Arthur Scargill
 is a British trade unionist and socialist activist who served as President of the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) from 1981 to 2002.[1][2] Born into a family of coal miners in Worsbrough Dale, South Yorkshire, he began working in the pits at age 15 and rose through union ranks, joining the Young Communist League in 1955 and becoming active in left-wing politics.[1] Scargill's leadership of the NUM was marked by militant industrial action, including successful strikes in the 1970s that secured wage gains for miners, but culminated in the 1984–1985 national miners' strike, which he initiated without a prior national ballot to oppose the closure of uneconomic pits under the National Coal Board.[3][4] The dispute, pitting the NUM against the Thatcher government, lasted nearly a year, involved widespread picketing and police confrontations, and ended in defeat for the union, accelerating pit closures, job losses in coal mining, and a broader erosion of trade union influence in Britain.[5][6] Post-strike, Scargill faced internal NUM challenges, including accusations of authoritarian control and financial improprieties, such as disputes over union-funded housing and expenses that led to his expulsion from the union in 2010 and ongoing legal claims.[7][8] In the Cowan v Scargill case of 1985, he and fellow trustees were overruled for prioritizing political divestment from apartheid South Africa over pension fund returns, establishing that trustees must prioritize financial interests. Disillusioned with the Labour Party's shift under Tony Blair, Scargill founded the Socialist Labour Party in 1996 to advocate uncompromising socialist policies.[1]Early Life
Family Background and Childhood
Arthur Scargill was born on 11 January 1938 in Worsbrough Dale, a mining village near Barnsley in South Yorkshire, England.[9][1] He was the only child of Harold Scargill, a coal miner affiliated with the Communist Party of Great Britain, and Alice Scargill (née Pickering), who worked as a professional cook.[9][10] Scargill's upbringing occurred amid the hardships of a working-class mining family during the interwar and postwar periods, with his parents instilling contrasting values: his father's commitment to communism and trade unionism contrasted with his mother's devout religiosity.[11] He attended Worsbrough Dale School locally but departed at age 15 without sitting the Eleven-Plus examination, entering the coal industry at Woolley Colliery to follow his father's trade.[1] This early immersion in pit life shaped his formative years in a community defined by industrial labor and collective solidarity.[9]Entry into Mining Industry
Arthur Scargill left school at the age of 15 in 1953 and immediately entered the coal mining industry, beginning his career at Woolley Colliery near Barnsley in South Yorkshire.[4][12] Born into a family of miners—his father Harold was a lifelong coal face worker—Scargill followed this familial tradition amid the post-World War II expansion of the British coal sector, which employed over 700,000 workers at its peak in the early 1950s.[13] His initial role involved manual labor underground as a pit lad, a common entry-level position for young workers involving tasks such as hauling coal tubs and assisting face workers in the harsh conditions of deep-seam mining.[14] Scargill worked continuously at Woolley Colliery for 19 years, progressing through the ranks while exposed to the physical demands and safety risks inherent to the industry, including coal dust inhalation and roof collapses that claimed numerous lives annually.[15] The colliery, part of the National Coal Board's operations, produced high-quality coal from the Barnsley seam but faced typical productivity pressures and mechanization efforts of the era.[16] From his first day underground, Scargill later recalled adopting a militant stance toward workplace grievances, influenced by the labor-intensive environment and union culture prevalent among Yorkshire miners.[4] This early immersion in mining not only shaped Scargill's worldview but also laid the groundwork for his rapid ascent in trade union activism, as he joined the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) in 1957 at age 19 after completing requisite underground service.[13][10]Early Political and Union Activism
Involvement with Communist Organizations
