Tell Sid’ – famous advert selling shares in British Gas.
‘Margaret Thatcher Panorama 1987’ – typically combative interview, making the case for Thatcherism
as a ‘One Nation’ strategy.
‘Spitting Image Thatcher’ – for lots of sketches and a critical take on Thatcher.
‘New Labour – New Danger’ – failed Tory ad in 1997.
The Downing Street Years – acclaimed BBC series (1994), with lots of interviews and archival footage.