Read God and Mrs Thatcher Online
Authors: Eliza Filby
More important than any of this, though, was the fact that the Church was articulating what the majority of the British people felt. The year-long strike, with its intransigency, violence, and even death, in the words of historian Richard Vinen, ‘all seemed un-English’. The public were undoubtedly sympathetic to Thatcher’s attempts to curtail union power, but at the same time were equally uncomfortable with the harsh tactics being deployed.
77
A Mori poll by the
Sunday
Times
at the height of the strike revealed that nearly 90 per cent considered that Thatcher was doing a ‘bad job’ managing the dispute, while another by the
Evening Standard
showed that even 49 per cent of Conservative voters disagreed with the government’s approach (Thatcher personally had an eight-point lead over Kinnock in the polls). The country hardly needed reminding of how damaging the dispute was, yet where the Church proved to be credible was as a non-partisan voice calling for reconciliation in a lengthy battle largely defined by hard-line positions and unsympathetic personalities. It was a call that was particularly welcomed by those on the moderate left. ‘Their lamps shin[e] brightly with an innocence that is both sobering and inspiring in a world grown cynical under the pressure of so much claptrap from so many other quarters,’ wrote Geoffrey Goodman, industrial editor of the
Daily Mirror,
who had himself attempted to negotiate a settlement along with his boss, newspaper magnate Robert Maxwell.
78
Recognising the importance of public opinion and frustrated by Scargill’s continued attempts to scupper negotiations, Norman Willis, the
General Secretary of the TUC, established the Miners’ Hardship Fund in November 1984. The aim, which was separate from the Miners’ Solidarity Fund, was to support families in the run up to Christmas and, no doubt, to generate public sympathy not with the miners, but the mining communities. For this explicit purpose, Willis turned to two Christian leaders who had no mining connections but who symbolised unity: David Sheppard and Derek Worlock, along with Moderator of the Free Churches Council, Howard Williams, former union man, Mr George Lowthian and Labour leader in the House of Lords, Lord Cledwyn of Penrhos. In its first three months, the Miners’ Hardship Fund raised over £900,000, with one parishioner writing to Worlock informing him that he had sold his shares in the recently privatised British Telecom and donated the proceeds to the fund: a symbolic, albeit minor victory for the churches in their battle against Thatcherite values.
79
In late 1984, with the NUM’s position significantly weakened and with miners drifting back to work, an increasingly desperate Scargill reached out to the Christian leaders, issuing a statement welcoming their help in negotiating a settlement. That November, an ecumenical delegation made up of Archbishop Habgood, Derek Worlock and the Bishop of Lincoln, Simon Phipps, met with NUM representatives in the rather grand surroundings of Bishopthorpe Palace, York. At the press conference after the meeting, the delegation put the onus on the NCB, hinting that a negotiation was possible if the government and MacGregor were willing. In a private letter to Worlock, however, Peter Walker warned that the Church leaders risked being pawns in Scargill’s games:
Whilst not a member of your church, I endeavour to take a Christian approach to this problem. I am very concerned when I see not just your church but my church being used by a person who is not only in total disagreement with the Christian faith, but is in close association with governments of powers passionately opposed to the Christian faith and who has certainly used methods which any Christian should condemn.
80
The religious delegation, though, pressed ahead and over the next three months senior church representatives from all denominations in Wales, Scotland and England, met with the NUM and eventually Walker himself, in a concerted effort to succeed where the NUM, TUC and the Labour Party had all failed. In the end, it was to no avail. The miners trickled back to work as all lost hope for a settlement being reached.
