by Felicity Dowling *
April 11, 2013
Thatcher was our enemy, she led the forces ranged against working people
in the eighties. We engaged her in battle, believing we could win. We
lost and were bereft, bereaved and massively damaged. Thatcher hated us
as socialists, hated the miners, the trade unions, the Irish. She hated
Liverpool. She was a strategist and propagandist for her class globally.
Internationally, she befriended Pinochet and greeted Afghan Mujaheddin
leader Gulbuddin Hekmatyar as a “freedom fighter”. He trafficked in
opium and threw acid in the face of women who refused to wear the veil (http://www.us-uk-interventions.org/Afghanistan_fullchron.html).
She was of course a great ally of Ronald Reagan. She went to war with
Argentina causing the deaths of thousands for the mineral wealth beneath
the South Atlantic and to secure an election victory.
She hated the ANC, labelling Mandela as a “terrorist”. Her reactionary
politics extended to victimising Gays, and attempting to control
teachers, implementing a reactionary national curriculum. Even
mentioning homosexuality in school risked prosecution under Clause 28.
Our struggle in Liverpool too was internationalist. South African
exiles worked with us day and night in our campaigns, Chileans, comrades
from Pakistan were there too and comrades from around the globe gave us
support and solidarity.
What is the history of our enmity with Thatcher? Liverpool was one of
her chosen battlegrounds; she was determined to break the organised
working class. The trade unions were one battleground, another was the
democratically elected Local Authorities, mainly Labour controlled.
Labour was in flux. At the end of the Thatcher era, Labour had gone
entirely over to the neo-liberal project, but at the outset labour still
had working class roots.
We had a history of struggle. Women workers in the Ford factory in
Liverpool fought alongside those from Dagenham in the struggle for equal
pay. From women in the tobacco, sugar and biscuit factories to the
seafarers, shipbuilding, bus drivers and Dockers, being organised at
work was as natural as breakfast. Liverpool builders took their trade
unionism wherever they went – and they travelled far and wide.
Liverpool has centuries old Black and Chinese Communities. In 1981,
parts of Liverpool rioted not once but twice. Unemployment and racist
policing spurred the riots. An appallingly racist Police Chief, a friend
of Thatcher, used ‘Stop and Search’ relentlessly. The police publicly
characterised the black youth as ‘the offspring of African sailors and
prostitutes’. They used teargas and drove mini buses at speed against
pedestrians as crowd control – David Moore, a disabled man, was killed
outside his house by a police van.After the riots Thatcher had full
reports on the terrible poverty but instead of intervening she planned
“managed decline”.
In the late 70s and early 80s, factory after factory closed despite
bitter struggles, creating mass unemployment and deep, grinding poverty
with 30-50% unemployment in some areas. Poverty of the kind where
people wore shoes with holes in the soles through to their socks, and
mothers often went without food to feed their children. Yet in the
sixties and early seventies things had been Ok, getting better for most
families in Liverpool. This poverty was new, well represented in Boys
from the Black Stuff; (the author of this though was won over to
Thatcherism.)
http://gerryco23.wordpress.com/2011/07/04/liverpool-81-the-voice-of-the-unheard/
http://metro.co.uk/2012/03/15/hillsborough-was-drunk-liverpool-fans-fault-margaret-thatcher-told-353486/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boys_from_the_Blackstuff
The Labour Party had deep and radical routes in Liverpool, and had
had marxist currents since its inception, but the city was not ‘safe’
electorally for the party, as other major cities were. The time Labour
in Liverpool spent in opposition allowed us to build a radical program
well researched and ready to implement. There were organised working
class socialists in every area of the city. Some of the youth from the
riots moved over into left wing politics. The Militant played a leading
role and there were other left wing socialists in the fight. The MPs for
the city were working class fighters.
The City Council was previously run by Liberals. They implemented savage
cuts years before Thatcher, so spending on services in Liverpool was
already at dangerously low levels before she arrived.
