When Britain
emerged victorious from World War II, the Labour Party under Clement
Attlee came to power and created a comprehensive welfare state, with the
establishment of the National
Health Service, entitling free healthcare to all British citizens
and other reforms included the introduction of old-age pensions, free
education at all levels, sickness benefits and unemployment benefits, most of
which was covered by the newly introduced national
insurance, paid by all workers, this was all under the Beveridge
Report. The Bank of England, railways,
heavy industry, coal mining and public utilities were all nationalised. During this
time, British colonies such as India, Burma and Ceylon gained
independence and Britain was a founding member of NATO in 1949.
The Conservatives returned
to power in 1951, accepting most of Labour's postwar reforms (most notably, the
National Health Service) and presided over 13 years of economic stability.
However the Suez crisis of 1956 arguably ended Britain's status as
a superpower. Ghana, Malaya, Nigeria and Kenya were
granted independence during this period.
Labour returned to power under Harold Wilson in 1964 and oversaw a series of social reforms including the decriminalisation of homosexuality and abortion, the relaxing of divorce laws and the banning of capital punishment.
Edward Heath returned the Conservatives to power from 1970 to 1974, and oversaw the decimalisation of British currency, the ascension of Britain to the European Economic Community, and the height of the Troubles in Northern Ireland. In the wake of the oil crisis and a miner's strike, Heath introduced the three-day working week to conserve power.
Labour returned to power under Harold Wilson in 1964 and oversaw a series of social reforms including the decriminalisation of homosexuality and abortion, the relaxing of divorce laws and the banning of capital punishment.
Edward Heath returned the Conservatives to power from 1970 to 1974, and oversaw the decimalisation of British currency, the ascension of Britain to the European Economic Community, and the height of the Troubles in Northern Ireland. In the wake of the oil crisis and a miner's strike, Heath introduced the three-day working week to conserve power.
Labour made a
return to power in 1974 but a series of strikes carried out by trade
unions over the winter of 1978/1979 (known as the Winter of Discontent) paralysed
the country and as Labour lost its majority in parliament, a general election
was called in 1979 which took Margaret
Thatcher to power and began 18 years of Conservative government. Victory in
the Falklands War (1982) and the government's strong opposition to
trade unions helped lead the Conservative Party to another three terms in
government. Thatcher initially pursued monetarist policies
and went on to privatise many of Britain's Labour nationalised companies
such as BT Group, British
gas plc, British Airways and British
Steel. The controversial Community Charge (poll
tax), used to fund local government attributed to Thatcher being ousted from
her own party and replaced as Prime Minister by John
Major in 1990.
Major replaced
the Poll Tax with the council
tax and oversaw British involvement in the Gulf
War. Despite a recession, Major led the Conservatives to a surprise victory in
1992. The events of Black
Wednesday in 1992, party disunity over the European Union and
several scandals involving Conservative politicians led to Labour under Tony
Blair winning a landslide election victory in 1997. Labour had shifted its
policies closer to the political centre, under the
new name 'New Labour'. The Bank of England was given independence over monetary
policy and Scotland and Wales were
both given a devolved Scottish Parliament and Welsh Assembly respectively.
A devolved power sharing Northern Ireland Executive was
established in 1998, believed by many to be the end of The Troubles.
Blair led
Britain into the controversial Iraq
War, which contributed to his eventual resignation in 2007, when he was
succeeded by his Chancellor Gordon
Brown. A global recession in the late 2000s
(decade) led to Labour being defeated in the 2010 election and replaced by a
Conservative- Liberal Democrat coalition,
headed by David Cameron, which has pursued a series of public spending cuts
to help reduce Britain's budget deficit.
1. Labour Government, 1945–51
Clement
Attlee
After World
War II, the landslide 1945
election returned the Labour
Party to power and Clement
Attlee became Prime Minister of the United
Kingdom. The
party had clear aims. The Bank of
England was nationalised along
with railroads, coal mining, public utilities and heavy industry. During this
time British Railways was
created. A comprehensive welfare
state was created with the creation of a National Health Service, entitling
all British citizens to healthcare, which, funded by taxation, was free at the
point of delivery. Among the most important pieces of legislation was the
National Insurance Act 1946, in which people in work paid a flat rate of national
insurance. In return, they (and the wives of male contributors) were eligible for
flat-rate pensions, sickness benefit, unemployment benefit, and funeral
benefit. Various other pieces of legislation provided for child benefit and
support for people with no other source of income. Legislation was also passed
to provide free education at all levels.
Britain was in
many respects unable to afford such radical changes and the government had to
cut expenditures. This began with giving independence to many British oversea
colonies, beginning with India and Pakistan in 1947,
and Burma and Ceylon during
1948–1949. Under the post-war Bretton Woods economic system, Britain had
entered into a fixed exchange
rate of USD 4.03/ GBP. This rate reflected Britain's
sense of its own prestige and economic aspiration and optimism but was badly
judged, and hampered economic
growth. In 1949, Attlee's government had little choice but to devalue to USD
2.80/ GBP, permanently damaging the administration's credibility.
Despite these
problems, one of the main achievements of Attlee's government was the
maintenance of near full employment. The government maintained most of the
wartime controls over the economy, including control over the allocation of
materials and manpower, and unemployment rarely rose above 500,000, or 3% of
the total workforce. In fact labour shortages proved to be
more of a problem. One area where the government was not quite as successful
was in housing, which was also the responsibility of Aneurin
Bevan. The government had a target to build 400,000 new houses a year to replace
those which had been destroyed in the war, but shortages of materials and manpower
meant that less than half this number were built.
Britain became
a founding member of the United
Nations during this time and also helped found NATO in 1949.
During the onset of the Cold
War, Britain developed its own nuclear arsenal, although the first test was
not carried out until 1952.
In 1948,
London hosted the Olympic Games which
had originally been planned for 1944 but cancelled due to the war. The event
became known as "The Ration Games" due to the lean conditions in
Britain at the time. The city was short on funds and a number of cost-cutting
measures were undertaken including placing athletes and visiting dignitaries in
existing hotels rather than the usual practice of constructing an Olympic
Village. The United States and Sweden won the largest share of medals, with the
host country finishing in only 12th place with three gold medals, fourteen
silver, and six bronze.
The Labour Party was returned to power in the general election of 1950, its share of the popular vote holding up, much to the surprise of some commentators. The large reduction that it suffered in its parliamentary majority was mostly due to the vagaries of the first past the post voting system, plus a degree of Conservative opposition recovering support at the expense of the rapidly declining Liberal Party.
The Labour Party was returned to power in the general election of 1950, its share of the popular vote holding up, much to the surprise of some commentators. The large reduction that it suffered in its parliamentary majority was mostly due to the vagaries of the first past the post voting system, plus a degree of Conservative opposition recovering support at the expense of the rapidly declining Liberal Party.
New store opening draws crowds at Littlewood's, Oswestry |
Labour lost
the general
election of 1951 despite polling more votes than in the 1945
election, and indeed more votes than the Conservative Party.
While the
United States with its soil untouched by the war was enjoying prosperity and
living standards of a sort never seen before in history, life in postwar Britain
was comparatively grim.
Living standards and life expectancy were low, there was little for working-class people to buy, and infectious diseases such as tuberculosis continued to claim many lives. Automobile and home ownership were limited to the upper class of society. Birthrates were low compared to the contemporary baby boom in the US. Mandatory military service continued, as despite the end of WWII, Britain continued to wage numerous small conflicts around the globe, in Kenya with the Mau Mau Uprising and the 1956 Suez Canal conflict.
Living standards and life expectancy were low, there was little for working-class people to buy, and infectious diseases such as tuberculosis continued to claim many lives. Automobile and home ownership were limited to the upper class of society. Birthrates were low compared to the contemporary baby boom in the US. Mandatory military service continued, as despite the end of WWII, Britain continued to wage numerous small conflicts around the globe, in Kenya with the Mau Mau Uprising and the 1956 Suez Canal conflict.
2. Conservative Government, 1951–64
Winston
Churchill (1951–55)
Winston
Churchill again became Prime Minister. His third government — after the wartime
national government and the short caretaker government of 1945 — would last
until his resignation in 1955. During this period he renewed what he called the
"special relationship" between Britain and the United States, and
engaged himself in the formation of the post-war order.
His domestic
priorities were, however, overshadowed by a series of foreign policy crises,
which were partly the result of the continued decline of British military and
imperial prestige and power. Being a strong proponent of Britain as an
international power, Churchill would often meet such moments with direct
action.
In February
1952, King George VI died and
was succeeded by his eldest daughter Elizabeth. Her coronation on 2
June 1953 gave the British people a renewed sense of national pride and
enthusiasm which had been lowered by the war. Elizabeth II has now been the
monarch for 65 years. She celebrated her diamond jubilee, marking 60
years since her ascension to the throne, in 2012.
