Labour: The Wilderness Years | Complete Series | 1995 BBC Documentary

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  • čas přidán 21. 06. 2022
  • A four-part documentary following the history of the Labour Party from 1979 to 1995 when it was on the cusp of a return to power.
    Beginning with its bitter fallout and ‘betrayal’ in Government, the documentary features a wide cast - Michael Foot, Dennis Healey, Shirley Williams, Tony Benn, Peter Shore, Neil Kinnock, Jon Lansman, Jeremy Corbyn, Peter Mandelson, Tony Blair, Gordon Brown, Robyn Cook, David Blunkett, John Prescott and many more.
    OO:OO - Cast into the Wilderness
    Out of power and riven with strife, this programme tells the inside story of the Labour Party's bitter civil war with leading players speaking with devastating frankness about the time from 1979-81.
    57:14 - Comrades of War
    In the early 80's Michael Foot was leader of a divided Labour Party. The 1981 deputy leadership battle between Denis Healey and Tony Benn split party loyalties and Labour sank to its lowest popularity ever.
    01:57:02 - Enter the Rose
    Senior Labour politicians explore the Labour Party's long years in opposition. In 1983 after a humiliating defeat by Margaret Thatcher, Labour elected Neil Kinnock as its new leader in the hope that he can modernise the party.
    02:55:01 - The Pursuit of Power
    Key political figures from the Labour Party tell the story of the struggle to modernise the party, culminating in the rise to power of Tony Blair and the arrival of a new breed of Labour politician.

Komentáře • 164

  • @stephenpettett3472
    @stephenpettett3472 Před 3 měsíci +5

    Thanks for posting. Never caught this when it was on but enjoyed it immensely, even if much of it is painful to watch. The lessons of history are ongoing,

  • @castlelord8995
    @castlelord8995 Před měsícem +2

    Thanks so much for posting!

  • @Semisonic56
    @Semisonic56 Před 2 lety +44

    A great documentary. The Blair and Brown last year was good, but not as open or deep as this one. It’ll be interesting to see the documentary on the Corbyn years. History repeating itself again.

  • @philipwendt9668
    @philipwendt9668 Před 7 měsíci +5

    ...brilliant documentary! Thanks!

  • @jonathanmontgomery5178
    @jonathanmontgomery5178 Před rokem +28

    Perfect editing 34:50 - Ashton says idiots thought Healey was an asshole because he told them they were idiots to their face, and then cuts to Bryan Gould saying Healey was an asshole. Lol😂

  • @Da1Dez
    @Da1Dez Před rokem +45

    I look forward to when they do the 2010 - 20?? version concerning Brown, Milliband, Corbyn and Starmer's wilderness period.

    • @dylanmorrissey7339
      @dylanmorrissey7339 Před rokem +4

      Not gonna last past 13/14 or 15 years

    • @thedukeofswellington1827
      @thedukeofswellington1827 Před rokem

      @@dylanmorrissey7339 we will see

    • @thejfoshow1320
      @thejfoshow1320 Před rokem

      @@thedukeofswellington1827is Starmer Kinnock or Blair I guess…he is remarkably Kinnock like in some ways. We’ll see if he’s the same in elections

    • @Pikaling3408
      @Pikaling3408 Před rokem +6

      It's on the cusp of a return to power now under Starmer.

    • @Da1Dez
      @Da1Dez Před rokem +2

      I still don't know if that'll be the case, the best for Labour will be a hung parliament. Starmer still doesn't strike me as someone that people in Northern heartlands like, or even popular with the marginal seats like my one in Waveney, a key seat to win since Labour held it in 97, 2001 and 2005.

  • @MrDavey2010
    @MrDavey2010 Před 3 měsíci

    Very interesting. Thanks for posting

  • @craw.54
    @craw.54 Před 2 lety +21

    They were in opposition for around 16 years by the time this aired.

