When Mrs.
Thatcher became Prime Minister in 1979 she and her administration were taking
over a wreck of an economy. The
industrial structure of the post war period had mostly collapsed. Districts that had been prosperous and the
basis for much of the real wealth had declined into shadows of their former
selves.
Much of the
attempted state intervention in development had failed rarely making much if
anything of any return and we had the problem of industries and activities in a
state of terminal failure being propped up and others on life support of
subsidy and tax breaks.
Sometimes
in the 1970’s it seemed that almost everything was being paid for by government
who were struggling to raise the taxes to pay for it. The Trade Unions for the most part simply
added to the problems. They basically
wanted a state machine in which the 1950's status quo would be perpetuated in a world
now changing radically.
Then there
had been the massive inflation which had not only distorted whole sectors of
the economy and public services but which had disrupted any realistic planning
or financing and created huge injustices.
Quite literally by the summer of 1979 in financial terms few people
really knew what they were doing.
In 1978 to
1979 there had been the Winter of Discontent with extensive strike action
across public services and industry as the major trade unions tried to overturn
the actions of the then Labour Government to try to contain the financial
crisis.
Was Mrs.
Thatcher the best person to tackle this?
It is no good looking down history to past Prime Ministers; this was
another time in another world. Who was
around then?
There was
no Liberal in sight after the debacle of Jeremy Thorpe’s leadership. In the Labour Party the choice was between
Callaghan, on the way out, Healey, who had carried the bag, Benn very much of
the active hard socialism and Foot of the almost inactive soft intellectual socialism. Healy might have had the ability.
By 1979 the
division between the respective wings of the Labour Party, wrongly called
“Right” and “Left” possibly more accurately Dissenting Social and Marxist had
become almost a split. This was
aggravated by the Maoist and connected hard line elements who were influential
in some key districts.
There was
nobody else within the Conservatives then to really lead convincingly. Heath had gone off to sulk and the others did
not have either the clout or that particular media friendly manner to make
their claims felt.
This blog
has often insisted on complexity, uncertainty and for that matter chaos. Also, the principle in very many government
issues of “no right decision”, that is that every option has significant
downsides. It is when you ignore these that
you can run into chaos as Blair so clearly demonstrated.
As for the
Miner’s Strike, it was Scargill that called it and him and his cabal who
insisted on going in and on regardless of the realities on the ground. They were warned, indeed on the first day, that
the Government had seen them coming and was prepared.
They were warned
to go for any favourable deal they could get at an early stage. They disregarded the groups who tried to
achieve this. They were warned to lay
off the violence and pull back the groups of thugs doing the enforcing. They did not heed them. So they lost and deserved to for the rank
stupidity of their leadership.
As for what
was done and not done, what happened and how wise or otherwise it was this is
best left to historians to rake over the details and see if they can find a
logical explanation of events.
Personally,
my view is that this could be unlikely because by then the UK had become
prisoner to outside events and interests.
The eleven years were ones of having to make decisions on the hoof in a
rapidly changing world where it was never clear what was happening and why.
Mrs.
Thatcher was the first and so far only woman Prime Minister; she was also
almost the only one who was a scientist and a research one at that who moved on
into law. Also she grew up in a small
town the daughter of an ordinary shop keeper.
These gave
her some unusual insights but also some blind spots. Because of her dominance in cabinet,
relentless working habits, media presentation and ready grasp of complicated
subjects she did have remarkable and unusual abilities.
There were
mistakes made and misjudgements. Some
matters were set in train which led to adverse effects. She did not really understand that economists
are never to be trusted or that in the last analysis the money men could be
prone to taking care of themselves first and others last.
Essentially,
Mrs. Thatcher just about kept the show on the road and reclaimed ground after
the dreadful 1970’s. It might well have
been better but it could have been a lot worse.
And she saw
off the Soviet Union .
She in many ways saved the country, and gave us back some self belief. She made mistakes, most notably the poll tax fiasco, but that shouldn't detract from just much this country needed her!
ReplyDeletelfb_uk
One of the best summaries I've read. I think she showed us just how tough and clear-minded a PM has to be. Also that mistakes can be offset by successes. We've not seen it again and I don't think we ever will.
ReplyDeleteA truly excellent summary. Who has vision and determination now. I will always remember her.
ReplyDeleteSome of the comments on the BBC have truly appalled me.
I expect some people are eagerly rewriting even more history.