Scargill joined the Young Communist League (YCL), the youth organization affiliated with the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB), in 1955 at the age of 17, shortly after beginning his mining apprenticeship.[17] His involvement stemmed from family influence, as his father was a committed communist, and early exposure to left-wing activism in the coalfields.[18] Scargill remained an active member for approximately seven years, participating in organizational activities and ideological education aligned with Marxist-Leninist principles promoted by the CPGB.[19] During his YCL tenure, Scargill advanced to leadership roles, including election to the National Committee in 1956 and service on the National Executive Committee, where he handled responsibilities such as education and propaganda.[20][19] He retained membership as late as 1961, as evidenced by his personal membership card from that year, reflecting sustained engagement amid the broader Cold War context of CPGB efforts to influence British labor movements.[21] Scargill later described his YCL period as formative, involving intensive study of communist texts and participation in campaigns against perceived capitalist exploitation in industry, though he emphasized in a 1975 interview that his focus shifted toward practical trade unionism by age 18.[19] Scargill departed the YCL around 1962, transitioning to the Labour Party by 1966, amid growing disillusionment with the organization's rigid adherence to Soviet line and internal factionalism following events like the 1956 Hungarian uprising, which strained CPGB-YCL unity.[17][22] Despite this exit, his early communist affiliations informed his militant approach to union politics, drawing criticism from anti-communist observers for echoing CPGB tactics of industrial disruption, though Scargill himself rejected formal CPGB membership and framed his activism as independent socialist agitation.[19] No primary evidence confirms direct CPGB adult membership, limiting his organizational ties to the YCL phase.[1]Initial Roles in Trade Unions
Scargill's entry into formal trade union roles occurred at Woolley Colliery, where he began underground work in 1953 at age 15. In 1961, aged 23, he was elected to the Woolley NUM Branch Committee, marking his initial elected position within the local union structure.[23] By 1965, Scargill advanced to branch delegate, representing Woolley at the Yorkshire NUM Area Council meetings, a role that involved advocating for miners' interests at the regional level.[1][24] This position amplified his influence, as delegates coordinated responses to wage disputes and safety concerns across Yorkshire pits. In 1969, he secured election to the Yorkshire NUM Area Executive Committee, comprising representatives who shaped area-wide policies on pay, conditions, and industrial action.[23] During his tenure there, Scargill consistently pushed for rank-and-file militancy, including support for unofficial strikes against productivity deals perceived as undermining workers' leverage.[19] These early roles laid the groundwork for his full-time union career; in 1972, Scargill became a paid official as Compensation Agent for the NUM Yorkshire Area, handling claims for industrial injuries and fatalities, which exposed him to the human costs of mining operations. By this point, his reputation for uncompromising advocacy had solidified among Yorkshire miners, though it drew opposition from moderate union factions favoring negotiation over confrontation.[23]Rise within the National Union of Mineworkers
Leadership in Yorkshire NUM
Scargill was elected president of the Yorkshire Area of the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) in 1973, succeeding the previous incumbent who had died unexpectedly a few months earlier; he retained the position until 1981, when he transitioned to the national NUM presidency.[9] During this period, he advocated a militant approach to wage negotiations and pit closure proposals, emphasizing opposition to any closures of viable collieries and pushing for area-based productivity incentives that prioritized miners' earnings over national productivity deals favored by the National Coal Board (NCB).[19] His leadership solidified Yorkshire's reputation as a radical stronghold within the NUM, with membership actively engaging in unofficial actions to challenge NCB policies, such as localized stoppages over pay disputes in the late 1960s and early 1970s that he had helped organize prior to his presidency.[19] A pivotal achievement came during the 1972 national miners' strike, where Scargill, as a senior Yorkshire NUM official, orchestrated mass picketing at the Saltley Gate coke depot in Birmingham; starting with around 400 Yorkshire miners on February 5, the action grew to over 15,000 participants by February 10, prompting police to close the gates and halt coke distribution, which pressured the Heath government into conceding a 27% pay increase—the first time miners exceeded the government's incomes policy limits.[25] [26] This success, attributed to coordinated solidarity from local workers and trade unions, enhanced Scargill's profile and demonstrated the efficacy of flying pickets in disrupting fuel supplies, though it also highlighted tensions with moderate NUM leaders who preferred official ballots.