Newly crowned Queen Elizabeth II and her husband Prince Philip |
Anglo-Iranian Oil Dispute - in March 1951, the Iranian parliament (the Majlis)
voted to nationalise the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (AIOC) and its holdings by
passing a bill strongly backed by the elderly statesman Mohammed Mossadegh, a
man who was elected Prime Minister the following April by a large majority of
the parliament. The International Court of Justice was called in to settle the
dispute, but a 50/50 profit-sharing arrangement, with recognition of
nationalisation, was rejected by Mossadegh. Direct negotiations between the
British and the Iranian government ceased, and over the course of 1951, the
British ratcheted up the pressure on the Iranian government and explored the
possibility of a coup against it. U.S. President Harry S. Truman was reluctant
to agree, placing a much higher priority on the Korean War. Churchill's return
to power brought with it a policy of undermining the Mossadegh government. Both
sides floated proposals unacceptable to the other, each side believing that
time was on its side. Negotiations broke down, and as the blockade's political
and economic costs mounted inside Iran, coup plots arose from the army and
pro-British factions in the Majlis.
The Mau Mau Rebellion - In 1951, grievances against the colonial distribution
of land came to a head with the Kenya Africa Union demanding greater
representation and land reform. When these demands were rejected, more radical
elements came forward, launching the Mau Mau rebellion in 1952. On 17 August
1952, a state of emergency was declared, and British troops were flown to Kenya to deal
with the rebellion. As both sides increased the ferocity of their attacks, the
country moved to full-scale civil war.
Malayan Emergency - in Malaya, a rebellion against British
rule had been in progress since 1948. Once again, Churchill's government
inherited a crisis, and once again Churchill chose to use direct military
action against those in rebellion while attempting to build an alliance with
those who were not. He stepped up the implementation of a "hearts and
minds" campaign and approved the creation of fortified villages, a tactic
that would become a recurring part of Western military strategy in South-East
Asia. (See Vietnam War).
Anthony
Eden (1955–57)
Suez crisis - in April 1955,
Churchill finally retired, and Sir
Anthony Eden succeeded him as Prime Minister. Eden was a very
popular figure, as a result of his long wartime service and also his famous
good looks and charm. On taking office he immediately called a general
election, at which the Conservatives were returned with an increased majority.
But Sir Anthony had never held a domestic portfolio and had little experience
in economic matters. He left these areas to his lieutenants such as Rab
Butler, and concentrated largely on foreign policy, forming a close alliance with
US President Dwight
Eisenhower.
This alliance
proved illusory, however, when in 1956 Sir Anthony, in conjunction with France,
tried to prevent Gamal
Abdel Nasser, President of Egypt,
nationalising the Suez Canal, which had been owned since the 19th century by
British and French shareholders in the Suez Canal Company. Sir Anthony, drawing
on his experience in the 1930s, saw Nasser as another Mussolini. Sir Anthony
considered the two men aggressive nationalist socialists determined to invade
other countries. Others believed that Nasser was acting from legitimate
patriotic concerns.
In October
1956, after months of negotiation and attempts at mediation had failed to
dissuade Nasser, Britain and France, in conjunction with Israel, invaded
Egypt and occupied the Suez Canal Zone. But Eisenhower immediately and strongly
opposed the invasion. The US President was an advocate of decolonisation, because it
would liberate colonies, strengthen US interests, and presumably make other
Arab and African leaders more sympathetic to the United States. Also, the Soviet
Union threatened to drop nuclear bombs on Paris and/or London unless
Britain and France withdrew. Eisenhower feared another global war. When Eden
asked for financial help, Eisenhower stated that Britain would have to pull-out
before the US would provide any more financial aid to Britain. Eden had ignored
Britain's financial dependence on the US in the wake of World War II, and was
forced to bow to American pressure to withdraw. The crisis arguably marks the
end of Britain's status as a superpower, being able to act and control
international affairs without assistance or coalition.
Harold
Macmillan (1957–63)
Eden resigned
in the wake of the Suez Crisis, and his Chancellor of the Exchequer, Harold
Macmillan succeeded him as Prime Minister on 10 January. He brought the
economic concerns of the exchequer into the premiership, but his approach to
the economy was to seek high employment; whereas his treasury ministers argued
that to support the Bretton-Wood's requirement on the pound sterling would
require strict control of the money base, and hence a rise in unemployment.
Their advice was rejected and in January 1958, all the Treasury ministers
resigned. Macmillan brushed aside this incident as 'a little local difficulty'.
Macmillan
supported the creation of the National Incomes Commission as a means to
institute controls on income as part of his growth without inflation policy, a
further series of subtle indicators and controls were also introduced during
his premiership.
One of
Macmillan's more noteworthy actions was the end of conscription. National
Service ended gradually from 1957; in November 1960 the last men entered
service. With British youth no longer subject to military service and with
postwar rationing and reconstruction ended, the stage was set for the social
uprisings of the 1960s to commence.
The
report The Reshaping of British Railways (or
Beeching I report) was published on 27 March 1963. The report starts by quoting
the brief provided by the Prime Minister, Harold
Macmillan, from 1960 "First, the industry must be of a size and pattern
suited to modern conditions and prospects. In particular, the railway system
must be modelled to meet current needs, and the modernisation plan must be
adapted to this new shape" and with the premise that the railways
should be run as a profitable business." It is, of course the
responsibility of the British Railways Board so to
shape and operate the railways as to make them pay." This led to the
notorious Beeching Axe, destroying many miles of permanent
way and severing towns from the railway network.
Macmillan also
took close control of foreign policy. He worked to narrow the post-Suez rift
with the US, where his wartime friendship with Dwight D. Eisenhower was
useful, and the two had a pleasant conference in Bermuda as early as March
1957. The amiable relationship remained after the election of President
John F. Kennedy. Macmillan
also saw the value of a rapprochement with Europe and sought entry to the European Economic Community (EEC) as
well as exploring the possibility of an European Free Trade Association (EFTA). In terms of the Empire, Macmillan continued decolonisation,
his Wind of Change speech in
February 1960 indicating his policy. Ghana and Malaya were granted independence
in 1957, Nigeria in 1960 and Kenya in 1963. However, in the Middle East Macmillan ensured Britain remained a
force — intervening over Iraq in 1958 (14 July
Revolution) and 1960 and becoming involved in Oman. Immigrants
from the Commonwealth flocked to England after The British Government posted
invitations in the British West Indies, for Workers
to come to England to "help the mother Country". He led the Tories to victory in the October 1959 general election, increasing
his party's majority from 67 to 107 seats. Following the technical failures of
a British independent nuclear deterrent with the Blue Streak and
the Blue Steel projects,
Macmillan negotiated the supply of American Polaris
missiles under the Nassau
agreement in December 1962. Previously he had agreed to base sixty Thor
missiles in Britain under joint control, and since late 1957 the
American McMahon Act had been eased to allow Britain more access to
nuclear technology. Britain, the US, and the Soviet Union signed the Partial Test Ban Treaty in
autumn 1963. Britain's application to join the EEC was vetoed by French
President Charles de Gaulle on 29
January 1963, in due to his fear that 'the end would be a colossal Atlantic
Community dependent on America', and personal anger at the Anglo-American
nuclear deal.
Britain's balance of payments problems
led to the imposition of a seven-month wage
freeze in 1961. This
caused the government to lose popularity and led to a series of by-election defeats.
He organised a major Cabinet change in July 1962 but he
continued to lose support from within his party. In 1963, he resigned on 18 October 1963 after he
had been diagnosed incorrectly with inoperable prostate
cancer. He died 23 years later, in 1986.
Alec
Douglas-Home (1963–64)
Macmillan's
successor was the Earl of Home, Alec
Douglas-Home. However, as no Prime Minister had led from the House
of Lords since the Marquess
of Salisbury in 1902, Home chose to become a member of
parliament so he could enter the House of Commons. He disclaimed his Earldom
and, as "Sir Alec Douglas-Home", contested a by-election in the
safe seat of Kinross
& West Perthshire. Home duly won as (probably) the last peer to become
Prime Minister and the only Prime Minister to resign the Lords to enter the
Commons. That was his most important claim for entering the history books as
his policy was not successful. Following the 1964 general election, the Labour
Party was returned to power under Harold
Wilson and Home became Leader of the Opposition. In July 1965, Edward
Heath defeated Reginald
Maudling and Enoch
Powell to succeed Home as Conservative Party leader. Enoch Powell was given
the post of Shadow Defence Secretary and became a figure of national prominence
when he made the controversial Rivers of Blood speech in 1968,
warning on the dangers of mass immigration from
Commonwealth nations. It is possible that the Conservative's success in
the 1970 general election was a result of the large public following Powell
attained, even as he was sacked from the shadow cabinet.
3. Labour Government, 1964–70
In 1964,
Labour regained the premiership, as Harold
Wilson narrowly won the general election with a majority of five. This was not
sufficient to last for a full term and, after a short period of competent
government, in March 1966, he won re-election with a landslide majority of 99.