It has been estimated that the Miners’ Strike cost the state £6 billion, with the police bill amounting to £200 million alone. For a government supposedly committed to reducing public expenditure, the fact that such sums were spent without question indicates the level of determination of the Thatcher government in defeating the most powerful union in Britain. Many interpretations have been imprinted onto the Miners’ Strike. For the left, it was a triumphant tragedy, a time when old solidarities were destroyed and new ones forged; for the right, Thatcher’s unrelenting and resounding victory against the over-powerful and undemocratic union movement remains her greatest triumph. For the Church though, the Miners’ Strike was a moral fight about the nation’s values: between community and capital; dogmatism and compromise; harmony and conflict. ‘Their solidarity and endurance, have helped the rest of the nation to see that materialism is not the only motivating force in people’s lives’ wrote the Bishop of Lincoln in pointed words at the end of the strike.
81
Reflecting years later, David Jenkins concluded that the social consequences of economic policies was not a ‘wet’ question, but a necessary one in order to formulate a proper assessment of the ‘structural deficiency or inefficiency’ of the government’s agenda.
82
Anyone who had witnessed not only the social but also the economic costs of those communities that had been built on mines, could not fail to agree.
• • •
‘
WHEN GOVERNMENTS START
attacking the consensus,’ wrote
Guardian
journalist Hugo Young in 1984, ‘other people – its
custodians, if you like – start behaving differently as well … When government has ceased to be a healer and becomes for its own good reasons, a fighter, others begin to fight back accordingly.’
83
Young had highlighted the motivation and political position of the Church as one of the main custodians of consensus. But it was not alone – the SDP Alliance, some beleaguered One-nation Tories, the liberal press and (as much as it could get away with) the BBC and even the monarchy – would also assume this mantle during the Thatcher years. But of all of these, it was the Established Church – despite its clumsy interventions, patrician tone and outdated thinking – which proved to be the most forceful enunciators of the centrist position. ‘The effect may be not to stir the conscience but to start a fashion,’ wrote Clifford Longley in
The Times
at the height of the Miners’ Strike, ‘the time may be soon when it is fashionable to be “wet”. If it does happen the Church of England could reasonably claim to have started it.’
84
Broadly speaking, the Church of England’s socio-political values had been forged in the Second World War and engendered a sort of patrician decency; a sense of ‘this will not do’. This ethos had remained largely intact despite flirtations with 1960s radicalism, which meant that its leadership at least were disinclined to see politics and indeed all aspects of national life, in adversarial terms. It might be said that this had been the Anglican way of doing things since its inception. As the historian Brian Harrison has noted, the Elizabethan religious settlement, in pursuing a doctrinal middle road between Catholicism and Puritanism, ‘set the tone’ for Anglicanism ‘by exemplifying the
via media
’.
85
This tradition continued into the twentieth century, whereby the Church of England bishops consistently acted as prominent articulators of these values, particularly in respect to class relations. Individual Anglicans may have held strong partisan convictions but in tone and content the Church of England remained very much tied to its
via media
tradition. The Church of
England had succeeded in exposing some of the moral failings within Thatcherism; Thatcherites, however, were equally determined to disclose similar failings within Anglicanism.