[27] Under Scargill's tenure, the Yorkshire NUM rejected NCB plans for selective pit closures in the mid-1970s, arguing that economic assessments understated reserves and overestimated losses, and instead pursued aggressive bargaining that secured improved safety conditions and wages through area agreements; for instance, in 1974, Yorkshire miners' militancy contributed to the national strike that toppled the Heath government, with Scargill coordinating regional actions against power station fuel stocks.[28] His strategy emphasized rank-and-file mobilization over reliance on national executive negotiations, fostering a culture of direct action but drawing criticism from centrists within the NUM for bypassing ballots and escalating confrontations with management.[19] By 1981, Scargill's record in Yorkshire—marked by successful defenses against closures at pits like those in Barnsley and Doncaster—propelled his national candidacy, reflecting the area's 70,000-plus membership's support for unyielding resistance to deindustrialization trends driven by rising oil prices and NCB inefficiencies.[23]Election to National Presidency
Arthur Scargill, having risen to prominence as president of the NUM's Yorkshire area, entered the contest for national president in 1981 as the incumbent Joe Gormley neared the end of his term.[29] The election reflected divisions within the union between more moderate elements aligned with Gormley and militants favoring Scargill's confrontational style, shaped by his successful leadership of regional disputes in the 1970s.[30] The national ballot occurred amid broader tensions, including rejection of a government pay offer for miners. On December 9, 1981, results were announced showing Scargill victorious with 70.3 percent of the vote against three other candidates.[31] This substantial margin underscored support for his platform, which emphasized devolving greater authority to local branches and resisting coal industry rationalization.[32] Scargill formally assumed the presidency in April 1982, marking a shift toward more assertive union policies under his leadership.[15] His election, while not without opposition from areas favoring negotiation over militancy, positioned the NUM for intensified conflict with the Thatcher government over pit closures and energy policy.[5]
NUM Presidency and Policies
Advocacy for Militant Unionism
Scargill assumed the NUM presidency on 12 December 1981 after defeating moderate rivals in an election where miners rejected a government pay offer amid rising tensions over colliery closures. His platform centered on uncompromising opposition to pit shutdowns, framing them as part of a broader capitalist strategy to dismantle the coal industry and weaken organized labor. He pledged to mobilize the union's full industrial strength, including strikes and overtime bans, rather than accepting negotiated reductions in capacity.[31][11] Central to Scargill's advocacy was the NUM's longstanding policy, reaffirmed under his leadership, that no pit should close except due to geological exhaustion or mutual agreement between the union and the National Coal Board. This stance rejected economic viability as a criterion for closures, viewing it as a mechanism for privatization and job destruction; he argued that such policies ignored the sector's capacity to produce 150 million tons annually if fully operational. In practice, this translated to endorsing proactive industrial actions, such as the 1981 wave of area strikes against proposed shutdowns, without requiring a national ballot to avoid diluting resolve. Scargill maintained that local ballots in threatened coalfields provided sufficient democratic legitimacy, prioritizing rapid response to prevent piecemeal losses.[33][34][35] Scargill championed militant tactics like flying pickets—mobile groups of strikers dispatched to enforce solidarity at key sites—and mass picketing to halt coal extraction and transport, tactics proven effective in prior disputes such as the 1972 and 1974 national strikes where he played a leading role. He criticized union bureaucracy for suppressing rank-and-file initiative, urging young militants to seize control through direct action, as exemplified by his early organization of unauthorized demonstrations involving thousands to challenge management and right-wing officials. This approach emphasized class confrontation over arbitration, with Scargill asserting in union addresses that compromise equated to surrender, and that sustained militancy had preserved at least 30,000 jobs and 22 pits during the 1984–1985 dispute.[19][36][35]Opposition to Pit Closures and Government Policies
