Anorak

Anorak News | Margaret Thatcher urged ‘abandon Liverpool to managed decline’

Margaret Thatcher urged ‘abandon Liverpool to managed decline’

by | 30th, December 2011

DID Margaret Thatcher like Liverpool? Those around her didn’t. In the wake of the Toxteth Riots, Margaret Thatcher was secretly urged to abandon Liverpool to a fate of “managed decline”, according to official papers made public for the first time today. Senior ministers in Thatcher’s Conservative government urged her not to waste public money on the “stony ground” of Merseyside, suggesting it would be like “trying to make water flow uphill”.

The riots in Toxteth followed the year’s earlier Brixton riots. Lord Scarman’s reports attributed their cause to “complex political, social and economic factors” leading to “disposition towards violent protest”.

Not all of Thatcher’s children benefitted from the free market and the booming City.

Eyewitness Christopher Davies said the trouble was organised:

“I’ve seen them wearing balaclava helmets, just like Belfast, handing out petrol bombs and telling people where to go. There are people standing on street corners with pick-axe handles looking like hell’s preachers to make sure no one interferes with what’s going on.”

That was a small part of Liverpool in 1981, a city that Westminster wanted to forget…

12370632

Image 2 of 14

EMBARGOED TO 0001 FRIDAY DECEMBER 30. File photo dated 05/08/81 of Environment Secretary Michael Heseltine at a press conference in Liverpool where he unveiled his 13 point plan to start tackling the problems of riot torn Merseyside before returning to London after his two and a half week fact finding mission to the area. With him is Sir Trevor Jones (second from right), leader of the Liverpool City Council. Margaret Thatcher was secretly urged to abandon Liverpool to a fate of 'managed decline' in the wake of the Toxteth riots, according to official papers made public for the first time today.



Posted: 30th, December 2011 | In: Politicians Comment | TrackBack | Permalink