As Prime Minister, his opponents accused him of deviousness, especially over
the matter of devaluation of the pound in
November 1967. Wilson had rejected devaluation for many years, yet in his
broadcast had seemed to present it as a triumph. During his first period of
office, Wilson's government set up the Open
University which he would come to regard as his own greatest achievement.
Overseas,
Wilson was troubled by crises in several of Britain's former colonies,
especially Rhodesia and South
Africa. Wilson gave diplomatic support but resisted pressure for military support
to the United
States in the Vietnam War. In addition to the damage done to its reputation by
devaluation, Wilson's Government suffered from the perception that its response
to industrial relations problems was inadequate. A six-week strike of members
of the National Union of Seamen, which began
shortly after Wilson' re-election in 1966, did much to reinforce this
perception, along with Wilson's own sense of insecurity in office.
Also during
this period, the counterculture
movement spread from the US like a wildfire. Although Britain did not
experience much of the same social turmoil like the Vietnam
War and racial tensions, British youth readily identified with their
American counterparts' desire to cast off the older generation's social mores.
In this case, it took the form of a wholesale revolt against the class system,
which was now being questioned for the first time in the nation's history. Rock
music, which had first been introduced from the US in the 1950s, became a key
instrument in the social uprisings of the young generation and Britain soon
became a groundswell of musical talent thanks to groups like the
Beatles, Rolling Stones, The Who, Pink
Floyd, and more in coming years.
On 16 February
1965, Lord Beeching announced the second stage of his reorganisation
of the railways. In The Development of the Major Railway Trunk
Routes. In this
report he set out his conclusion that of the 7,500 miles (12,100 km) of
trunk railway only 3,000 miles (4,800 km) "should be selected for
future development" and invested in.
4. Conservative Government, 1970–74
Edward Heath |
Heath's major
achievement as prime minister was to take Britain into the European Economic Community on 1 January
1973. Meanwhile, on the domestic front, galloping inflation led him into
confrontation with some of the most powerful trade unions, and energy shortages
related to the oil shock resulted
in much of the country's industry working a Three-Day Week to
conserve power. In an attempt to bolster his government, Heath called an
election for 28 February 1974. The result was inconclusive: the Conservative
Party received a plurality of votes cast, but the Labour Party gained a
plurality of seats due to the Ulster Unionist MPs
refusing to support the Conservatives. Heath began negotiations with leaders of
the Liberal Party to form a coalition, but, when these failed, resigned as
Prime Minister.
5. Labour Government, 1974–79
Harold
Wilson (1974–76)
But he was not
able to end the economic crisis either. Unemployment remained well in excess of
1,000,000, inflation peaked at 24% in 1975, and the national debt was
increasing. The rise of punk rock bands such as the Sex
Pistols and The Clash were a reflection of the discontent felt by
British youth during the difficulties of the late 70s.
James
Callaghan (1976–79)
Wilson
announced his surprise resignation on 16 March 1976 and unofficially endorsed
his Foreign Secretary James
Callaghan as his successor. His popularity with all parts of the Labour
movement saw him through the ballot of Labour MPs. Callaghan was the first
Prime Minister to have held all three leading Cabinet positions — Chancellor of
the Exchequer, Home Secretary and Foreign Secretary — prior to becoming Prime
Minister.
Callaghan's
support for and from the union movement should not be mistaken for a left wing
position. Callaghan continued Wilson's policy of a balanced Cabinet and relied
heavily on the man he defeated for the job of party leader — the
arch-Bevanite Michael Foot. Foot was made Leader of the House of Commons and
given the task of steering through the government's legislative programme.
Callaghan's
time as Prime Minister was dominated by the troubles in running a Government
with a minority in the House of Commons; by-election
defeats had wiped out Labour's three-seat majority by early 1977. Callaghan was
forced to make deals with minor parties in order to survive, including
the Lib-Lab pact. He had been forced to accept referendums on
devolution in Scotland and Wales (the
first went in favour but did not reach the required majority, and the second
went heavily against).
However, by
the autumn of 1978 the economy was showing signs of recovery – although unemployment
now stood at 1,500,000, economic growth was strong and inflation had fallen
below 10%. Most
opinion polls were showing Labour ahead and he was expected to call an election
before the end of the year. His decision not to has been described as the biggest
mistake of his premiership.
Callaghan's
way of dealing with the long-term economic difficulties involved pay restraint
which had been operating for four years with reasonable success. He gambled
that a fifth year would further improve the economy and allow him to be
re-elected in 1979, and so attempted to hold pay rises to 5% or less. The Trade
Unions rejected continued pay restraint and in a succession of strikes over the
winter of 1978/79 (known as the Winter of Discontent) secured
higher pay, although it had virtually paralysed the country, tarnished
Britain's political reputation and seen the Conservatives surge ahead in the
opinion polls. He was
forced to call an election when the House of Commons passed a Motion of No Confidence by one
vote on 28 March 1979. The Conservatives, with advertising consultants Saatchi and Saatchi, ran a
campaign on the slogan "Labour isn't working." As expected, Margaret
Thatcher (who had succeeded Edward Heath as Conservative leader in February
1975) won the general election held on
3 May, becoming Britain's first female prime minister. In August, IRA agents
succeeded in killing the 79-year-old Lord
Mountbatten, a hero of the fighting in Burma during WWII, by planting a bomb on his
fishing boat.
6. Conservative Government, 1979–97
Margaret
Thatcher (1979–90)
Margaret Thatcher with US President Ronald Reagan |
In May 1980,
one day before she was due to meet the Irish Taoiseach, Charles
Haughey to discuss Northern
Ireland, she announced in the House of Commons that
"The future of the constitutional affairs of Northern
Ireland is a matter for the people of Northern Ireland, this government, this
Parliament and no-one else."
In 1981, a
number of Provisional
IRA and Irish National Liberation Army prisoners
in Northern Ireland's Maze prison
went on hunger strike to
regain the status of political prisoners, which had
been revoked five years earlier. After 10 men had starved themselves to death
and the strike had ended political status was restored to all paramilitary
prisoners. This was a major propaganda coup for the IRA and is seen as the
beginning of Sinn
Féin's electoral rise, as they capitalised on the gains made during the hunger
strikes.
During the
summer of 1981, the nation's spirits were raised by the wedding of Prince
Charles and Lady Diana Spencer. The
globally-televised ceremony, also brought the royal family, which had been
almost forgotten by most of the general public, back into the headlines where
they would become a permanent fixture in tabloids and celebrity gossip
publications.
Thatcher
continued the policy of "Ulsterisation" of the previous Labour
government and its Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, Roy
Mason, believing that the unionists of Ulster should
be at the forefront in combating Irish republicanism. This meant
relieving the burden on the mainstream British
army and elevating the role of the Ulster Defence Regiment and
the Royal Ulster Constabulary.
In economic policy, Thatcher started out by
increasing interest rates to drive down the money supply. She had a preference
for indirect taxation over taxes on income, and value
added tax (VAT) rose sharply to 15% with the result that inflation also rose.
These moves hit businesses, especially in the manufacturing sector, and unemployment – which had stood at 1,500,000 by the time of
the 1979 general election – was above 2,000,000 by the end of 1980. It
continued to rise throughout 1981, passing the 2,500,000 mark during the summer
of that year – although inflation was now down to 12% compared to 27% two years
earlier. The economy was now in recession.
Her early tax
policy reforms were based on the monetarist theories of Friedman rather
than the supply-side economics of Arthur
Laffer and Jude Wanniski, which the government of Ronald
Reagan espoused. There was a severe recession in the early 1980s, and the
Government's economic policy was widely blamed. In January 1982, the inflation
rate dropped to single figures and interest
rates were then allowed to fall. Unemployment continued to rise, peaking at
a figure of more than 3.2 million (estimated by the International Labour
Organization). Despite the preference of most UK Governments to use the smaller
figure of claimant count, this number itself exceeded 3,000,000 by early 1982. The recession of the early 1980s was the deepest
in Britain since the depression of the 1930s and Thatcher's popularity
plummeted with most predicting she would lose the next election.
British
defence budget cuts, applying in the South
Atlantic, coupled with general disregard of the Falkland Islands, the removal of
the ice patrol ship Endeavour, and immigration reform detrimental to the
British citizenship rights of citizens of the British
Empire's few remnants provoked the arguably most difficult foreign policy
decision of Thatcher's era. In Argentina, an unstable
military junta was in power and keen on reversing its huge economic
unpopularity. On 2 April 1982, it invaded the Falkland
Islands, the only invasion of a British territory since World
War II. Argentina has claimed the
islands since an 1830s dispute on their settlement. Thatcher sent a naval task force to
recapture the Islands. The ensuing military
campaign saw the swift defeat of Argentina in only a few days of fighting,
resulting in a wave of patriotic enthusiasm for her personally, at a time when
her popularity had been at an all-time low for a serving Prime Minister.