Upon his election as NUM president on 20 July 1981, Scargill adopted a firm policy against pit closures, committing the union to oppose any unless collieries were fully exhausted of reserves.[37] He argued that viable pits required investment rather than immediate shutdowns, rejecting the National Coal Board's (NCB) assessments of uneconomic operations as pretextual.[33] In his 5 July 1982 presidential address, Scargill lambasted prior NUM leadership for acquiescing to closures in the 1960s and 1970s, vowing unyielding resistance to preserve jobs and industry capacity.[38] Scargill contended that the NCB's closure program contravened the 1970 Plan for Coal, a tripartite agreement envisioning expanded production to 130-150 million tons annually by the 1980s through modernization and new investments.[39] He claimed government policies under Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher prioritized breaking union power over economic rationale, alleging a covert strategy to dismantle the coal sector via selective closures escalating to mass shutdowns.[35] By 1982, Scargill publicized an alleged NCB "hit list" targeting dozens of pits, sourced from internal board documents, framing it as evidence of premeditated industrial destruction affecting over 100,000 jobs.[40] Throughout 1981-1983, the NUM under Scargill rejected three national ballot attempts to endorse strike action against closures, yet pursued area-by-area resistance, including occupations and local walkouts.[37] Scargill's rhetoric emphasized no compromise, declaring in NUM conferences that capitulation would doom mining communities and invite broader deindustrialization aligned with Thatcher's monetarist reforms favoring market efficiency over subsidized heavy industry.[39] He insisted negotiated settlements were repeatedly undermined by NCB intransigence or government interference, positioning the union's stance as defense of national energy security against ideological privatization drives.[41] This opposition crystallized in early 1984 when closures at pits like Cortonwood and Bullcliffe Wood prompted nationwide action, underscoring Scargill's rejection of phased rationalization in favor of total preservation.[33]The 1984–1985 Miners' Strike
Economic Realities and Prelude
The British coal industry entered the early 1980s amid a long-term decline in demand, driven by shifts to alternative energy sources such as North Sea gas, nuclear power, and oil, alongside improvements in energy efficiency that reduced overall consumption.[42][43] By the beginning of the decade, annual coal output stood at approximately 130 million tonnes, supporting a workforce exceeding 200,000, but the sector's share of the UK's energy mix had fallen significantly from nearly 50% in 1970.[44] The National Coal Board (NCB), the state-owned operator, incurred substantial financial losses, totaling nearly £2 billion over the four years preceding 1984, with an operating loss of £3.05 per tonne in 1982–1983—exceeding international market prices by about 25%.[45][46] Many collieries operated at a loss due to high production costs, outdated infrastructure, and overcapacity, necessitating closures to restore industry viability by concentrating output on more efficient pits.[5] The Conservative government under Margaret Thatcher, elected in 1979, pursued policies to reduce subsidies and enforce market discipline on nationalized industries, viewing sustained losses as unsustainable amid broader economic recession and high unemployment.[47] In October 1983, the government appointed Ian MacGregor, a Scottish-American executive with experience rationalizing loss-making U.S. steel operations, as NCB chairman to implement a program of pit closures targeting unprofitable operations.[48][3] MacGregor's plan, kept partially secret from public disclosure to avoid preemptive union action, envisioned closing around 75 pits between 1983 and 1985, though the initial public announcement on March 6, 1984, specified 20 collieries out of 173 operational ones, resulting in the loss of 20,000 jobs and further subsidy reductions.[49][47] This move aligned with the NCB's assessment that numerous pits could not compete economically, as evidenced by the sector's persistent deficits and falling global coal prices.[46] The prelude to confrontation was heightened by the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM), led by Arthur Scargill, rejecting any closures and insisting on investment to maintain all pits, despite evidence of widespread unprofitability that independent analyses, including those predating the strike, deemed inevitable for long-term sustainability.[5][3]Strike Initiation and Tactical Decisions