    • @ralphdavidson9542
      @ralphdavidson9542 Před rokem +8

      Yes this was meant to support the great Blairite revolution!
      Which was actually bloody awful

    • @BlyatimirPootin
      @BlyatimirPootin Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@ralphdavidson9542yes, so awful

  • @Amber90125
    @Amber90125 Před rokem +4

    Brilliant Documentry &

  • @Pookleberry
    @Pookleberry Před 3 měsíci +8

    Excellent and informative documentary.
    As an ex-pat of 40 years in Denmark, I do feel that all this SHIT (pardon my French) in the Labour Party could have been avoided by the introduction of proportional representation, like we have in DK....
    This means that the various wings of Labour could have formed their own parties, been their own political entities, with avoiding all the squabbling in one party, ultimately weakening it.
    Same goes for the Tories.

    • @lloydnaylor6113
      @lloydnaylor6113 Před měsícem

      Does PR in Denmark give a functioning government or does it takes weeks or indeed months to get a coalition together like in other European nations? FFP gives strong government and indeed in the UK where a party loses its majority like in 1978 and 2010 a coalition or a support system from another party can be quickly be enacted, like the Liberals support for Labour in the late 70s and again in 2010 for the Conservatives.

  • @duncanbick6732
    @duncanbick6732 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Does anyone know where the footage of Foot in Tribune and on the bus at about 40:00 comes from? Is the full piece on YT?

  • @deanunio
    @deanunio Před 3 měsíci +4

    Will need to do a new one Wilderness Years Part 2 - 2010-2024

  • @dlamiss
    @dlamiss Před 5 měsíci +4

    Best political drama ive ever watched and im not a Labour man

  • @johnoriordan5695
    @johnoriordan5695 Před 7 měsíci +3

    I would like my leaders cunning, smart and devoted to the British people.

  • @IronFist.
    @IronFist. Před měsícem

    Please enable automatic captions for this.
    (I don't understand why CZcams still doesn't allow the user to enable this on any video)

  • @Albert-Arthur-Wison225
    @Albert-Arthur-Wison225 Před 11 měsíci +8

    He can’t / couldn’t help it, but ,my goodness, Blair’s voice ! Close your eyes and you can see a public school boy, capped and sporting shorts.

    • @stevebbuk9557
      @stevebbuk9557 Před 8 měsíci

      His history of lay preacher and converting to Roman Catholicism, yet plunging us into a war from which President Bush gave him an opt-out.

    • @blehoo1
      @blehoo1 Před 7 měsíci +1

      But surely even saying that betrays a class prejudice. If someone is born into privilege it should never preclude them from leading the Labour Party any more than someone born into destitution should stop someone joining the Conservative Party. All that matters is talent and ability. I heard the other day that last year Edinburgh University did not accept one single undergraduate who had obtained their qualifications from a private school to read Law. How can that ever be right? We are cancelling people based upon what they are born into.

    • @thedualtransition6070
      @thedualtransition6070 Před 6 měsíci

      And a turncoat traitor

    • @npe1
      @npe1 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Blair came from a far more humble background than Benn but you don't seem able to criticise Benn who went to public school - Westminster School.

    • @eightiesmusic1984
      @eightiesmusic1984 Před měsícem

      @@blehoo1Levelling down to level up.

  • @johnmacon8630
    @johnmacon8630 Před 5 měsíci +12

    Benn is so arrogant and sanctimonious. Causes all this uproar, then says he didn’t expect to win? He would’ve made a great American politician.

    • @richmotroni
      @richmotroni Před 4 měsíci +2

      Benn would’ve been a horrible Prime Minister. He was so arrogant and unpleasant to work with that he would have alienated his entire cabinet.

    • @ThomasDanielsen1000
      @ThomasDanielsen1000 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@richmotroni He was indeed despised by large swaths of the Labour party, not least by his Cabinet colleagues from the 74-79 government.