Opinion polls showed a huge surge in Conservative support which would be
sufficient to win a general election.
One British
destroyer had been sunk by an Argentine vessel armed with a French Exocet
missile launcher, an event that disturbed relations with Paris for some
months, but by the end of the year, the storm clouds had mostly blown away.
This
"Falklands Factor", as it came to be known, is regarded as crucial to
the scale of the Conservative majority in the June 1983 general election, with a
fragmented Labour Party enduring its worst postwar election result, while
the SDP-Liberal Alliance (created
two years earlier in a pact between the Liberal
Party and the
new Social Democratic Party (UK) formed
by disenchanted former Labour MP's) trailed Labour closely in terms of votes if
not seats.
On another
foreign policy score, Thatcher was less successful when she visited China
during September 1982 and tried to pressure that country's leader Deng
Xiaoping into reconsidering the political status of Hong
Kong. The city had been ceded to Britain in perpetuity following the Opium
War 140 years earlier, followed in 1898 by a 99-year lease of the
territory immediately surrounding it. This arrangement was due to expire in
1997 and although it would not affect Hong Kong proper, China nonetheless
demanded that the city also be turned over to their control. Thatcher argued
that the lease did not cover Hong Kong itself and that the treaty signed in the
aftermath of the Opium War had no expiration date. Deng however stated that the
Imperial Qing court were "traitors" who had illegally
signed over Chinese territory to foreign imperialist powers and any agreements
made by them were null and void. Thatcher unsuccessfully pleaded with him to
respect international law and the wishes of Hong Kong's residents, but Deng was
insistent that the city must revert to Chinese control in 1997 and if Britain
did not want to cooperate, they would go through any means necessary to get it
back, including military force.
This visit to
China was in fact the Prime Minister's second, as she originally headed a
British delegation there in 1977 as Opposition Leader of Parliament. Thatcher
had not been impressed with what she saw of the country on that trip and the
Chinese appeared to have returned the favour since her 1982 visit received
little coverage from the Chinese state media while another visiting foreign
leader, Kim Il Sung of North
Korea, was the subject of extensive publicity. Thatcher was left talking to
Premier Zhao Ziyang while Deng and the rest of the Chinese Politburo
went off to have a banquet with the North Korean leader. They managed to work
out the Sino-British Joint Declaration over the
Question of Hong Kong which would thus provide for a peaceful transfer
of Hong Kong to Beijing's control in 15 years' time, after which the city would
be allowed to retain its "capitalistic" system for another 30 years.
Thatcher nonetheless was left thoroughly shaken by her meeting with Deng
Xiaoping.
Thatcher's
strong opposition against communism and
the Soviet Union as well as the decisive military victory
against Argentina, re-affirmed Britain's influential position on the
world stage and bolstered Thatcher's firm leadership. In addition the economy
was showing positive signs of recovery thanks mainly to substantial oil
revenues from the North Sea. Also despite mass unemployment, it was implied to be
transitory, and alongside it new laws had given trade union members democratic
powers to restrain militant union leaderships. Additionally, Thatcher's 'Right to Buy' policy,
whereby council housing residents
were permitted to buy their homes at a discount did much to increase her
government's popularity in working-class areas.
Ironically,
despite her hardline anti-communist stance, Thatcher felt it necessary to
criticise the US invasion of Grenada in 1983
to remove Cuban agents on the grounds that "The Falklands conflict was
merely a defensive action to safeguard our nation's territory, not invading a
sovereign nation."
The 1983
election was also influenced by events in the opposition parties. Since their
1979 defeat, Labour was increasingly dominated by its "hard
left" that had emerged from the 1970s union militancy, and in opposition
its policies had swung very sharply to the left while the Conservatives had
drifted further to the right. This drove a significant number
of right wing Labour members and MPs to form a breakaway party in 1981,
the Social Democratic Party. Labour
fought the election on unilateral nuclear disarmament, which
proposed to abandon the British nuclear deterrent despite the threat from a
nuclear armed Soviet Union, withdrawal from the European
Community, and total reversal of Thatcher's economic and trade union changes.
Indeed, one Labour MP, Gerald
Kaufman, has called the party's 1983 manifesto "the longest suicide note in
history". Consequently, upon the Labour split, there was a new centrist
challenge, the Alliance, from the Social Democrats in
electoral pact with the Liberal
Party, to break the major parties' dominance and win proportional representation. The British
Electoral Study found that Alliance voters were preferentially tilted towards
the Conservatives, but this possible loss of vote share by the Conservatives
was more than compensated for by the first past the post electoral
system, where marginal changes in vote numbers and distribution have
disproportionate effects on the number of seats won. Accordingly, despite the
Alliance vote share coming very close to that of Labour and preventing an
absolute majority in votes for the Conservatives, the Alliance failed to break
into Parliament in significant numbers and the Conservatives were returned in a
landslide.
Thatcher was
committed to reducing the power of the trade
unions but, unlike the Heath government, adopted a strategy of incremental
change rather than a single Act. Several unions launched strikes that
were wholly or partly aimed at damaging her politically. The most significant
of these was carried out by the National Union of
Mineworkers (NUM). However, Thatcher had made preparations long in advance for an
NUM strike by building up coal stocks, and there were no cuts in electric
power, unlike 1972. Police tactics during the strike concerned civil
libertarians: stopping suspected strike sympathisers travelling towards
coalfields when they were still long distances from them, phone tapping as
evidenced by Labour's Tony
Benn, and a violent battle with mass pickets at Orgreave, Yorkshire. But images
of massed militant miners using violence to prevent other miners from working,
along with the fact that (illegally under a recent Act) the NUM had not held a
national ballot to approve strike action. Scargill's policy of letting each
region of the NUM call its own strike backfired when nine areas held ballots
that resulted in majority votes against striking, and violence against strikebreakers escalated with time until
reaching a tipping point with the killing of David Wilkie (a
taxi-driver who was taking a strikebreaker to work). The Miners' Strike lasted a
full year, March 1984 until March 1985, before the drift of half the miners
back to work forced the NUM leadership to give in without a deal. This aborted
political strike marked a turning point in UK politics: no longer could
militant unions remove a democratically elected government. It also marked to
beginning of a new economic and political culture in the UK based upon small
government intervention in the economy and reduced dominance of the trade
unions and welfare state.
On the early
morning of 12 October 1984, Thatcher escaped death (on the day before her 59th
birthday) from the bomb planted by the Provisional Irish Republican Army in Brighton's Grand Hotel during
the Conservative Party conference. Five people died in the attack, including
Roberta Wakeham (the first wife of the government's Chief
Whip John Wakeham) and the
Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) Sir
Anthony Berry. A prominent member of the Cabinet, Norman
Tebbit, was injured, along with his wife Margaret, who was left paralysed.
Thatcher insisted that the conference open on time the next day and made her
speech as planned.
On 15 November
1985, Thatcher signed the Hillsborough Anglo-Irish Agreement, the first
acknowledgement by a British government that the Republic of Ireland had an
important role to play in Northern Ireland. The agreement was greeted with fury
by Irish unionists. The Ulster
Unionists and Democratic Unionists made an
electoral pact and on 23 January 1986, staged an ad-hoc referendum by
re-fighting their seats in by-elections, and won with one seat lost to the
nationalist Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP).
Then, unlike the Sunningdale Agreement in 1974, they found they could not bring
the agreement down by a general strike. This was another effect of the changed
balance of power in industrial relations. The agreement stood, and Thatcher
"punished" the unionists for their non-cooperation by abolishing a
devolved assembly she had created only four years before, although unionists
have traditionally been of two minds about political devolution (witness the
"Home Rule" crisis that led to the Anglo-Irish
War), and the politicians most affected by the abolishment of the assembly were
the constitutional nationalists, i.e., the SDLP, not Sinn Féin, which was not
interested in a devolved assembly at that time, nor would it be for many years
to come. The Anglo-Irish Agreement therefore, enraged the Unionists and
alienated moderate nationalists, while doing little to reduce IRA violence. The
British Government's intention may have been to solidify support from Dublin.
However, the British Government had proved an unreliable ally since Éamon
de Valera's time, adopting the strategy of making conciliatory gestures or minor
concessions with one hand and undermining Ireland with the other.
Thatcher's
political and economic philosophy emphasised free
markets and entrepreneurialism. Since gaining power, she had experimented in
selling off a small nationalised company,
the National Freight Company, to its workers, with a surprisingly large
response. After the 1983 election, the Government became bolder and sold off
most of the large utilities which had been in public ownership since the late
1940s. Many in the public took advantage of share offers, although many sold
their shares immediately for a quick profit. The policy of privatisation, while
anathema to many on the left, has become synonymous with Thatcherism.
