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alun2005
08 Apr 13 16:29
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Date Joined: 11 Jan 02
| Topic/replies: 41,295 | Blogger: alun2005's blog
I just can't see it somehow. My guess is that those who wore blue uniforms at Orgreave, Wapping and elsewhere weren't quite so enthusiastic at having a Chancer Lawyer on speed dial if they stubbed their toe on a pesky pavement, or being teased about their sexual and/or gender preferences.

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Replies: 53
By:
pandora1963
When: 08 Apr 13 16:32
oh yes the unions,,,,thousands and thousands of working people,they had to be destroyed of course
By:
Roquebrune
When: 08 Apr 13 16:33
Just as well that Maggie sorted them out back then.
By:
mickstick
When: 08 Apr 13 16:35
Someone needed to challenge the Unions, especially those who thought they could hold the country to ransom.
By:
mickstick
When: 08 Apr 13 16:39
Better question would have been 'could she have defeated a Joe Gormley led strike by the mineworkers'? No in my opinion.
By:
Mighty Whites 2008
When: 08 Apr 13 16:52
Her biggest strength in the miners crisis was Scargill.
By:
Dr Crippen
When: 08 Apr 13 17:57
Thatchers biggest weapon against the unions was unemployment.

It was unemployment and fear of it that cost the unions so many members.
By:
the good doctor
When: 08 Apr 13 18:06
agree
By:
treetop
When: 08 Apr 13 19:37
Cant agree crips, her biggest asset was the media showing Scargill, Hoppper (up here) and Mcgahey on TV. Every time they opened their mouths spouting hatred the public stopped supporting them in tens of thousands. Ed may have this level of support shortly !
By:
tobermory
When: 09 Apr 13 00:40
from what i recall Ian MacCregor  was a bigger laughing stock than Scargill ever was , remember the footage of him walking down the street with a plastic bag over his head Laugh
By:
Dr Crippen
When: 09 Apr 13 09:41
Of course the right like to see the defeat of the miners as a glorious victory against trade unions which finished them off. This  is simply bullshine.

Workers didn't drop out of trade unions because of what happened to the miners, they dropped out because they wanted to keep their jobs.
People were less inclined to be union reps for fear of ending up on the dole, and others couldn't see the point in organizing themselves against the companies they worked for that were fighting for survival. 

A very significant turning point in the demise of the unions was when Derek Robinson was sacked at BL 6 months after Thatcher was made PM.
The workers decided not to support any action over this outrage against unionism, which signalled a wind of change blowing through the country.
This wind of change had started well before the miner’s futile attempts at trying to hold back the tide in the form of mine closures.
Too much is made of the effect that the miners strike had on unions, the damage had been done to worker's perceptions of unions well before the miners decided to make their final stand.
By:
Eeternaloptimist
When: 09 Apr 13 09:49
The country's perception of the unions in general had been poisoned by those who over decades had been hell bent on bringing down the democratic state and replacing it with some kind of authoritarian socialist/communist utopia. They had ruined the unions and much of British industry which in many cases was clinically dead before Thatcher arrived.
By:
Dr Crippen
When: 09 Apr 13 10:08
Exactly EO,

Derek Robinson was a communist, the sole aim of many like him was simply to disrupt and damage everything associated with democracy in the cause to bring it down.
The way they sought to achieve this was as usual through the left and the trade unions.
By:
mickstick
When: 09 Apr 13 10:53
The weakness of both Heath and Wilson to deal with the union problem was the seed that was sown. Wilson was not helped by his own undermining from within, Labour party and establishment. But ultimately it was the electorate by electing governments with small majorities that gave the hard left succor.And the electorate got it right in 1979.
By:
Mighty Whites 2008
When: 09 Apr 13 11:34
tobermory     09 Apr 13 00:40 
from what i recall Ian MacCregor  was a bigger laughing stock than Scargill ever was


Is this the same scargill who didn't call a vote on strike action splitting the miners. The same Scargill who called strike action at the beggining of the summer rather than the end of Autumn Laugh

The bloke was an idiot.
By:
Dr Crippen
When: 09 Apr 13 13:44
Scargill didn't call for a vote from the miners, because they were already split and some were already on strike, he simply made the strike official.

As for waiting for the autumn to strike, events didn't evolve like that with Scargill setting a date for a strike.
Any delay would have given the government more time to build up their coal reserves, and taken the date for the pit closures even nearer.

Scargill was not the towering colossus dictating to his members that the right make him out to be, he was simply carrying out the wishes of his members the Yorkshire miners, and the one who was paid to take the flak.
By:
bazzar
When: 09 Apr 13 13:48
During this debate about unions, can anyone tell me of a prominent figure in
politics who was a member of the OLDEST union in the world and tried to destroy all other attempts at unionism or combines as they were once called?
By:
Angel Gabrial
When: 09 Apr 13 14:26
What really stoked the initial furnace was the leaked document to the Economist outlining what Thatcher had mapped out to prevent the Unions from succeeding. Was it a deliberate leak to get the Unions into a heightened sense of potential unrest so Thatch could send in 5,000 coppers when the time came?
By:
bazzar
When: 09 Apr 13 16:20
The reason we have the most DIShonest police force ever in British history is because THATCHER used them and praised them as LIONS, just a slight MISuse of the word LIARS.
This mob are now in the process of doing the same with OUR education system,
COMMUNISTS WOULD BE PROUD TO TREAT IT'S PEOPLE LIKE THIS.
THATCHER was a member of THE LAW SOCIETY which is the oldest union in the world, their history tells us that they tried many hundreds of times, to prevent ordinary working class people of creating their own unions.
By:
bazzar
When: 09 Apr 13 16:22
People were murdered (executed) in attempts to form unions, TOLPUDDLE martyrs just a few.
By:
Mexico
When: 09 Apr 13 16:31
Baz - so the "TOLPUDDLE martyrs" were murdered (executed)?
By:
bazzar
When: 09 Apr 13 16:46
Must apologise getting mixed up with poll tax of 1381, never the less people died fighting injustice and THATCHER still insisted on injustice for the many over the few, hence these idiots belief that they are born to rule.
By:
bazzar
When: 09 Apr 13 16:49
We are now in 2013 and very little has changed, yet people talk of progress
and civilization, so why do you mexico and sphincter, side with those who believe they have the right to rule and do down those who are poor?
GUTLESS springs to mind in both your cases.
By:
Dr Crippen
When: 09 Apr 13 17:00
Any recovery in the economy will be caused by the actions of the rich not the poor.