    • @tomgibson6801
      @tomgibson6801 Před měsícem

      Kinnock was the arrogant and sanctimonius one

    • @ThomasDanielsen1000
      @ThomasDanielsen1000 Před měsícem

      @@tomgibson6801 How?

    • @SplashTasty
      @SplashTasty Před měsícem

      @@tomgibson6801 lol grow up.

  • @ohheyitskevinc
    @ohheyitskevinc Před 6 měsíci

    Cheers for finding this.
    The national Labour Party was in the wilderness, but they had plenty of councils across the country back then, but the national party never listened to them and took them for granted. People would see the national Labour Party on tv infighting, vote Tory for MP and vote Labour for councils. They knew their local councillors who canvassed, but didn’t trust the national party. Labour can get to power in Westminster by going right and dropping clause IV and everything, but they do that and lose county councils - because they don’t listen to the local party or their constituents. They haven’t changed.

  • @buy.to.let.britain
    @buy.to.let.britain Před 6 měsíci +2

    why did they want industry when it was discovered later that you can just print money ?

  • @PlayMoreGolf-RipOff
    @PlayMoreGolf-RipOff Před 10 měsíci +16

    Roy Hattersley pretty much summed up why Labour was such a catastrophic failure for 15years until Blair became leader.
    They only focused on trying to appeal to the poorest people in the country which was around 10% of the electorate…. I’m sorry but if you disregard 90% of the people who are eligible to vote and show no interest in them or their aspirations you will lose as you become a niche party!

    • @stevebbuk9557
      @stevebbuk9557 Před 8 měsíci +5

      Isn't there some validity in Tony Benn's point that if you renounce everything you believe in for the pursuit of power, then fail to achieve it you' end up as emperor with no clothes?

    • @Da1Dez
      @Da1Dez Před 8 měsíci

      I've never understood why Labour don't say they're red tories to get elected but then when they get into power they help the poor more and more, that's the opposite to what all Conservative governments do and if anything less corrupt.

    • @Fort976
      @Fort976 Před 7 měsíci +7

      ​@@stevebbuk9557But they didn't renounce everything they believed in - there were huge differences in terms of policy between New Labour (even at its most moderate) and the Tories.
      Also, Benn was always an outlier, not at all representative of the main traditions of the British Labour movement; opposing Benn was NOT betrayal of Labour values, in fact, it was the opposite.

    • @stevebbuk9557
      @stevebbuk9557 Před 7 měsíci

      I was talking primarily of Kinnock and the 1992 election. But Blair had shifted Labour massively from the manifesto he stood on in 1983.@@Fort976

    • @th8257
      @th8257 Před 7 měsíci +5

      @@stevebbuk9557 Benn was not representative of the wider Labour movement and traditional Labour voters, although he always spoke like he thought he was. It's why how, the more powerful he got within the Labour Party, the fewer votes they got. I think though that the comment he made was directed at Neil Kinnock, who had been a man of the left of the Labour Party like Benn. Roy Hattersley summed up the dilemma that Kinnock was in. That Kinnock would not have won the leadership if he had not been of the left, that he was of the left meant he had no chance of winning a general election, and that if he tried to move to the centre, he'd be accused of abandoning his beliefs.

  • @syedadeelhussain2691
    @syedadeelhussain2691 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Some of the most formidable intellectuals are not good leaders.
    Because, they are not decision markers, but, only work as either theory builders or abstract problem solvers, which requires a complex mind to understand and appreciate.
    From Callaghan to John Smith, the Labour party, got entangled in issues which hardly helped the common person in the streets.
    Credit must go to New Labour and Blair who was masquerading as a socialist.

    • @thedualtransition6070
      @thedualtransition6070 Před 6 měsíci

      You mean Blair being a turncoat and traitor to his party, just like Callaghan and Healey, the SDP and the anti-Corbyn MPs and Labour Head Office. The result, the shithole we now call Britain with uncontrolled immigration, failing public services and levels of wealth inequality travelling back to the 1800s.