In the Cold
War, Mrs. Thatcher supported Ronald Reagan's policies of deterrence against
the Soviets. This contrasted with the policy of détente which
the West had pursued during the 1970s, and caused friction with allies still
wedded to the idea of détente. US forces were permitted by Mrs. Thatcher to
station nuclear cruise missiles at
British bases, arousing mass protests by the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. However, she
later was the first Western leader to respond warmly to the rise of reformist
Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev, declaring she liked him and "We can do business together" after
a meeting three months before he came to power in 1985. This was a start in
swinging the West back to a new détente with the Soviet Union in his era, as it
proved to be an indication that the Soviet regime's power was decaying.
Thatcher outlasted the Cold War, which ended in 1989, and voices who share her
views on it credit her with a part in the West's victory, by both the
deterrence and détente postures.
She supported
the US bombing raid on Libya from bases in the UK in 1986 when other NATO
allies would not. Her liking for defence ties with the United States was
demonstrated in the Westland
affair when she acted with colleagues to prevent the helicopter
manufacturer Westland, a vital defence contractor,
from linking with the Italian firm Agusta in
favour of a link with Sikorsky Aircraft Corporation of the
United States. Defence Secretary Michael
Heseltine, who had pushed the Agusta deal, resigned in protest at her style of
leadership, and thereafter became a potential leadership challenger.
In 1986, the
government controversially abolished the Greater London Council (GLC),
then led by left-winger Ken
Livingstone and six Metropolitan County Councils (MCCs).
The government claimed this was an efficiency measure. However, it is widely
believed to have been politically motivated, as all of the abolished councils
were controlled by Labour, and had become powerful centres of opposition to her
government and were in favour of higher public spending by local government.
By winning
the 1987 general election, on the
economic boom (with unemployment finally falling below 3,000,000 that spring)
and against a stubbornly anti-nuclear Labour opposition (now led by Neil
Kinnock after Michael Foot's resignation four years
earlier), she became the longest serving Prime Minister of the United Kingdom since Lord Liverpool (1812–1827),
and first to win three successive elections since Lord Palmerston in 1865.
Most United Kingdom newspapers supported
her — with the exception of The
Daily Mirror and The
Guardian — and were rewarded with regular press briefings
by her press secretary, Bernard
Ingham. She was known as "Maggie" in the tabloids, which inspired the
well-known "Maggie Out!" protest song, sung
throughout that period by some of her opponents. Her unpopularity on the left
is evident from the lyrics of several contemporary popular songs: "Stand
Down Margaret" (The Beat), "Tramp the Dirt
Down" (Elvis Costello),
"Mother Knows Best" (Richard Thompson), and
"Margaret on the Guillotine" (Morrissey).
Many opponents
believed she and her policies created a significant North-South divide from
the Bristol Channel to The
Wash, between the "haves" in the economically dynamic south and the
"have nots" in the northern rust belt. Hard welfare reforms in her
third term created an adult Employment Training system that included full-time
work done for the dole plus a £10 top-up, on the workfare model
from the US. The "Social Fund" system that placed one-off welfare
payments for emergency needs under a local budgetary limit, and where possible
changed them into loans, and rules for assessing jobseeking effort by the week,
were breaches of social consensus unprecedented since the 1920s.
The sharp fall
in unemployment continued as the end of the decade neared. By the end of 1987,
it stood at just over 2,600,000 – having started the year still in excess of
3,000,000. It stood at just over 2,000,000 by the end of 1988, and by the end
of 1989 less than 1,700,000 were unemployed. However, total economic growth for
1989 stood at 2% – the lowest since 1982 – signalling an end to the economic
boom. Several other countries had now entered recession, and fears were now rife
that Britain was also on the verge of another recession.
In the late
1980s, Thatcher, a former chemist, became concerned with environmental issues,
which she had previously ignored. In 1988, she made accepting the problems
of global warming, ozone
depletion and acid rain. In 1990,
she opened the Hadley Centre for climate prediction and research.
At Bruges,
Belgium in 1988, Thatcher made a speech in which she outlined her opposition
to proposals from the European
Community for a federal structure and increasing centralisation of
decision-making. Although she had supported British membership, Thatcher
believed that the role of the EC should be limited to ensuring free trade and
effective competition, and feared that new EC regulations would reverse the
changes she was making in the UK. "We have not successfully rolled back
the frontiers of the state in Britain, only to see them re-imposed at a
European level, with a new super-state exercising a new dominance from
Brussels". She was specifically against Economic
and Monetary Union, through which a single currency would replace
national currencies, and for which the EC was making preparations. The speech
caused an outcry from other European leaders, and exposed for the first time
the deep split that was emerging over European policy inside her Conservative
Party.
Thatcher's
popularity once again declined in 1989 as the economy suffered from high interest
rates imposed to stop an unsustainable boom. She blamed
her Chancellor, Nigel Lawson, who had been following an economic policy which was
a preparation for monetary union; Thatcher claimed not to have been told of
this and did not approve. At the Madrid European
summit, Lawson and Foreign Secretary Geoffrey
Howe forced Thatcher to agree the circumstances under which she would join
the Exchange Rate Mechanism, a
preparation for monetary union. Thatcher took revenge on both by demoting Howe,
and by listening more to her adviser Sir Alan
Walters on economic matters. Lawson resigned that October, feeling that
Thatcher had undermined him.
That November,
Thatcher was challenged for the leadership of the Conservative Party by
Sir Anthony Meyer. As Meyer was a virtually unknown backbench MP, he
was viewed as a stalking horse candidate
for more prominent members of the party. Thatcher easily defeated Meyer's
challenge, but there were 60 ballot papers either cast for Meyer or abstaining,
a surprisingly large number for a sitting Prime Minister.
Thatcher's new
system to replace local government rates was introduced in Scotland in 1989 and
in England and Wales in 1990. Rates were replaced by the "Community
Charge" (more widely known as the poll tax), which applied the same amount
to every individual resident, with only limited discounts for low earners. This
was to be the most universally unpopular policy of her premiership, and saw the
Conservative government split further behind the Labour opposition (still led
by Neil Kinnock) in the opinion polls. The Charge was introduced early in
Scotland as the rateable values would in any case have been reassessed in 1989.
However, it led to accusations that Scotland was a 'testing ground' for the tax.
Thatcher apparently believed that the new tax would be popular, and had been
persuaded by Scottish Conservatives to bring it in early and in one go. Despite
her hopes, the early introduction led to a sharp decline in the already low
support for the Conservative party in Scotland.
Additional
problems emerged when many of the tax rates set by local councils proved to be
much higher than earlier predictions. Some have argued that local councils saw
the introduction of the new system of taxation as the opportunity to make
significant increases in the amount taken, assuming (correctly) that it would
be the originators of the new tax system and not its local operators who would
be blamed.
A large London
demonstration against the poll tax on 31 March 1990 — the day before it was
introduced in England and Wales — turned into a riot. Millions of people
resisted paying the tax. Opponents of the tax banded together to resist bailiffs and
disrupt court hearings of poll tax debtors. Mrs Thatcher refused to compromise,
or change the tax, and its unpopularity was a major factor in Thatcher's
downfall.
By the autumn
of 1990, opposition to Thatcher's policies on local government taxation, her
Government's perceived mishandling of the economy (especially high interest
rates of 15%, which were undermining her core voting base within the
home-owning, entrepreneurial and business sectors), and the divisions opening
within her party over the appropriate handling of European integration made her
and her party seem increasingly politically vulnerable. Her increasingly
combative, irritable personality also made opposition to her grow fast and by
this point, even many in her own party could not stand her.
John
Major (1990–97) - in November
1990, Michael Heseltine challenged
Margaret Thatcher for leadership of the Conservative Party. Thatcher failed to
gain enough votes for a majority in the first round and thus withdrew from the
second round on 22 November, ending her 11-year premiership. Chancellor of the
Exchequer John Major contested the
second round and defeated Michael Heseltine as well as Foreign Scretary Douglas
Hurd, becoming prime minister on 27 November 1990.
By this stage,
however, Britain had slid into recession for the
third time in less than 20 years. Unemployment had started to rise in the
spring of 1990 but by the end of the year it was still lower than in many other
European economies, particularly France and Italy.
John Major was
Prime Minister during British involvement in the Gulf
War and he and his cabinet survived an assassination attempt by the IRA in 1991.
The change of
prime minister from Margaret Thatcher to John Major saw a turnaround in
Conservative fortunes in the opinion polls, with the Conservatives managing to
top many opinion polls over the next 17 months as a general election loomed.
This was despite the recession deepening throughout 1991 and into 1992, with
the economy for 1991 detracted by 2% and unemployment passing the 2,000,000
mark.
Major called
a general election for
April 1992 and took his campaign onto the streets, famously delivering many
addresses from an upturned soapbox as in his Lambeth days. This populist
"common touch", in contrast to the Labour Party's more slick
campaign, chimed with the electorate and Major won an unexpected second period
in office, albeit with a small parliamentary majority. The Conservative
election win was something of a surprise to the pollsters, who had predicted a
hung parliament or a narrow Labour win.