1
Faith in the City: A Call for Action by Church and Nation. The Report of the Archbishop of
Canterbury’s Commission on Urban Priority Areas
(London: Church House, 1985), p. 259
2
Liverpool City Archives, Sheppard Papers, UPA Box,
Faith in the City
file Speech to the Liverpool Diocesan Synod, March 1987
3
Private interview with author
4
TNA, PREM19/658, Fol. 35
5
Ibid., Fol. 22
6
Ibid., Fols. 16, 25, 35
7
The Times
, 27 July 1982
8
Robert Runcie,
The Canterbury Tales
(Channel 4, 1996)
9
The Times
, 27 July 1982
10
Speech at the
Salute to the Task Force
lunch, 12 October 1982
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/105034
11
LCA, SP, National Issues Box, House of Lords file, letter to Hugh Montefiore, 11 April 1983
12
Andrew Partington,
Church and State: The Contribution of the Church of England Bishops to
the House of Lords during the Thatcher Years
(Milton Keynes, 2006)
13
David Winter,
Winter’s Tale: Living through an Age of Change in Church and Media
(Oxford: Lion, 2001), p. 76
14
D. Rogers,
Politics, Prayer and Parliament
(London: Continuum, 2000), p. 142
15
John Habgood,
Church and Nation in a Secular Age
(London: Darton, Longman and Todd), p. 63
16
Kenneth Leech,
Struggle In Babylon: Racism in the Cities and Churches in Britain
(London: Sheldon, 1988), pp. 145–6
17
York University Library, Borthwick Institute, Blanch Papers, BP1/BLA/4/6/4, Royal Wedding file,
Thought for the Day
, 29 July 1981
18
A. H. Halsey, ‘On Methods and Morals’ in Abrams, Mark, David Gerard & Noel Timms,
Values and Social Change in Britain
(Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 1985), p. 12
19
LPL, RP, Runcie/Main/1983/222, letter to Clifford Longley, 26 October 1983
20
Proc. of the Gen. Synod 1982
, Vol. 13, No. 3, 11 November 1982, p. 958
21
The Times
, 30 August 1976
22
P. Elsom and D. Porter,
4 million reasons to care: how your church can help the unemployed
, (Bromley: Marc Europe, 1985), p. 7
23
G. Ecclestone, ‘Coping with Caring’,
Crucible
, January–March 1985, p. 2
24
Speech to Women’s Royal Voluntary Service National Conference, 19 January 1981
25
Parl. Proc.
, HL Debs, 8 April 1981, Vol. 419, Cols. 547–8
26
Anthony Seldon,
Major: A Political Life
(London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1997), p. 362
27
Liverpool Cathedral Archives, Worlock Papers, Series 13, Box X, A Toxteth Riots, Letter to Frank Judd, 11 July 1981
28
No. 10 record of conversation, Margaret Thatcher, Archbishop Worlock and Bishop of Warrington, 13 July 1981
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/134870
29
The Times
, 27 May 1981
30
Faith in the City
, p. 21
31
Ibid., p. 208
32
Sunday Times
, 1 December 1985
33
Faith in the City
, p. xiv
34
Interview with the
Catholic Herald
, 5 December 1978
http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/103793
35
Atherton’s statement also echoes Tawney’s statement: ‘What thoughtful rich people call the problem of poverty, thoughtful poor people call with equal justice a problem of riches.’
36
Faith in the City
, p. xv
37
Daily Mail
, 2 December 1985
38
David Jenkins, ‘Christian Doctrine: The Challenge to and from Poverty’ reprinted in his
God, Politics and the Future
(London: SCM Press, 1988), p. 60
39
Frank Field,
The Politics of Paradise: A Christian Approach to the Kingdom
(London: Collins, 1987), p. 69
40
David Jenkins, ‘Justice, the Market and Healthcare’ in
The Market and Healthcare
(Edinburgh: Centre for Theology and Public Issues, 1990), p. 2
41
Ibid., p. 7
42
Proc. of the Gen. Synod 1989
, Vol. 20, No. 2, 11 July 1989, p. 864
43
Daily Telegraph
, 19 April 1984
44
LCA, SP, UPA Box,
Faith in the City
file, letter to the Chief Rabbi, 4 March 1986
45
LCA, SP, Publications Box 5, Press Statements 1989–93, The Debrabant Lecture 1989, 10 May 1989, p. 6, 7
46
LPL, CAA, MS 4445, Minutes of the Council of Christian Action, 19 June 1979, Fol. 17; Minutes of the Council of Christian Action, 19 July 1986
47
Joe Hasler, ‘With you always – but absent?’