  • @lucianopavarotti2843
    @lucianopavarotti2843 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Story here is of the perpetual struggle in Labour between "The Movement" who pride themselves on pure ideals and don't want to be besmirched by the compromises necessary in exercising power, and "The Party" that wants power to implement progressive policies short of the ideal.

    • @SplashTasty
      @SplashTasty Před měsícem

      pretty much, although people are complicated. All of these men and women probably had the best of intentions in their hearts and minds, but there is no correlation between beliefs I find to be in line with my values and having the skills to actually win and implement legislation. Tony Benn, was obviously a guy who deeply believed in trade union and 'socialist' values, but as per nearly everyone who worked with him he was borderline uncompromising and in Politics you need to be able to compromise.

    • @lucianopavarotti2843
      @lucianopavarotti2843 Před měsícem +1

      @@SplashTasty Thanks. To mind mind., it's hard to avoid the conclusion that Tony Benn was, despite his erudition, little more a narcissist. He paraded as a man of the people but ultimately was an egotist who deluded the people.

    • @lucianopavarotti2843
      @lucianopavarotti2843 Před 13 dny

      @@SplashTasty I think Tony Benn was a disaster. He is often romanticised by followers who were taken in and he was a very effective propagandist on his own behalf. But I think his main interest was himself and he was greedy for power. He vandalised Labour and made it unelectable in the public mind. His shenanigans wasted years and years in the reform of the party and helped give Thatcherism an open road.

  • @wessexfox5197
    @wessexfox5197 Před 4 měsíci +1

    31:08 the fudging and the mudging 😂 wtf does that mean

    • @SMAXZO
      @SMAXZO Před 4 měsíci +1

      To avoid making decisions or give a clear answer.

    • @wessexfox5197
      @wessexfox5197 Před 4 měsíci

      @@SMAXZO I know what he was trying to say it’s just very odd phrasing.

    • @SMAXZO
      @SMAXZO Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@wessexfox5197 I guess it's the flow...I mean, slush and mush..can't just leave fudging left hanging, right?

  • @jonnysmyth9435
    @jonnysmyth9435 Před 3 měsíci +4

    It was nice to watch some short snippets of the programme in between the 50,000 ads every 2 minutes

  • @thedukeofswellington1827

    1:08:16 scathing 🤣🤣🤣

  • @JK-br1mu
    @JK-br1mu Před 11 měsíci

    01:32:56 Lmbo

  • @joseph2196
    @joseph2196 Před 3 měsíci

    What if Callaghan had continued as Labour Leader and Leader of the Opposition?
    Would Labour have won in 1987 or 1992 even if it couldn't in 1983?
    Till around 1981, Labour was leading in opinion poll. Labour would have remained a credible united force capable of governing at the very least

  • @WilliamSmith-mx6ze
    @WilliamSmith-mx6ze Před měsícem

    Neil Kinnock IS Kinnock. Bill Kinnock IS Uncle Bill. Aunt Gladys IS Aunt Gladys. And the Labour Party IS... totally missing.

  • @stevemartin6528
    @stevemartin6528 Před měsícem

    79 to 94 is 15 not 16 years

  • @thedukeofswellington1827

    1:24:20 well they need to do it again because labour is unelectable

    • @briandelaney9710
      @briandelaney9710 Před 10 měsíci +6

      23 pts ahead of the Tories

    • @eightiesmusic1984
      @eightiesmusic1984 Před 7 měsíci

      @@briandelaney9710 The Tories have destroyed Britain since 1979, including the red Tories of Labour under Blair/Brown/Starmer.

    • @andypandy9013
      @andypandy9013 Před 7 měsíci +2

      In your view maybe. The Opinion Polls would appear to show the opposite.
      I am happy to state now that, in my opinion, the Tories will get as big an @rse kicking at the next election as Labour got in 1983.

