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Mobilisation
The Conservative Party won the 1979 general election with
the slogan Labour isnt Working alongside a picture
of a queue of unemployed people, who at that time numbered around
one million. The country had been hit by a series of strikes and the
economy was doing badly.
Increasing revenues from North Sea oil enabled the government
to cut public borrowing. Yet over 1980-81 the economy fell further
into slump, with high wage increases, a high exchange rate and high
interest rates combining to cripple business.
Jobs continued to be lost, mostly from the manufacturing
industry; the total later to peak at more than three million in 1986.
The racist National Front party lost support after Thatchers
election in 1979 and was turning increasingly to violence. The country
had been engulfed by riots in many inner cities, including Birmingham,
Leeds, Luton, Leicester, Derby, Portsmouth, Edinburgh, Halifax, Reading
and Cardiff. In London, riots exploded in many areas, but the Brixton
riots were the trigger. There, nearly 1,000 people, mostly black,
had been stopped by police under Operation Swamp named after
Thatchers controversial outburst that Britain was in danger
of being swamped by people of a different culture
igniting an already volatile tinderbox of poverty and urban decay.
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The
fortunes of the Thatcher government and the country were to change
dramatically as a result of an event on 19 March 1982. Argentinian
scrap merchants landed on the Falklands island, South Georgia, escorted
by some military personnel, and hoisted an Argentine flag. Britain
called for Argentina to remove the military personnel, but got no
response. The intention to claim the Islands became clear a few days
later when Argentinian forces invaded the main Falkland Islands.
Argentina was also in economic trouble, far worse than
Britain. In 1981 inflation shot to more than 600% and manufacturing
output and wages were plummeting. Unrest was also brewing as a result
of huge numbers of disappearances at the hands of the military junta
that had seized control in a 1976 coup. For newly installed president
General Galtieri, the invasion was the fulfilment of a national ambition
to make the Islands part of Argentina. Cheering crowds celebrated
the news in Buenos Aires. |
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Margaret
Thatchers Conservatives had been transformed by the Falklands
victory into a popular party and a general election was called in
1983. Labour, under new left wing leader Michael Foot, faced internal
divisions and defections to the new Social Democratic Party (SDP).
Defence, employment and economic prosperity formed the
main aims of the Conservative manifesto. Trade union reform, more
privatisation, tax cuts and slowing inflation were all central commitments.
Labours manifesto, New Hope for Britain,
became known as 'the longest suicide note in history'. After the Falklands
War, defence was high on the agenda. With its call for the removal
of Cruise missiles from Britain and cancellation of the Trident nuclear
programme, Labour faced an uphill struggle to win voters. As the campaign
progressed, the Labour Party continually tried to fudge its non-nuclear
commitments.
The Conservatives won 397 seats, Labour 209 and the Alliance
23, a landslide majority of 144, even though the Tory share of the
vote fell from 43.9% to 42.4%. Labour won just 27.6% of the vote.
Both Tony Blair and Paddy Ashdown entered Parliament for the first
time. |
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The
United Nations Security Council passed Resolution 502 calling
for Argentinian troops to withdraw. US Secretary of State Alexander
Haig attempted shuttle mediation and the EEC approved trade
sanctions against Argentina. None of this had any effect.
Economic problems in the UK did not prevent it dispatching
a task force on 5 April 1982 some 8,000 miles out to the war
zone, establishing a staging post on the British-held Ascension
Island. But due to cutbacks there was not enough equipment for
such a long-distance endeavour. One civilian ship, the Canberra,
received a complete refit for military service. Ironically,
dockyard workers who were to be made redundant by the government
before the invasion were given a reprieve from the unemployment
queue to carry out the work.
Britain rejected a peace proposal presented by the
UN Secretary General Perez de Cuellar in mid-May, and after
an air and artillery barrage and major land battles the Argentinians
surrendered late in June.
In the 72 days of the war, the British captured
about 10,000 Argentine prisoners, all were released. Some 655
Argentinians lost their lives (362 on the General Belgrano);
Britain lost 255. General Galtieri was toppled and the junta
replaced by civilian rule in 1983.
Estimates of the financial cost of the war vary,
but are put at approximately $2 billion which equates
to giving each Falklands islander £2 million. |
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The
newly empowered government wasted little time in launching its
new radical programme. It took on the miners in the strike of
1984-85, with coal stockpiled and bought in from abroad to avoid
a repeat of the predecessor Edward Heath's capitulation in the
mid-1970s.
The National Union of Miners, led by Arthur Scargill,
was wrong-footed at every turn and the strike was lost. Mass
pit closures began immediately and this victory for Thatcher
led to a full-blooded programme of curtailing union power.
Privatisation began with the selling of shares in
public utilities to private business interests. Local authority
control of expenditure was snatched away through 'rate-capping'.
The Greater London Council was abolished and in 1989 the community
poll tax was introduced to rioting protesters. |
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