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I've only just got round to reading the details of the local election results in Oxford. I voted, but I have to admit I found it terribly hard to care very much about these recent elections. My ward re-elected its Green councillor, but even had there been a switch to the close-running second (Labour), I doubt it would seriously have affected my life. Somehow it's difficult to believe that even had the council changed from NOC to one party that there would have been any appreciable impact on day-to-day life.

Whenever elections come round, I'm always reminded that I've only ever cared deeply about the result of an election once in my life, and that was the general election in 1987. I waited for the outcome of that vote in utter terror; I was ten at the time.

Junior school kids have a rare talent for picking select facts from the news, and making their own story to fit. In 1987, "the Yorkshire Ripper will get you" was still a common phrase in my class - for years Darlington was caught between the devil and the deep blue sea in the area between Yorkshire, where the murders occurred, and Wearside, where everyone "knew" the Ripper lived. That Peter Sutcliffe had been behind bars since 1981 had somehow passed us by. To us, he was still a very real threat.

I presume some similar process of logic, which I'm now utterly unable to follow, led to the firm belief among the "top class" of Cockerton School that if Labour won the '87 election, world war three would immediately follow. WWIII would, naturally, be a nuclear show. Brought up on Action Man and toy guns, the boys in my class thought that war would be great fun and were looking forward to it immensely. I can still see four of them walking round the playground the week before the election, arms about each other's shoulders, chanting 1-2-3-4, we want a bloody war. One of the dinner ladies told them off - but only for saying "bloody". They changed it to we want a nuclear war and everyone was happy.

Nuclear war in the late 80s was, to me, a very real prospect. Although I never saw things like the Protect and Survive film, much of that thinking was still in people's consciousness. Occasionally one still saw tips for how to survive or protect, although people were moving round to the idea that nothing would help. It was barely a year since the disaster at the Chernobyl power plant.

References to the nuclear threat were common - for years one of the ladies' toilets in our local Arts Centre had a scribbled message on the wall:

In the event of nuclear attack:
Close all doors and windows
Loosen tight clothing
Put your head between your knees and kiss your arse goodbye


Hardly original, but yet another thing that reminded me that said attack was imminent.

I remember being on holiday in Whitby one year, and CND had staged a demonstration to coincide with the rowing regatta. They handed out photocopied leaflets which read:

They'll give you four minutes warning. We're warning you NOW.

To get to Whitby, of course, we'd driven past the "golf balls", the three huge, white, geodesic domes of RAF Fylingdales which at that time formed the British arm of the nuclear early warning system. I was horrified to discover that all they'd do was give us enough time to send off "ours". I knew that my dad, then a British Telecom employee, had been travelling the area for months fitting the black boxes which would actually relay the alarm to rural areas. The system was in place, ready and waiting for when we needed it. I always saw it as a when, not an if.

Of course, I didn't know what the alarm would sound like. Nor did anyone else, so I guessed that in towns there might be some kind of speaker system. The summer evenings in '87 featured many cars driving around broadcasting loud canvassing - and every one made me jump, straining my ears until it told me about a local candidate instead of delivering a warning to get inside and wait for attack. Even these days, if I hear an unfamilar type of alarm, it is still my first gut reaction to wonder if it's the early warning system.

So, the war was imminent, and all this hung in the balance of whether Labour won the election. I wasn't sure what benefits Labour were offering which might outweigh such a disadvantage, but clearly some people were prepared to risk it - Darlington was (and still is) solid Labour country.

Although I know broadly what my parents' politics are, I have no idea how they voted in 1987. Our household wasn't an overtly political one, and I really knew very little about the situation of the day. Apparently my main contribution to political opinion thus far had been, on hearing Yesterday in Parliament, asking why the backbenchers' mummies let them behave like that. If I'd asked my parents about my nuclear fears I'm sure they'd have given me a much more realistic picture - but I didn't, because it hadn't occurred to me that what I'd heard might not be true. Hearing my parents talk about it would just make it seem all the more real, so I kept quiet.