    • @eightiesmusic1984
      @eightiesmusic1984 Před 7 měsíci

      @@andypandy9013 Why the capital letters for opinion polls? The poll lead will narrow considerably before the election and is fragile. Former Home Secretary ( correct use of capitals, take note) David Blunkett has said recently that Labour has a major challenge to even achieve a small majority ( I paraphrase). Regardless, it does not matter if the worst government in UK political history is replaced by a Starmer administration committed to the same policies as the Tories. That is precisely why Britain is in a doom loop of decline with two parties adopting the same failed neoliberal policies that are the root of the problem.

    • @andypandy9013
      @andypandy9013 Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@eightiesmusic1984
      As an English Teacher (correct use) I do not need lessons regarding punctuation or format from you. Thank you very much.

  • @christopheroshea9799
    @christopheroshea9799 Před 2 lety +2

    better in opposition than government

  • @aarondavis8943
    @aarondavis8943 Před 3 měsíci

    The Liverpool Trots...what a bunch of gangsters.

  • @MARAK709
    @MARAK709 Před 13 dny

    No wonder the UK is in the state it is in when you look at the comments below. It is made clear in the latter part of the documentary that the Kinnock leadership accommodated itself to Thatcherism and Blair continued that process with even more enthusiasm. Now what we see around us is the result of Thatcherism: the majority of people now struggling to pay rents on properties that they have no long-term tenancy on, no chance of affording a home of your own, a semi-privatised NHS which will only decline further, and shit being pumped into water.
    At the end of the day, you can rail against Benn all you like, but he was opposed to this ideology and was prescient about what the outcome would be. Be good Tories and adhere to that oft declared Tory principle: take some personal responsibility. If you voted Tory, voted Blair and voted for the Tories since 2010, then it is your fault the country is in the state it is in.

  • @str.77
    @str.77 Před rokem +3

    1:49:41 "I warn you not to be ordinary" could still be a sogan of the left (and alas, many others, today, albeit with a very different meaning.

  • @andypandy9013
    @andypandy9013 Před 7 měsíci +6

    I am old enough to remember when the left wing had a stranglehold on the Labour Party in the 1970s through the 1980s. When the ridiculous 1983 General Election Labour Manifesto, with its pledges of Unilateral Nuclear Disarmament and sweeping nationalisations, was described as "The longest suicide note in history". As indeed was proved when the results came in. And again at the next General Election. And the one after that. And the one after that.
    From 1979 to the present time in 2023 Labour have only held power for 30% of those last 44 years - the 13 years from 1997 to 2010.
    Peter Mandelson put it very well recently when talking about the General Elections from 1979 onwards:
    "Defeat, defeat, defeat, defeat.
    Blair, Blair, Blair.
    Defeat, defeat, defeat, defeat."
    I very much hope that the current Labour Party can finally learn the lesson from their past.

    • @Dbdbe1
      @Dbdbe1 Před 6 měsíci

      Blair only won because of Brown in 2005.

    • @andypandy9013
      @andypandy9013 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@Dbdbe1
      Frankly, I do not agree with you but OK then:
      "Defeat, defeat, defeat, defeat.
      Blair, Blair, Blair & Brown.
      Defeat, defeat, defeat, defeat."
      Happy now? 🙂

    • @andypandy9013
      @andypandy9013 Před 5 měsíci

      Brown did not win the 2005 election, Blair was PM and Labour leader at the time so he did.
      Anyway, it was Peter Mandelson who said it. Not me.

    • @robertrulebirtannia
      @robertrulebirtannia Před 2 měsíci

      Amazing how people get outraged that a left wing party should have left wing policies.

    • @eightiesmusic1984
      @eightiesmusic1984 Před měsícem

      Labour MPs who disagree with a manifesto too left wing for their liking should refuse to go forward for selection or be deselected. The right has won and should be happy that it can continue to implement Thatcherism indefinitely with the support of a majority of the population under FPTP even if the left lives rent free in its head.