The narrow
majority for the Conservative government proved to be unmanageable,
particularly after the United Kingdom's forced exit from the Exchange Rate Mechanism on Black
Wednesday (16 September 1992) just five months into the new parliament. From
this stage onwards, Labour – now led by John Smith – was
ascendant in the opinion polls.
Major allowed
his economic team to stay in place unchanged for seven months after Black
Wednesday before forcing the resignation of his Chancellor, Norman Lamont, who he
replaced with Kenneth Clarke. This delay
was indicative of one of his weaknesses, an indecisiveness towards personnel
issues that was to undermine his authority through the rest of his premiership.
At the 1993
Conservative Party Conference, Major began the "Back to Basics"
campaign, which he intended to be about the economy, education, policing, and
other such issues, but it was interpreted by many (including Conservative
cabinet ministers) as an attempt to revert to the moral and family values that
the Conservative Party were often associated with. A number of sleaze scandals
involving Conservative MP's were exposed in lurid and embarrassing detail in tabloid
newspapers following this and further reduced the Conservative's popularity.
Despite Major's best efforts, the Conservative Party collapsed into political
infighting. Major took a moderate approach but found himself undermined by the
right-wing within the party and the Cabinet. In particular, his policy towards
the European Union aroused
opposition as the Government attempted to ratify the Maastricht
Treaty. Although the Labour opposition supported the treaty, they were prepared
to undertake tactical moves to weaken the government, which included passing an
amendment that required a vote on the social chapter aspects of the treaty
before it could be ratified. Several Conservative MPs (the Maastricht
Rebels) voted against the Government and the vote was lost. Major hit back by
calling another vote on the following day (23 July 1993), which he declared
a vote of confidence. He won by 40
but had damaged his authority.
One of the few
bright spots of 1993 for the Conservative government came in April when the end
of the recession was finally declared after nearly three years. Unemployment had touched 3,000,000 by the turn
of the year, but had dipped to 2,800,000 by Christmas as the economic recovery
continued. The
economic recovery was strong and sustained throughout 1994, with unemployment
falling below 2,500,000 by the end of the year. However, Labour remained ascendant in the opinion polls and their
popularity further increased with the election of Tony
Blair – who redesignated the party as New
Labour – as leader following the sudden death of John Smith on 12 May 1994. Labour remained ascendant in the polls
throughout 1995, despite the Conservative government overseeing the continuing
economic recovery and fall in unemployment. It was a similar story throughout 1996, despite the economy still
being strong and unemployment back below 2,000,000 for the first time since
early 1991. The Railways
Act 1993 (1993 c. 43) was introduced by John
Major's Conservative government
and passed on 5 November 1993. It provided for the restructuring of the British Railways Board (BRB),
the public corporation that owned and operated the national railway system. A
few residual responsibilities of the BRB remained with BRB (Residuary) Ltd.
Few were
surprised when Major lost the 1997 general election to Tony
Blair, though the immense scale of the defeat was not widely predicted. In the
new parliament Labour won 418 seats, the Conservatives 165, and the Liberal
Democrats 46, leaving the Labour party with a majority of 179 which was the
biggest majority since 1931. In addition, the Conservatives
lost all their seats in Scotland and Wales and
several cabinet ministers including Norman Lamont, Michael
Portillo, Malcolm Rifkind and Ian
Lang lost their seats. Major carried on as Leader of the
Opposition until William Hague was elected to lead the Conservative Party the
month after the election.
7. Labour Government, 1997–2010
Tony
Blair (1997–2007)
Tony Blair
became Prime Minister in 1997 after a landslide victory over the Conservative Party. Under the title of New
Labour, he promised economic and social reform and brought Labour closer to
the center of the
political spectrum. Early policies of the Blair government included the minimum
wage and university tuition
fees. Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon
Brown also gave the Bank of
England the power to set the base rate of interest autonomously. The
traditional tendency of governments to manipulate interest rates around the
time of general elections for political gain is thought to have been
deleterious to the UK economy and helped reinforce a cyclical pattern of boom
and bust. Brown's decision was popular with the
City, which the Labour Party had been courting since the early 1990s. Blair
presided over the longest period of economic expansion in Britain since the
19th century and his premiership saw large investment into social aspects, in
particular health and education, areas particularly under-invested during the
Conservative government of the 1980s and early 1990s. The Human Rights Act was
introduced in 1998 and the Freedom of Information Act came
into force in 2000. Most hereditary peers were removed from the House
of Lords in 1999 and the Civil Partnership Act of 2005
allowed homosexual couples the right to register their partnership
with the same rights and responsibilities comparable to heterosexual marriage.
The nation was
stunned when Princess Diana died in a car accident in Paris on 31
August 1997, even though she had divorced Prince Charles a few years earlier.
Numerous conspiracy theories arose about her being intentionally murdered due
to her plans to marry an Arab businessman, although nothing was ever proven.
From the
beginning, New Labour's record on the economy and unemployment was strong,
suggesting that they could break with the trend of Labour governments
overseeing an economic decline while in power. They had inherited an
unemployment count of 1,700,000 from the Conservatives, and by the following
year unemployment was down to 1,300,000 – a level not seen since James Callaghan was in
power some 20 years previously. A minimum wage was announced in May 1998, coming
into force from April 1999. Unemployment
would remain similarly low for the next 10 years.
The
long-running Northern Ireland peace process was
brought to a conclusion in 1998 with the Belfast
Agreement which established a devolved Northern Ireland Assembly and
de-escalated the violence associated with the
Troubles. It was signed in April 1998 by the British and Irish governments and was
endorsed by all the main political parties in Northern Ireland with the
exception of Ian Paisley's Democratic Unionist Party. Voters in
Northern Ireland approved the agreement in a referendum in May 1998 and it came
into force in December 1999. In August 1998, a car-bomb exploded in the
Northern Ireland town of Omagh, killing 29 people and injuring 220. The attack was
carried out by the Real Irish Republican Army who
opposed the Belfast Agreement. It was reported in 2005, that the IRA had
renounced violence and had ditched its entire arsenal.
In foreign
policy, following the September 11, 2001 attacks in the
United States, Blair greatly supported U.S.
President George W. Bush's new War on
Terror which began with the forced withdrawal of the Taliban regime in Afghanistan. Blair's case
for war was based on Iraq's alleged possession of weapons of mass destruction
and consequent violation of UN resolutions. He was wary of making direct
appeals for regime change, since international law does not recognise this as a
ground for war. A memorandum from a July 2002 meeting that was leaked in April
2005 showed that Blair believed that the British public would support regime
change in the right political context; the document, however, stated that legal
grounds for such action were weak. On 24 September 2002 the Government
published a dossier based on the intelligence agencies' assessments of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction. Among the
items in the dossier was a recently received intelligence report that "the
Iraqi military are able to deploy chemical or biological weapons within 45
minutes of an order to do so". A further briefing paper on Iraq's alleged
WMDs was issued to journalists in February 2003. This document was discovered
to have taken a large part of its text without attribution from a PhD thesis
available on the internet. Where the thesis hypothesised about possible WMDs,
the Downing Street version presented the ideas as fact. The document
subsequently became known as the "Dodgy
Dossier".
46,000 British
troops, one-third of the total strength of the British
Army (land forces), were deployed to assist with the invasion of Iraq.
When after the war, no WMDs were found in Iraq, the two dossiers, together with
Blair's other pre-war statements, became an issue of considerable controversy.
Many Labour Party members, including a number who had supported the war, were
among the critics. Successive independent inquiries (including those by the
Foreign Affairs Select Committee of the House of Commons, the senior judge Lord
Hutton, and the former senior civil servant Lord Butler of Brockwell) have
found that Blair honestly stated what he believed to be true at the time,
though Lord Butler's report did imply that the Government's presentation of the
intelligence evidence had been subject to some degree of exaggeration. These
findings have not prevented frequent accusations that Blair was deliberately
deceitful, and, during the 2005 election campaign, Conservative
leader Michael Howard made
political capital out of the issue. The new threat of international terrorism
ultimately led to the 7 July 2005 bomb attacks in
London which killed 52 people as well as the four suicide bombers who led the
attack.
The Labour
government was re-elected with a second successive landslide in the general election of June
2001. Blair became the first Labour leader to lead the
party to three successive election victories when they won the 2005 general election, though this
time he had a drastically reduced majority.
The
Conservatives had so far failed to represent a serious challenge to Labour's
rule, with John Major's successor William Hague unable to make any real
improvement upon the disastrous 1997 general election result at the next
election four years later. He stepped down after the 2001 election to be
succeeded by Iain Duncan Smith, who did not
even hold the leadership long enough to contest a general election – being
ousted by his own MP's in October 2003 and
being replaced by Michael
Howard, who had served as Home
Secretary in the government of John Major. Howard failed to win the 2005
general election for the Conservatives but he at least had the satisfaction of
narrowing the Labour majority, giving his successor (he announced his
resignation shortly after the election) a decent platform to build upon. However, the Conservatives began to re-emerge as
an electable prospect following the election of David
Cameron as Howard's successor in December 2005. Within months of Cameron
becoming Conservative leader, opinion polls during 2006 were showing a regular
Conservative lead for the first time since Black Wednesday 14 years earlier.