My political grasp just about extended to understand that Mrs Thatcher had stolen our milk, caused the miners' strike, and closed so many of the pits which employed people in the north east. Yet the news that she'd been elected for a third term was nothing but a relief - war wasn't on the doorstep after all.

Date: 2006-05-10 11:24 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Darlington used to be one of those constituencies which coincidentally returned an MP of the ruling party so swung from Con to Lab and back and forth. The council has also been Con and Lab controlled over the years. We now have Alan Milburn, the man who gave up his family to spend more time with his politics - not that he lives in the constituency and, as far as I know, hasn't a home in it. He lives near his partner's work, in a seriously expensive dormitory village.

A Labour Voter Quibbles...

Date: 2006-05-12 11:04 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] marjory.livejournal.com
Darlington was (and still is) solid Labour country.

Ahem! In 1987 Michael 'Handbag' Fallon of the evil Conservative Party got in in Darlo for the 2nd time in a row... I was of quite the opposite impression to you guys re Labour, evidently. My nightmares came true post that election... Not that my dreams came true in 1997, but for one glorious night...

Alan Milburn never exactly struck me as being an especially sympathetic type, but Michael Fallon was an ARSE.

Re: A Labour Voter Quibbles...

Date: 2006-05-12 09:44 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Grant you that on Michael Fallon (when he was out of policitcs for a while, I worked for the firm doing his PR), though he did at least live in the town. You are probably too young to remember his Labour predecessor, who also lived in town (whose sick child begged not be sent home from school because their house was such hell during election campaigns) and the Tory before that, who didn't live in the constituency either. I'm afraid I expect my MP, whether I support his party or not, to live in the constituency (it should be a condition of BEING an MP) and at least give an impression of caring about it.

Re: A Labour Voter Quibbles...

Date: 2006-05-16 04:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] marjory.livejournal.com
I am actually too young to remember MF's predecessor really, but 1983 was about the first time I can recall that I took any interest in politics whatsoever, but then a general election and a junior school where that sort of thing was discussed will do that for you...

I agree with you entirely that, where possible (and it truly ought to be) an MP should live at least within spitting distance of his constituency, especially if s/he is to have any chance of comprehending quite what issues trouble his electorate, who, believe it or not, he is supposed to represent. I think that, on average, MPs earn their 60k per year, but an awful lot cannot really see beyond the money and power that such a career can bring. On the other hand, who ever said that politicians were nice and decent in actuality...

Re: A Labour Voter Quibbles...

Date: 2006-05-21 05:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] onebyone.livejournal.com
I expect my MP, whether I support his party or not, to live in the constituency (it should be a condition of BEING an MP)

Good idea: if Blair had to live in Co. Durham, he wouldn't have nearly so much opportunity to run the country.

Re: A Labour Voter Quibbles...

Date: 2006-05-21 06:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] venta.livejournal.com
Which might be no bad thing.

Blair, however, does at least return to Trimdom occasionally. I expect the previous poster was particularly bitter because Darlington's MP doesn't even have a notional base in the constituency, and is practically never seen there (he lives in Newcastle).

Re: A Labour Voter Quibbles...

Date: 2006-05-24 12:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] marjory.livejournal.com
It's delightful to keep up...

Of course, laxity was especially demonstrated to me when I lived in ther London Borough of Lambeth (get the string section ready). No candidates AT ALL whether for the Council, the European Parliament, the Borough Tiddlywinks Assiociation so much as stuck a flyer through the door or on a local lamp post at election times. Back in Darlo, forms are delivered to make sure that people are on the electoral roll, canvassers go around and around and all kinds of leaflets and pamphlets appear in order to inform the electorate of various policies, pledges and misdeeds of the rivals. 'Twere the same in Oxford when I lived there as a Proper Person. But not a sausage in Lambeth. Makes me wonder if they actually wanted people to vote... I was actually in the odd twilight world of wondering who the heckers my local MP was let alone if they lived anywhere near the constituency...

Re Mr. Millburn. Violent agreement.

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