  • @mag-7924
    @mag-7924 Před měsícem +1

    Tony Benn being incredibly prescient through this whole thing

  • @merseydave1
    @merseydave1 Před 11 měsíci +9

    Being 58 I lived through this ... as a Socialist I want a Socialist society, yet the people who vote Do Not Vote For It. The prime examples are 1983 2017 and 2019 .
    So lets look at what has happened Labour have won when they have taken a liberal outlook ( I do not like what I am saying) I am just reflecting on what has happened over my time of political activity. Thay are taking a liberal stance again .... To Win Again!.
    My Dad explained to me a long time ago ... he said this, "Labour changed society for The Better in 1945 to1951 but when people have to pay more tax "they don't tell you that thay vote tory, BUT THEY DO! " ... His words stand up today!.

    • @kailashpatel1706
      @kailashpatel1706 Před 11 měsíci +2

      My own view is that people in England are simply strongly bound to voting Tory, its hard for Labour to make headway among an English voting public..(either in the rural areas or wealthy suburbs, the working class Tory vote is also strong..I hate saying this as well..My friends parents doing working class jobs in the 1980s all voted Thatcher and now complain about a NHS in a mess..I think people get the governments they vote for..

    • @kailashpatel1706
      @kailashpatel1706 Před 11 měsíci

      I think electoral reform could help Labour..

    • @merseydave1
      @merseydave1 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@kailashpatel1706 You have to get into power to do that !!!

    • @kailashpatel1706
      @kailashpatel1706 Před 11 měsíci

      @@merseydave1 Labour was in power between 1997 and 2010 and did not move the dial forward on that issue at all..

    • @thedualtransition6070
      @thedualtransition6070 Před 6 měsíci

      In 2017 right-wing Labour MPs and Labour Head Office acted utterly traitorously dueing the election campaign to make sure that Corbyn did not win, and even then he nearly did in a massive turnaround for the Labour vote. That's why the establishment went after him full bore, and installed the Manchurian establishment candidate Starmer.

  • @system1912
    @system1912 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Neil Kinnock was/is so bloody embarrassing, appalled he’s a fellow Welshman.

  • @Genetulsa1
    @Genetulsa1 Před rokem

    You need to add your commercials at the appropriate times!!!

    • @andrewrobinson8305
      @andrewrobinson8305 Před 10 měsíci +3

      The person who posts the video has no control about when the adverts appear. They’re put in by CZcams, and the timing will vary each time you watch.
      This isn’t the same as TV you know!

    • @allegra0
      @allegra0 Před 7 měsíci

      I’m surprised you put up with them.

  • @ethanorange3705
    @ethanorange3705 Před rokem +10

    supporters of tony ben here come off very well in retrospect.

    • @ralphdavidson9542
      @ralphdavidson9542 Před rokem +2

      Only those who can spell Benn.

    • @ethanorange3705
      @ethanorange3705 Před rokem +4

      @@ralphdavidson9542 yes, obviously ours in an age in which the labour movement must prioritise spelling pedantry above all other concerns. is it labour or labor BTW? my spellcheck doesn't know

    • @ethanorange3705
      @ethanorange3705 Před rokem +2

      @@ralphdavidson9542 ignoramus

    • @thejfoshow1320
      @thejfoshow1320 Před rokem

      True

    • @bruceylike9666
      @bruceylike9666 Před 7 měsíci +5

      Don't agree with this at all to be honest. Benn's challenge of Healey, especially when Foot wanted unity, looks completely ludicrous in retrospect, especially only a couple years from an election when Thatcher was really struggling with the economy and didn't exactly look on track to win. Obviously the Falklands helped her hugely, but the years of stupid infighting in Labour did poor Foot absolutely no favours when he was destroyed at that election. Also, the left-wing Euroscepticism has aged like milk in my opinion.

  • @Robert-tl2vg
    @Robert-tl2vg Před 5 měsíci

    18:02 oh dear lord! What a scruffy old communist mess.