The 1984-1985 miners' strike initiated with localized actions in Yorkshire on March 6, 1984, when approximately 1,400 miners at Cortonwood colliery and 400 at Bullcliffe Wood walked out following National Coal Board (NCB) notices to close both pits, citing uneconomic viability and threatening 2,300 jobs.[33] These walkouts, driven by fears of broader closures amid the NCB's announcement of 20 pits shutting with 20,000 job losses, spread rapidly, with South Wales miners striking at Point of Ayr colliery on March 9.[3] On March 12, 1984, the NUM national executive committee, under Scargill's leadership, declared a national strike, mobilizing around 165,000 members without a prior national ballot, a decision Scargill justified under NUM rules book 43, which he interpreted as permitting action against closures without member vote.[50] [33] Scargill's tactical choice to forgo a national ballot stemmed from prior defeats in three consecutive ballots on similar issues and a belief that it would undermine momentum, though this sparked division, with Nottinghamshire miners initially voting against striking and continuing work.[3] The High Court later ruled the strike illegal for breaching NUM rules requiring ballots for disputes, fining the union and sequestering funds, yet Scargill persisted, arguing the action defended jobs against government policy.[33] This approach prioritized rapid solidarity over procedural consensus, reflecting Scargill's militant unionism but alienating moderate areas and enabling government narratives of undemocratic leadership.[5] Key tactics included deploying flying pickets—mobile groups of strikers traveling to enforce shutdowns at non-striking pits—and mass picketing to block coal movement and worker access, tactics Scargill had successfully used in the 1972 and 1974 strikes.[50] [51] Scargill rejected phased or area-by-area strikes, insisting on an all-out national effort to prevent any closures and force policy reversal, while refusing compromise offers, such as those in June, July, September, and October 1984, viewing them as capitulation.[35] These decisions aimed to leverage union strength for total victory but faced government countermeasures, including coal stockpiles built since 1981 and police mobilization, prolonging the dispute into a war of attrition.[52]Key Events, Violence, and Public Response
The strike escalated rapidly after its initiation on March 6, 1984, when Arthur Scargill, president of the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM), declared a national strike in response to the National Coal Board's (NCB) announcement on March 1 of plans to close 20 uneconomic pits, including Cortonwood Colliery in South Yorkshire.[3] [33] By March 12, strikes had spread to Scotland and Kent, with Scargill organizing flying pickets to enforce solidarity and prevent coal movement from working collieries.[53] On March 15, the NUM executive committee endorsed the action without a national ballot, a decision Scargill supported to avoid potential defeat based on prior lost ballots.[3] Key confrontations intensified in spring and summer, including clashes at pits like Harlesden and Ferrybridge.[53] A pivotal event occurred on June 18, 1984, at the Orgreave coking plant in South Yorkshire, where approximately 8,000 NUM pickets confronted 6,000 police officers attempting to protect coke shipments; the ensuing "Battle of Orgreave" involved mounted charges and baton use by police after pickets threw missiles, leading to 95 arrests and injuries to over 120 individuals, including both miners and officers.[54] [55] Scargill described the police action as a "police riot," while official inquiries later noted initial aggression from picketers.[55] Further violence persisted, with incidents such as the death of taxi driver David Jones on November 19, 1984, when his vehicle collided with pickets near Ollerton Colliery.[56] Throughout the strike, violence resulted in eight deaths, including picketers, working miners, and civilians, alongside over 11,000 arrests, with more than 8,000 charged and 150-200 receiving prison sentences.[56] [57] NUM tactics, including mass picketing to blockade collieries and power stations, frequently led to physical altercations with police tasked to maintain access for non-striking miners, who comprised about one-quarter of the 187,000 workforce.[33] Public support for the strike eroded over time due to its duration, economic disruptions, and perceptions of NUM aggression. Initial sympathy in March 1984 gave way to majority opposition; by August, 62% of respondents in an NOP poll attributed violence to picketing miners.[58] Gallup polls showed sympathy dropping to 26% by December 1984, with 51% favoring employers, reflecting frustration over power cuts, inflation pressures, and the lack of a ballot.[59] The Thatcher government's stockpiling of coal and use of imported supplies mitigated immediate hardships, bolstering public resolve against the NUM, while media coverage emphasized strike tactics over underlying industry decline.[60]Economic Costs and Defeat