Crucible
, (January–March 1987), p. 13
48
The Perception of Poverty Europe
(Brussels: European Communities Commission, 1977)
49
‘The 24 Steps’,
Crucible
(July–September 1986), pp. 46–7
50
York University Library, Borthwick Institute, PC 62.12.YOR, York Diocesan Leaflet, February 1989
51
Winchester Churchman
, No. 317, August 1989, pp. 4–5
52
Ibid., No. 304, July 1988, p. 8; No. 305, August 1988, p. 7
53
Ibid., No. 306, September 1988, p. 1
54
Yorkshire Post
, 18 October 1983
55
The Times
, 1 July 1988
56
LPL, RP, Runcie/Main/1983/137, Letter from Lord Hailsham, 9 February 1983, Fol. 4
57
Winchester Churchman
, No. 243, February 1983, p. 1
58
Daily Mirror
, 16 December 1985. David Sheppard had in fact stated that he believed that it was ‘very difficult to find thoughtful Christians on the Right’ even though the press incorrectly quoted him as saying that it was impossible to be a Christian and vote Conservative
59
LCA, SP, UPA Box,
Faith in the City
follow up envelope, No date; Ibid.; Letter from parishioner (name withheld), 22 December 1985
60
LPL, RP, Runcie/main/1983/161, Letter to Neil Kinnock, 29 June 1983, Fol. 4
61
Frank Field, ‘Socialism and the Politics of Radical Distribution’ reprinted in Ormrod
(
ed.),
Fellowship, Freedom and Equality
(London: CSM, 1990), p. 57
62
Militant was a Trotskyite left-wing splinter group which had no more than a couple of thousand members but dominated Liverpool City Council
63
LCA, WP, Series 13, Box X, B/2 Liverpool Rate Crisis 1984, Letter from Patrick Jenkin, 8 October 1985
64
Ivor Crewe & Anthony King,
SDP: The Birth, Life and Death of the Social Democratic Party
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995), p. 134
65
MCL, BCP, Z Files, 2/01 Politics, National File, Letter to Shirley Williams, 3 February 1981
66
Ibid., Reply from Shirley Williams, 13 March 1981
67
Brian Jenner,
Christian Reflections on the Miners’ Strike
(New City: Sheffield, 1986)
68
MCL, BCP, Z Files, Section 5, ‘The mining dispute and the churches’, 7 March 1985
69
Jenkins’s enthronement sermon reprinted in Jenkins,
God, Politics and the Future
, p. 8
70
The Times
, 25 September 1984, 2 October 1984
71
‘Throne and Altar’, John Selwyn Gummer. Copy held in MCL, BCP, M289, Z File, 2/3, 18 November 1984
72
The Times
, 2 October 1984
73
Sunday Times
, 23 September 1984
74
The Times
, 8 October 1984
75
Jenkins,
God, Politics and the Future
, p. 7
76
Ibid., pp. 5–6
77
Richard Vinen,
Thatcher’s Britain
(London: Simon & Schuster, 2009), p. 176
78
Daily Mirror
, 23 November 1984
79
MCA, WP, Series 13, Liverpool Papers, Secular Matters Box VI, A/7, Strikes: Miners’ Hardship Fund 1985–6, anonymous letter, no date
80
MCA, WP, Series 13, VI Social Issues A/5, Strikes, Pay and Trade Unions 1979–90, VI A/5 Miners’ strike 1984/5, Public statements, Letter from Peter Walker, 4 December 1984
81
MCL, BCP, Z Files, Section 5, ‘The mining dispute and the churches’, 7 March 1985
82
David Jenkins,
Calling of the Cuckoo: Not quite an autobiography
(London: Bloomsbury, 2002); David Jenkins,
Market Whys and Human Wherefores: Thinking about Markets,
Politics and People
(London: Continuum, 2004), p. 50
83
The Guardian
, 24 September 1984
http://www.theguardian.com/politics/1984/sep/24/past.hugoyoung
84
The Times
, 15 October 1984
85
Brian Harrison, ‘The Rise, Fall and Rise of Political Consensus in Britain since 1940’,
History
, Vol. 84, No. 274, (April 1999), p. 308