  • @splottpaddy
    @splottpaddy Před 6 měsíci +7

    Corbyn proving he has spoken bollocks for many a year.

    • @eightiesmusic1984
      @eightiesmusic1984 Před měsícem

      The man who saved socialism in Britain and the last chance to reverse Thatcherism. No history book will share your opinion as the verdict on his leadership. The electorate has an unerring ability to be fooled by the Tories ( over 100 years and counting, including the red Tories since Blair) and voting against their own self interest in every election since 1979, despite warnings of the consequences throughout the eighties. They cannot complain about a system that is rigged in favour of the rich ( the whole point of Thatcherism) when they vote for it, including so called 'new' Labour and the red Tories in control of Labour now.

  • @str.77
    @str.77 Před rokem +1

    Oh Tannenbaum, oh Tannenbaum, Labour hängt am Gartenzaun!
    Und dass nicht nur zur Sommerszeit, nein auch im Winter wenn es schneit.
    Oh Gaslatern, oh Gaslatern, wie haben dich die Hunde gern.

  • @EVANGELOSS54
    @EVANGELOSS54 Před 6 měsíci

    It's amazing that Labour actually believed that Benn, Foot, Healy or even Kinnock could ever be voted PM ...

    • @Dbdbe1
      @Dbdbe1 Před 6 měsíci +8

      Healey was a much more plausible candidate than the other three. Tough old bruiser but also a very clever and accomplished man. Read his autobiography.

    • @EVANGELOSS54
      @EVANGELOSS54 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Lord Healey was too bored to bother to even beat Michael Foot ... do you actually think he had the energy to go against Thatcher ?

    • @TimComley
      @TimComley Před 3 měsíci

      @@Dbdbe1agree

    • @Da1Dez
      @Da1Dez Před měsícem

      Denis Healey is the greatest leader Britian NEVER had!

    • @eightiesmusic1984
      @eightiesmusic1984 Před měsícem

      If the comment is any guide it seems unlikely that evangeloss54 does that much reading.

  • @martinwalsh3228
    @martinwalsh3228 Před rokem +2

    Were back in Government (1997-2010) Hong Kong returns to Chinese Rule, Scotland first Parliament since 1707 & Wales first Parliament since 1536 occurred during the period.

    • @craw.54
      @craw.54 Před rokem +2

      What did he really achieve though?

    • @cameronmckirdy4874
      @cameronmckirdy4874 Před rokem +2

      what's wrong with devolution?

    • @thedualtransition6070
      @thedualtransition6070 Před 6 měsíci +3

      And?

    • @martinwalsh3228
      @martinwalsh3228 Před 6 měsíci

      More took power in 1999.@@thedualtransition6070

    • @MrAJR76
      @MrAJR76 Před 5 měsíci

      The handover of Hong Kong was arranged and scheduled by the previous Tory government. Nothing to do with Blair.

  • @system1912
    @system1912 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Roy Hattersley was truly odious.

  • @strangetrip837
    @strangetrip837 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Next. Labour the Starmer Tory years

  • @thedukeofswellington1827

    What do you know back in the wilderness for 13 years haha

  • @user-vk2qw8fs7l
    @user-vk2qw8fs7l Před 7 měsíci +3

    Tony Blair IRA lover.

    • @andypandy9013
      @andypandy9013 Před 7 měsíci

      Oh p!ss off!!!! 😠

    • @pauldoyle8035
      @pauldoyle8035 Před 6 měsíci +10

      What a ridiculous comment to make, the man helped to bring peace to an embattled country which was sick of conflict, as a reminder Big Ian shared power with Martin Mc, does that make him a terrorist lover too ?

    • @Dbdbe1
      @Dbdbe1 Před 6 měsíci

      Yes stupid comment

    • @TimComley
      @TimComley Před 3 měsíci +1

      Well rounded argument ffs