The 1984–1985 miners' strike resulted in substantial economic losses, primarily from forgone coal production and associated disruptions. The National Coal Board (NCB) estimated daily losses of approximately £1.2 million due to halted operations, exacerbating the industry's pre-existing deficits from high production costs exceeding £44 per tonne compared to cheaper imports.[61] The strike contributed to a reduction in UK GDP growth by 1 to 1.25 percentage points in 1984.[62] Power stations relied on pre-strike stockpiles of 34 million tonnes and oil conversions to mitigate shortages, but overall output cuts deepened the NCB's annual financial strain.[5] Government expenditures mounted significantly, with policing costs alone reaching around £200 million for deploying thousands of officers to manage picket lines and maintain order.[63] Preparatory measures, including coal stockpiling and contingency planning following the Ridley Report's recommendations, added to the fiscal burden, though these enabled continuity in energy supply and undermined the strike's leverage.[64] Miners faced acute hardship, with approximately 140,000 participants forgoing wages over the year-long action, leading to reliance on community support and loans; average weekly earnings of around £350 were lost, straining coalfield communities economically.[65][33] The strike's defeat stemmed from strategic miscalculations by NUM leadership under Scargill, including the absence of a national ballot, which eroded legitimacy and fueled internal divisions—particularly as 20,000 Nottinghamshire miners continued working, forming a breakaway union.[33] Government foresight, including ample stockpiles and imports, prevented energy crises, while Scargill's rejection of compromise prolonged the impasse without gaining concessions.[5] On 3 March 1985, the NUM executive voted 98–91 to end the strike unconditionally, as returning miners faced redundancy terms and depleted union funds.[33] Post-defeat, pit closures accelerated, with over 100 collieries shuttered by 1990, reflecting the underlying uneconomic nature of many operations amid declining demand and competition from alternative fuels.[61] The NUM's membership plummeted, marking a decisive weakening of militant unionism in the coal sector.[5]Assessments of Strategy and Outcomes
Scargill's decision to initiate the strike without a national ballot, relying instead on NUM rules permitting action in response to local pit closure threats, fractured union solidarity, particularly as Nottinghamshire miners voted overwhelmingly to continue working, with 70% rejecting the strike in area ballots.[66][67] This tactical choice rendered the action vulnerable to legal challenges and accusations of undemocratic imposition, alienating moderate union members and eroding broader labor movement support, as evidenced by the Trades Union Congress's failure to endorse a general strike despite initial sympathy.[66][68] Historians assess Scargill's militant picketing strategy, including mass mobilizations at sites like Orgreave on June 18, 1984, as intensifying confrontations with police but failing to halt coal production effectively, partly due to inadequate coordination with other unions and the government's preemptive stockpiling of 54 million tons of coal by early 1984.[69][66] While Scargill framed closures as politically motivated rather than economically driven, empirical data showed the UK coal industry's structural decline, with production costs exceeding market values in many deep mines amid falling demand from competition with North Sea oil, natural gas, and nuclear power; by 1983, the National Coal Board reported losses of £1.3 billion over five years, necessitating rationalization of uneconomic pits.[5][43][70] The strike's outcomes underscored these strategic shortcomings: launched on March 6, 1984, it ended in defeat on March 3, 1985, with miners returning to work without concessions, accelerating pit closures from 20 initially announced to over 100 by 1990 and NUM membership plummeting from 230,000 in 1983 to under 50,000 by 1990.[33][47] Economically, the confrontation enabled subsidy reductions, contributing to lower inflation and fiscal relief, though at the cost of severe hardship for striking communities, including an estimated £1.5 billion in lost wages and welfare dependency in affected regions.[69][47] Critics, including former NUM figures, attribute the failure primarily to Scargill's intransigence and underestimation of government resolve, rather than solely to state preparations, while supporters argue the strategy highlighted systemic deindustrialization but failed to adapt to the industry's terminal overcapacity.[66][71] Longer-term evaluations emphasize causal factors beyond tactics: the coal sector's workforce had halved from 700,000 in 1957 to 187,000 by 1984 due to mechanization and market shifts, rendering Scargill's defense of all pits incompatible with profitability absent indefinite subsidies, which totaled £2.5 billion in the early 1980s.[43][5] The strike's legacy includes diminished union power, paving the way for 1980s labor reforms, though some analyses note that even a moderated approach might not have averted closures given global energy transitions.[69][70]Post-Strike NUM Leadership