The Local Authority manual workers had built a reputation for struggle
in the Winter of Discontent (1979). The manual workers were staunch
allies and comrades of the councillors; the white collar workers less
so.
Labour first won control of the city in April 1983. In March 1984 before
the next local elections a huge demonstration took place. There was no
legal budget and the possibility of the Government sending in
commissioners was very real. The results were an endorsement of our
campaigns. We won elections with large turnouts and good results. These
results came from detailed canvassing and campaigning. “In a citywide
survey, voters were asked what action they thought could be taken to
oppose a Tory government takeover: 62 per cent of Labour voters
supported demonstrations; 68 per cent occupation by redundant workers;
59 per cent a strike by council workers; 48 per cent a rent and rates
strike; 56 per cent supported a refusal by council workers to cooperate
with commissioners; and an incredible 55 per cent in favour of a city
wide general strike. Moreover, 28 per cent of Liberal voters favoured
occupation of council premises by redundant council workers. Even 8 per
cent of Tories favoured similar measures – Liverpool was like a
tinderbox: one false move from the government and it would explode” (City that dared to Fight. Mulhearn and Taafe)
We came into office in 1983 on a programme to create 1000 jobs, to build
1000 houses, and refuse to implement government cuts. “No Cuts in Jobs
or Services!” Somehow, the majority of Councillors stood firm. In the
first battle with the government after the ‘84 elections they blinked
first and we got enough money to balance our books with no cuts. We
created the jobs, we built the houses, (many more than 1000) demolished
the slums, reorganised the schools, built new Nurseries and a large
urban park and we led a huge campaign; quite a lot in a short time.
http://www.liverpool.gov.uk/leisure-parks-and-events/parks-and-greenspaces/everton-park/
(Building council/social housing has an excellent effect on an area in
economic downturn. It creates jobs but it also pulls money into the
economy; a young couple moving into a decent home somehow gets the money
for a carpet; (either granny buys it from her paltry savings or someone
sells some thing or….).We reckoned it was a multiplier of 10 for every
pound spent on the building. It was propaganda in bricks and mortar.
In the second year it looked as though the other labour councillors in
other parts of Britain would join us in the struggle but under pressure
from the press, the government, and above all, from the right wing of
the Labour party, one by one they crumbled and made the cuts, leaving
only Liverpool and Lambeth to fight alone
In the course of our campaign we held huge demonstrations and built our
socialism deep in the communities. At one point Thatcher came to
Liverpool and was personally affronted to be met with actual
negotiations, rather than to be treated as royalty. “They have no
respect for my office” she complained
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/dec/30/thatcher-government-liverpool-riots-1981
We failed to win a critical vote for all out strike from the local
Authority workers in September 1985. The Tories took courage from this
and moved against us.
By defeating the political struggle in Liverpool she also defeated the
trade union struggles of Local Authority employees. The employees in the
big utilities, gas, electric, water, telecommunications followed.
In her time in office, Thatcher attacked the building workers, print
workers, Local Authority workers, miners and the local authorities
The Government and the employers in the late seventies launched an
attack on building workers’ trade unions. Many Liverpool building
workers are to this day affected by blacklist:
http://www.shrewsbury24campaign.org.uk/
http://www.hazards.org/blacklistblog
In 1983 the print workers were also under attack from Thatcher and
her big business allies. Eddie Shah deliberately opened a non union
print works in Winnick Quay in Warrington. The unions, mainly from
Liverpool picketed it, but physical the battle that ensued with the
police was unprecedented on a picket line. The police were used like
soldiers against us. They drove mini buses full speed at us and beat the
hell out of those they could. This use of the police against trade
unionists became a trade mark of Thatcher. Murdoch claimed that it was
Thatcher’s promise to provide police support that was the decider in
choosing his battle with the printers. New York had not promised such
Government ordered policing. Murdoch gained supremacy in the print
media in the UK and eventually to the monstrosity that is Fox news
“Margaret Thatcher was an inspiration in the fight against the print unions” Murdoch
http://www.pressgazette.co.uk/content/rupert-murdoch-margaret-thatcher-was-inspiration-fight-against-print-unions
Thatcher re configured British capitalism; she privatised most of
industry and de facto broke the unions. She left the NHS to rot. Queues
were endemic; my som waited two years to get on a waiting list.The
hospital cleaning was privatised so MRS disease became rampant
She gave priority to the finance sector which ballooned in her time.