Despite the economy still being strong and unemployment remaining low, Labour's
decline in support was largely blamed upon poor control of immigration and
allowing Britain to become what was seen by many as an easy target for
terrorists.
Devolution
for Scotland and Wales - Blair also came into power with a policy of devolution. A
pre-legislative referendum was held
in Scotland in 1997 with two questions: whether to create a devolved Parliament for
Scotland and whether it should have limited tax-varying powers. Following a
clear 'yes' vote on both questions, a referendum on the
proposal for creating a devolved Assembly was held
two weeks later. This produced a narrow 'yes' vote. Both measures were put into
effect and the Scottish Parliament and Welsh Assembly began operating in 1999.
The first election to the Scottish parliament saw the
creation of a Labour-Liberal Democrat coalition with Donald
Dewar as First Minister. In Wales,
the Labour Party achieved a complete majority with Alun
Michael as theWelsh First Minister. In the 2007 Scottish election, the Scottish National Party gained
enough seats to form a minority government with its leader Alex
Salmond as First Minister.
Devolution
also returned to Northern Ireland, leaving
England as the only constituent country of the
United Kingdom without a devolved administration. Within England, a devolved
authority for London was re-established
following a 'yes' vote in a London-wide referendum.
Gordon
Brown (2007–10) - Tony Blair tendered his resignation as Prime Minister
of the United Kingdom to the Queen on 27 June 2007, his successor Gordon
Brown assuming office the same afternoon. Gordon Brown took over as Prime
Minister without having to face either a general election or even a contested
election for leadership of the Labour Party.
Brown's style
of government differed from that of his predecessor, Tony Blair, who had been
seen as presidential. Brown rescinded some of the policies which had either
been introduced or were planned by Blair's administration. He remained
committed to close ties with the United States and to the Iraq war, although he
established an inquiry into the reasons why Britain had participated in the
conflict. He proposed a "government of all the talents" which would
involve co-opting leading personalities from industry and other professional
walks of life into government positions. Brown also appointed Jacqui
Smith as the UK's first female Home Secretary, while Brown's old position
as Chancellor was taken over by Alistair
Darling.
His
appointment as prime minister sparked a brief surge in Labour support as the
party topped most opinion polls that autumn. There was talk of a "snap"
general election, which it was widely believed Labour could win, but Brown decided
against calling an election.
Brown's
government introduced a number of fiscal policies to help keep the British
economy afloat during the financial crisis which
occurred throughout the latter part of the 2000s (decade) and early 2010,
although the United Kingdom saw a dramatic increase in its national debt. Unemployment
soared through 2008 as the recession set in,
and Labour standings in the opinion polls plummeted as the Conservatives became
ascendant.
Several major
banks were nationalised after falling into financial difficulties, while large
amounts of money were pumped into the economy to encourage spending. Brown was
also press ganged into giving Gurkhas settlement rights in Britain by the actress and campaigner Joanna
Lumley and attracted criticism for its handling of the release of Abdelbaset
Al Megrahi, the only person to have been convicted over the 1988
Lockerbie bombing.
Initially,
during the first four months of his premiership, Brown enjoyed a solid lead in
the polls. His popularity amongst the public may be due to his handling of
numerous serious events during his first few weeks as Prime Minister, including
two attempted terrorist attacks in London and Glasgow at the end of June.
However, between the end of 2007 and September 2008, his popularity had fallen
significantly, with two contributing factors believed to be his perceived
change of mind over plans to call a snap general election in October 2007, and
his handling of the 10p tax rate cut in 2008, which led to allegations of
weakness and dithering. His unpopularity led eight labour MPs to call for a
leadership contest in September 2008, less than 15 months into his premiership.
The threat of a leadership contest receded due to his perceived strong handling
of the global financial crisis in October, but his popularity hit an all-time
low, and his position became increasingly under threat after the May 2009
expenses scandal and Labour's poor results in the 2009 Local and European
elections. Brown's cabinet began to rebel with several key resignations in the run
up to local elections in June 2009.
In January
2010, it was revealed that Britain's economy had resumed growth after a
recession which had seen a record six successive quarters of economic
detraction. However, it was a narrow return to growth, and it came after the
other major economies had come out of recession.
The 2010 general election resulted
in a hung parliament – Britain's
first for 36 years – with the Conservative Party controlling 306 Seats, the
Labour Party 258 Seats and the Liberal Democrats 57 Seats. Brown remained as
prime minister while the Liberal
Democrats negotiated with Labour and the Conservatives to form a coalition
government. He announced his intention to resign on 10 May 2010 in order to
help broker a Labour-Liberal Democrat deal. However, this became increasingly
unlikely, and on 11 May Brown announced his resignation as Prime Minister and
as Leader of the Labour Party. This paved the way for the Conservatives to
return to power after 13 years.
His
deputy Harriet Harman became
Leader of the Opposition until September 2010, when Ed
Miliband was elected Leader of the Labour Party.
8. Conservative Government, 2010–present
Coalition
government (2010–2015)
The Conservative Party won the
2010 general election but did not win enough seats to win an outright
majority. David Cameron, who has led the party since 2005 became Prime
Minister on 11 May 2010 after the Conservatives formed a coalition government with the
Liberal Democrats. Nick Clegg, leader of the Liberal
Democrats was appointed Deputy Prime Minister and several other Liberal
Democrats were given cabinet positions. Cameron promised to reduce Britain's
spiralling budget deficit by cutting back on public service spending and by
transferring more power to local authorities. He committed his government to
Britain's continuing role in Afghanistan and stated that he hopes to remove
British troops from the region by 2015. An emergency budget was
prepared in June 2010 by Chancellor of the Exchequer George
Osborne which stated
that VAT will be raised to 20% and there will be a large reduction in public
spending. A key Liberal Democrat policy is that of voting reform, to which
a referendum took
place in May 2011 on whether or not Britain should adopt a system of Alternative Vote to elect
MPs to Westminster. However, the proposal was rejected overwhelmingly, with 68%
of voters in favour of retaining first-past-the-post. The Liberal Democrat
turnabout on tuition policy at the universities alienated their younger
supporters, and the continuing weakness of the economy, despite spending
cutbacks, alienated the elders.
In March 2011,
UK, along with France and USA voted for military intervention against Gaddafi's
Libya leading to 2011 military intervention in Libya. Prince
William married Kate Middleton on 29 April 2011 in a globally televised event
much like his parents' wedding 30 years earlier. In July 2013, the royal couple
welcomed their first child, Prince George. In May 2015, they welcomed their
second child, Charlotte Elizabeth Diana. On August 6th, the Death of Mark Duggan sparked
off the 2011 England riots.
In 2012,
the Summer Olympics returned
to London for the first time since 1948. The United States claimed the largest
count of gold medals, with Britain running third place after China.
2014
Scottish Independence Referendum
On 18
September, Scotland voted in a referendum on the question of becoming an
independent country. The No side, supported by the three major UK parties,
secured a 55% to 45% majority for Scotland to remain part of the United
Kingdom. Following the result, Scotland's First Minister, Alex
Salmond, announced his intention to step down as First Minister and leader of
the SNP.
Majority
government (2015–present)
After years of
austerity, the British economy was on an upswing in 2015. In line with the
Fixed Term Parliaments Act, the 2015 General Election was
called for 7 May 2015. The Conservatives claimed credit for the upswing,
promising to keep taxes low and reduce the deficit aa well as promising am
In/Out referendum on the UK's relationship with the European Union. The rival
Labour party called for a higher minimum wage, and higher taxes on the rich. In
Scotland, the SNP attacked the austerity programme, opposed nuclear weapons and
demanded that promises of more autonomy for Scotland made during the
independence referendum be delivered.
Pre-election
polls had predicted a close race and a hung parliament, but the surprising
result was that a majority Conservative government was elected. The
Conservatives with 37% of the popular vote held a narrow majority with 331 of
the 650 seats. The other main victor was the Scottish National Party which
won 56 of the 59 seats in Scotland, a gain of 50. Labour suffered its worst
defeat since 1987, taking only 31% of the votes and 232 seats; they lost 40 of
their 41 seats in Scotland. The Liberal
Democrats vote plunged by 2/3 and they lost 49 of their 57 seats, as their
coalition with the Conservatives had alienated the great majority of their
supporters. The new UK Independence Party (UKIP),
rallying voters against Europe and against immigration, did well with 13% of
the vote count. It came in second in over 115 races but came in first in only
one. Women now comprise 29% of the MPs. Following
the election, the Leaders of the Labour Party and Liberal Democrats both
resigned.