The poor are mere spectators.
By:
paddletoe
When: 09 Apr 13 17:39
Dr Crippen how will the rich go about causing a recovery without the poor and no so rich playing a part.

Your comment implies and is correct that benfit cuts wont make any difference to any economic recovery. So why the need to demonise the worse off in society and lay a disproportionate ammount of blame on them.
By:
Dr Crippen
When: 09 Apr 13 19:38
No one is demonising the poor.
The coalition government is cutting back on spending and the poor have to make some sacrifices the same as the more productive amongst us.

You can't keep hammering the workers, as Mr Cameron said ''we're all in this together.''
By:
gus
When: 09 Apr 13 20:52
i just love this idea that 'the Unions' were ever in a position or had the intention  to hold 'the country' to ransom

the Unions were made up of the majority of the working people of this country (13million Union members in 1979)
... the, and their families were 'the country'.

they were asking, or, if you prefer,  demanding,  to be paid a fair price for the one-third of their lives that they spent on creating wealth for other people so that they could provide themselves and their families with food and shelter.

ok, they failed to achieve that relatively modest ambition, and now people are made to work for nothing or starve, and made destitute for having a spare room ... i suppose that's a victory for someone, somewhere

meanwhile we're collectively required to contribute £billions to a financial sector that's 'too big to fail', but of course that's not holding the country to ransom ... it's just a temporary setback on the road to economic nirvana

frankly i'd say that anyone who prefers 2013 to 1979 is insane
By:
treetop
When: 09 Apr 13 20:55
We are now in 2013 and very little has changed, yet people talk of progress

You are off your silly little head bazza with comments like this. Wat Tyler would have loved the welfare state benefits !
By:
Angel Gabrial
When: 09 Apr 13 21:03
Excellent post Gus.
By:
snickers
When: 09 Apr 13 21:24
Thatcher smashed the unions because she had a public growing tired of their tyranny, on her side.
By:
Angel Gabrial
When: 09 Apr 13 21:30
The political and media driven rhetoric is always absorbed by the public. They believe whichever garden path they are lead down.
By:
gus
When: 09 Apr 13 21:30
13 million workers tyrannising themselves?

or a  small bunch of hereditary w@nkers determined not to lose their power and privilege?
By:
bazzar
When: 10 Apr 13 18:45
I remember THATCHER exploding in anger over the FRENCH revolution, the people of FRANCE were wrong, she said, she even got that wrong and 200 years late.
By:
treetop
When: 10 Apr 13 21:33
The unions destroyed themselves, in the 70's they were going on strike because they didn't have lasagne on the menu in the canteens ! Total suicide as the memebrs allowed the demagogues like Robbo and SCargill to hijack their unions.Ambulance men and grave diggers on strike,come on lads,get real.
By:
Captain Wurzel
When: 10 Apr 13 21:41
Groups that have an excess of power as the unions did in the seventies need to be brought into line. Thats what happened to

the unions and it is what is needed now with our over mighty financial sector.
By:
treetop
When: 10 Apr 13 21:44
Agree with that assessment wurzel , it would win an election if done some time next year so fresh within the minds of the electorate in 2015.
By:
Angel Gabrial
When: 10 Apr 13 22:05
What would have happened if Thatcher had given into the Unions, where would the future have taken the miners?

I was only a kid but heavy industry was going through a transitional period by the 80`s. It had happened with the steel industry which was Ian McGregor had slim lined with manpower. What did the Unions see as the future?
By:
Dr Crippen
When: 11 Apr 13 10:50
If Thatcher had given into the miners and cancelled the pit closures, they would simply have closed them at a later date.
The government would have no doubt been in an even stronger position by then.
The miners strike was a waste of time.
By:
Mexico
When: 11 Apr 13 11:27
Many of the mines would have closed before now even without Thatcher/Scargil.
It cost more money to get the stuff out the ground than it was worth.
Europe would not have been too happy with state help & Europe not a massive fan of CO2.

Did the NUM have a business plan for the industry? Did they offer to cut wages/ shut the most expensive mines etc.
By:
Dr Crippen
When: 11 Apr 13 11:42
I don't know about the cost of getting it out of the ground, we only have the government's figures for that, do they include the big chunk going back to the government through taxation for instance?

The true cost of closing the mines was in the money paid out in welfare for the families and communities that closing the mines threw on the scrapheap, and the money that flowed out of the country that was used to buy energy from abroad with, which was a dead loss.
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