Union Membership Decline
Following the defeat of the 1984–1985 miners' strike, membership in the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) experienced a sharp decline, mirroring the contraction of the UK coal industry. Prior to the strike, the NUM represented approximately 180,000 miners across 174 operational pits.[72] By the late 1980s, coal employment had fallen below 100,000 workers, with union membership contracting accordingly as pits closed and jobs were lost. This drop was exacerbated by the formation of breakaway unions, such as the Union of Democratic Mineworkers (UDM) in 1985–1986, which attracted non-striking miners particularly in areas like Nottinghamshire, further eroding NUM rolls. The primary driver of membership decline was the acceleration of pit closures post-strike, as the National Coal Board (later British Coal) proceeded with rationalizing uneconomic operations unhindered by the union's former industrial muscle. Government policies under Margaret Thatcher, including stockpiling coal in advance and legal reforms curbing union power, enabled this restructuring, shifting the UK energy mix toward North Sea gas, nuclear power, and imported coal.[73] Arthur Scargill's insistence on opposing all closures—regardless of pits' financial losses—failed to halt the tide, as evidenced by his testimony to parliamentary committees where he evaded specifying acceptable loss thresholds for shutdowns, reflecting a denial of underlying economic realities.[61] By 1990, NUM influence had waned significantly, with membership levels continuing to plummet into the 1990s amid ongoing industry downsizing.[74] Internal factors compounded the external pressures, including disillusionment among rank-and-file members with Scargill's leadership tactics, such as the absence of a national ballot before the strike, which courts later deemed illegal. This bred divisions and reduced recruitment, while broader de-unionization trends in the UK—union density falling from over 50% in 1979 to around 30% by the early 1990s—amplified the NUM's vulnerabilities.[75] Despite Scargill's continued presidency until 2002, the union's bargaining power eroded, culminating in negligible active membership by the 2010s, numbering around 100 in some regions.[76]Internal Conflicts and Resignation
Following the 1984–1985 miners' strike, Scargill's leadership of the NUM faced mounting internal opposition, primarily from moderates and former allies who criticized his strategic decisions, such as the refusal to hold a national ballot, and his handling of union finances. These tensions were exacerbated by the formation of breakaway groups like the Union of Democratic Mineworkers (UDM) in 1985, established by non-striking Nottinghamshire miners who accused Scargill of imposing an undemocratic strike without member consultation, leading to a schism that further weakened NUM cohesion.[77] Despite such challenges, Scargill secured re-election in 1986 with 81% of the vote, maintaining control through loyal support in areas like Yorkshire and South Wales.[29] A significant flashpoint emerged in the Cowan v Scargill case of 1985, where Scargill and other NUM trustees opposed diversifying the Mineworkers' Pension Scheme investments into overseas or non-coal assets, arguing it would undermine the domestic coal industry politically. The High Court ruled against them on April 13, 1985, holding that trustees must prioritize financial benefits to beneficiaries over ideological objectives, a decision that highlighted divisions between Scargill's militant stance and pragmatic union elements concerned with fiduciary duties.[78] This ruling strained internal trust and fueled accusations that Scargill's politics overrode practical governance. Financial disputes intensified in July 1990, when the NUM executive unanimously voted to sue Scargill and general secretary Peter Heathfield for allegedly diverting approximately £250,000 in strike-era funds—intended for British miners—to the International Mineworkers' Organisation, an entity Scargill helped establish, for uses not directly benefiting the NUM.[79] The lawsuit, settled out of court, required Scargill to repay a portion of the funds, but it deepened rifts, with critics within the union viewing it as evidence of mismanagement amid the organization's post-strike fiscal strain.[80] Persistent allegations of personal enrichment, including claims of using Libyan donations for property improvements, though later cleared in some inquiries, eroded support among remaining members and executives.[8] By the late 1990s, with coal privatization under the 1994 Coal Industry Act accelerating pit closures and NUM influence waning, internal acrimony over Scargill's perks—such as union-funded housing and allowances—intensified challenges to his authority. Scargill announced his resignation as president on July 31, 2002, after 21 years in office, transitioning to honorary president amid these unresolved conflicts, though he cited the need for fresh leadership in a diminished union rather than direct pressure.[81] His departure did not end disputes, as subsequent battles over entitlements foreshadowed his 2010 loss of voting rights and partial expulsion from the NUM.[82]Formation of the Socialist Labour Party