CHRONOLOGY OF THE PERIOD
July
1945
General
elections are held and the Labour Party comes to power.
1946
The
National Health Service is founded and the nationalization of a number of
industries gets underway. Coal mining is nationalised.
1947
Electricity
is nationalised.
1947
India
and Pakistan gain independence.
Indian
independence initiates a wave of decolonisation, first in Asia and later in
Africa. Many of the newly independent countries remain in the British
Commonwealth.
1948
The
railways are nationalised.
1949
Drastic
devaluation of the pound to the US dollar, marking Britain’s new relationship
of dependence on the USA.
1952
Upon
the death of George VI, his eldest daughter Elizabeth becomes Queen.
3
October
Britain
tests its own atomic bomb, thus making a bid to establish itself as a nuclear
power, despite US disapproval.
1956-57
The
Suez Crisis: Britain joins with France and Israel in a military intervention to
attempt to
prevent
General Nasser from nationalising the Suez Canal in the autumn of 1956. The
intervention is condemned by the US and Britain withdraws from the venture. The
French are angry over this sign of Britain’s dependence on the US.
1961
Britain
attempts to join the EEC but is unsuccessful as its application is vetoed by
French President Charles de Gaulle.
1964
– 70
Labour
comes back to power under the leadership of Harold Wilson. The Wilson
Government is noted for its introduction of a number of permissive measures.
1967
The
Sexual Offences Act is passed, decriminalising homosexual practices above the
age of consent. The Abortion Act legalises abortion under certain conditions.
Britain
attempts to join the EEC but is unsuccessful again.
1969
The
Divorce Reform Act is adopted: it relaxes the conditions surrounding the ending
of marriage.
1970-79
The
British “disease” Britain is led by three prime ministers: Edward Heath
(1970-74), Harold Wilson
(1974-76), and James Callaghan (1976-79). The economy goes into
a decline and inflation rises disproportionately.
1970
Prime
Minister Edward Heath re-opens negotiations with the EEC over Britain’s
membership.
1973
Britain
becomes a member of the EEC along with the Irish Republic and Denmark.
Prime
Minister Heath introduces a three-day working week in December to
attempt to restrict energy use during a period of acute power crisis.
1976
The
economy has become so weakened that the Labour Government seeks
a loan from the International Monetary Fund. This involves harsh conditions,
including deep cuts in public spending.
August
1977
Unemployment
levels surpass 1,600,000.
Winter of 1978/79 (“the Winter of Discontent”)
A
number of key trade unions go on strike.
1979-90:
Thatcherism
1979
General
elections are held and the Conservative Party gains power.
Margaret
Thatcher becomes Britain's first woman Prime Minister. During her period in
office, her style of leadership and the policies she promotes become known as
Thatcherism (a loose concept encompassing her policies of strengthening the
powers of central government, curbing the powers of trades unions and local
government, and the active promotion of individualism and private enterprise).
An
attempt at devolution in Scotland fails.
1982
The
Prince of Wales marries Lady Diana Spencer.
The
Falklands conflict - in
April, Argentina invades and occupies the British dependency of the Falkland
Islands in the South Atlantic. The invasion is condemned in the United Nations
Security Council, which passes a resolution for Argentina to withdraw. Although
the British Foreign Office is initially caught by surprise, the UK quickly
despatched a task force to the South Atlantic to re-establish British control.
In the ensuing conflict 250 British and around 750 Argentine lives are lost.
The
Thatcher Government uses the conflict to extol British nationalism.
1984
– 5
A
major coal miners’ strike
1989
Introduction
of a controversial community charge (a. k. a. the Poll Tax)
1990
Thatcher
falls from power as a result of cabinet splits over the issue of Europe, London
Poll Tax Riots and her autocratic style as Prime Minister.
1990-97:
John Major succeeds Thatcher
1991
The
Maastricht Treaty is signed. It promotes closer economic and political union
through the establishment of a European currency, the harmonisation of defence,
foreign and social policies, and results in the transformation of the EEC into
the European Union (EU). As one of the Union’s
more sceptical and cautious members, Britain rejects the social chapter at the
Maastricht Summit.
Britain
joins a coalition of 28 nations, led by the USA, opposing Iraq over the
so-called Gulf Crisis.
16
September 1992
A
stock market crisis known as “Black Wednesday”; Britain is forced to pull out
of the European Exchange Rate Mechanism.
1997
Tony Blair and New Labour
Tony Blair and New Labour
May 1997
Tony
Blair becomes Prime Minister.
August
The
Princess of Wales dies in a car accident.
September
A
Referendum is held in Scotland: 75% vote for a parliament
A
Referendum is held in Wales; 559,419 vote in favour of a Welsh
Assembly
while 552,698 oppose the move.
1998
Good
Friday
All
main parties in Northern Ireland - with the exception of the Democratic
Unionist Party – announce an agreement to form a powersharing devolved
government with ministerial posts distributed according to
party strength.
May
1998
The
above accord is approved at a Referendum.
1999
Elections
are held for a Welsh National Assembly.
24 March
NATO
forces led by Britain and the United States begin air attacks on Serbia
over the country’s treatment of the Albanian minority in the province of
Kossovo.
1
July
The
Scottish Parliament is officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II.
1
January 1999
Britain
decides not to join the European Single Currency.
Widespread
British unease about the European single currency obliges Prime Minister Tony
Blair, who is keen on the project, to stay out. The Euro is launched as an electronic
currency used by banks, foreign exchange dealers, big firms and stock markets
in 1999. Euro coins first hit the streets of the 12 Eurozone countries on 1 January
2002.
1
January 2000
Britain
celebrates the new millennium.
2001
Foot-and-mouth
disease wreaks havoc in rural Britain.
The
nine-month epidemic of foot-and-mouth disease devastates large sections of the rural
economy. The Labour government is heavily criticised for its handling of the crisis.
7
June 2001
Labour
wins the general election, with Tony Blair returned as prime minister.
Labour
wins a commanding majority of 167 seats. Prime Minister Tony Blair's second term
is dominated by controversial foreign policy issues, mainly the “war on terror”
begun after the terror attacks in the United States on 11 September. The
Conservative leader, William Hague, resigns after the party shows little sign
of electoral recovery.
11
September 2001
Islamic
terrorists crash aircraft on targets in New York and Washington
Nineteen
mainly Saudi Arabian terrorists use hijacked planes to destroy the twin towers
of the World Trade Centre in New York and part of the Pentagon building in Washington.
A fourth plane crashes in Pennsylvania, killing all on board. Among the approximately
3,000 people killed in the attacks are 67 Britons. In response, US President
George W. Bush declares a worldwide “war on terror.”
7
October 2001
Britain
joins the US in strikes on Taliban-controlled Afghanistan.
British
forces contribute to the initial US military strikes against the Islamic fundamentalist
Taliban regime in Afghanistan - the first retaliation to the terrorist attacks
of '9/11'.
20
March 2003
Britain
joins the US in an invasion of Iraq.
1
May 2004
Ten
new states join the European Union
Ten
new states from Eastern and Southern Europe join the European Union, making it the
largest trading bloc in the world by population. Their inclusion sparks fears, stoked
by lurid media stories, of a huge influx of economic migrants from the poorer Eastern
countries to the wealthier Western countries such as Britain.
16
February 2005
Kyoto
Protocol on measures to control climate change comes into force
5
May 2005
Labour
wins a third consecutive term with Tony Blair as prime minister.
Labour
wins, but with a substantially reduced majority. Tony Blair joins Margaret Thatcher
as the only post-war prime minister to have won three successive general elections.
7
July 2005
Suicide
bombers kill 52 people on London's transport system.
Three
men blow themselves up on London Underground trains, while a fourth explodes
his bomb on a double-decker bus. Fifty two people are killed and more than 700
injured. On 21 July there are four more attempted suicide bombings in London, but
none of the devices explode. Islamic terrorist organisation Al-Qaeda claims responsibility,
but it is thought that the bombers, all British Muslims, have acted alone.
December
2005
Same-sex
couples are given the same legal rights as married couples.
January
2007
Australian
hacker Julian Assange launches the website WikiLeaks
24
June 2007
Tony
Blair resigns and is succeeded by Gordon Brown
2008
The
British economy goes into a recession after 16 years of growth
September
2008
Crash
of the stock markets worldwide, triggered by the collapse of USA banks.
October
2008
The
British economy shrinks for the first time in 16 years and the pound has its
biggest one-day drop against the dollar since 1971.
December
2008
The
London stock market loses 31% in 2008, the worst loss in 24 years.
December
2008
The
population of Britain is 61.4 million, the biggest increase in population in
almost 50 years.
6
May 2010
The
Conservatives win a plurality of seats in a hung parliament (a hung parliament occurs
when no political party has an overall majority of seats in the House of Commons).
11
May 2010
David
Cameron (b. 1966) becomes Britain's new prime minister as a coalition is formed
between the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats.
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