Quote..Lemongrove [ What you fail to appreciateGrandadis that the British peoplelikethe ‘centre’ thinking and don’t go for extremes,why do you think Blair did so very well!] End Quote
Lemongrove, I feel that the Labour movement today think on the Blair years as an extension of the John Major years and it is true to say that centre thinking was dominant and popular throughout that period.
However, Blairs big failure (outside the Iraqi war) was not revising the anti trade union legislation brought in initially by Thatcher and then extended by subsequent Conservative governments.
The Original legislation of having postal ballots Before any industrial action can be called was at least somewhat acceptable even to the trade unions. However, the extension of that legislation that requires fourteen days notice to be given to an employer before industrial action is to take place was devastating. Further legislation stating the name of all employees taking part in the any action was also to be given to the employer was even more devastating and completely reset to the balance between employee and employer.
The above has brought down drastically the number of industrial actions taking place, but has also very largely contributed to the low wages growth and through that employer/employee inequality throughout middle Britain.
In the above, low wages mean that many younger workers with families do not earn sufficient to get access to a mortgage and own their own home. Workers have also not had the power to resist widespread agency labour being introduced into workplaces, and worst of all the gig economy workers that would have been resisted in workplaces by those with full employment contracts in previous decades can no longer be resisted.
Lemongrove, yes centre thinking was popular among middle Britain during the 1990s and early 2000s, but as the last General Election demonstrated that is now changing as middle Britain seems now to be realising that thinking no longer promotes their interests and ambitions