She presided over the de industrialisation of Britain. Labour, like
fools, bought her theories and so presided over the huge banking crisis
that is still rocking the economy.
Drugs She brought the drugs into our city. It was critical to the
success of our enemies that they could convince the world Liverpool was
full of thieves and thugs. When we came into office drugs were not a
huge problem but they hit the city like a sledge hammer. Drug dealers
had links to the Tories especially through one Michael Howard and the
local drug lords went directly to the Mujahadin in Afghanistan for their
heroin. They had to fight the older gangsters who wanted none of it.
The street price of heroin dropped to 25% of its 1981 price by 1984. The
police were deep in the drugs trade. It wrecked communities, damaged
families, established thugs in charge of areas of the city. Many of us
believe it was an actual decision Thatcher to bring drugs into the city.
Miners strike in 1984-5
There were mines north of Liverpool in St Helens and just into Wales at
Point of Ayr. They gave their all in fighting for the union, staying on
strike for a year. Politically we worked closely with the miners
nationally. Locally, women who could ill afford it, would drop off
tins of beans and other basics at our Saturday collections as they
shopped for their own families and this would be driven down to the
miners’ welfare. Thousands of pounds were collected in Bucket
collections on a Saturday.
Again the police acted like soldiers fighting the pickets. We marched
back to work with the miners at the end of the strike but the industry
has been obliterated and with it the rich culture of the organised
workers.
http://www.minersadvice.co.uk/reviews_coalwsrlife.htm http://www.powerinaunion.co.uk/orgreave-truth-and-justice-campaign/
Thatcher needed the right wing of the labour party to defeat us. We had
the press and media ranged against us but just when we could have faced
the Tories down the Labour Party launched its attack on us. That though
is another story
47 Councillors were eventually surcharged and removed from office. We
were replaced by a second team also committed to no cuts but this was
short lived; the new right wing labour party established control.
Our supporters in the city raised our huge “surcharge” in collections.
Thatcher was denied the sight of our heads on pikes around the city.
The deepest wound though was Hillsborough. Liverpool FC went to play
in Sheffield. 96 died that day, by police incompetence and cruelty. The
crush was caused by the police, they refused to call the emergency
services, and people died who could have been saved. One of my pupils,
at 15 a big lad, was held by his feet above the crush to pull people
from the disaster; his was not the only heroism. Then in a cruel
conspiracy, Thatcher’s friend’s in the police and the press slandered
our dead. The police concocted the story with Downing Street. Murdoch
used his rag “The Sun” to claim our people were drunk and to blame, that
they urinated on the dead and stole from corpses. The truth that our
own people had given their all to save each other was known in the city
but across the globe our dead were slandered. Thatcher’s personal slave
Ingham was implicated. It has taken 26 years of long hard struggle to
get the truth published
• http://www.contrast.org/hillsborough/
• http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/teams/reading/9983688/Reading-to-have-minutes-silence-for-Hillsborough-disaster-not-Margaret-Thatchers-passing.html/
So we hate Thatcher because she:
• pioneered the new neo liberal economics of greed and de-industrialisation, she wrecked our hospitals, damaged our schools.
• because she used the press and media as a finely tuned tool against us,
• because she made the police fight workers like they were soldiers,
• because she wrecked our communities, destroyed our industries
• because she hated our friends around the world
• She tried to make it a crime to support gay kids in school.
• She colluded in the defamation of our dead.
“ Ding Dong, the witch is dead, the wicked witch, the witch is dead”
(as the song says) but we have serious unfinished business with her
political heirs.
*Felicity Dowling is a socialist from Liverpool England and a former Liverpool Councillor involved in the struggle against Thatcher in the 80's
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