Motivations and Break from Labour
Scargill's dissatisfaction with the Labour Party intensified in the mid-1990s under Tony Blair's leadership, as New Labour pursued policies perceived as abandoning core socialist principles, including widespread privatization and a pro-market orientation.[83] The pivotal trigger was Labour's revision of Clause IV in April 1995, which removed the party's historic commitment to public ownership of the means of production, replacing it with language emphasizing democratic socialism and individual opportunity.[84] Scargill publicly condemned the change as a betrayal of working-class interests, arguing it signaled Labour's full embrace of capitalism.[84] In response, Scargill mounted opposition within Labour, including a legal challenge in September 1995 asserting that the revision process violated party rules by bypassing adequate member consultation; a High Court ruling allowed his case to proceed, though it did not halt the reforms.[85] By late 1995, he convened meetings with trade unionists and left-wing activists, proposing the creation of a new party to restore commitment to nationalization, workers' control, and opposition to European Union integration, which he viewed as a vehicle for neoliberal policies eroding sovereignty.[13] These efforts reflected his longstanding belief, rooted in experiences like the 1984–1985 miners' strike, that mainstream Labour had capitulated to Thatcherite economics rather than advancing class struggle.[86] The Socialist Labour Party (SLP) was formally launched on 7 January 1996, with Scargill as its leader, explicitly as a breakaway vehicle for uncompromising Marxism-Leninism and rejection of Labour's "third way" centrism.[87] In founding documents and speeches, Scargill cited Labour's abandonment of Clause IV as emblematic of its transformation into a bourgeois party, unfit for representing miners, industrial workers, or the unemployed whose jobs had been decimated under prior Conservative and acquiescent Labour governments.[88] He positioned the SLP as a repository for traditional Labour values, including full nationalization of key industries and withdrawal from the EU, drawing initial support from disaffected union branches and militants who shared his view that electoral reform within Labour was futile.[89] This rupture marked Scargill's shift from reforming Labour to establishing an independent socialist formation, though it later faced internal divisions over entryism and democratic centralism.[90]Party Activities and Electoral Performance
The Socialist Labour Party, under Arthur Scargill's leadership, focused its activities on promoting a Marxist-Leninist program emphasizing public ownership of major industries, banks, and land; immediate withdrawal from the European Union and NATO; and the establishment of workers' control in workplaces. The party published detailed manifestos, such as those in 1996–2001 and 2005, which called for reversing privatization, implementing a planned economy, and prioritizing full employment over market mechanisms.[91][92] These documents critiqued both major parties for perpetuating capitalism, positioning the SLP as a vehicle for class struggle independent of parliamentary reformism. Organizational efforts included small-scale rallies, support for striking workers, and recruitment drives targeting disaffected trade unionists, though internal factionalism with Trotskyist and other far-left groups limited cohesion.[86] Electorally, the SLP has maintained a marginal presence, contesting general elections since its formation without securing any seats in the House of Commons. In its debut at the 1997 general election, the party fielded a limited number of candidates, garnering negligible national support amid Labour's landslide victory. Subsequent performances reflected steady decline in candidacy and votes: in 2010, it stood in 23 constituencies with 7,196 votes (0.0% share); 2015 saw 8 constituencies and 3,481 votes; 2017 had 3 constituencies and 1,154 votes; 2019 featured 1 constituency with 494 votes; and in 2024, 12 constituencies yielded 3,609 votes, all at 0.0% national share.[93]| General Election Year | Constituencies Contested | Total Votes | Vote Share | Seats Won |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | 23 | 7,196 | 0.0% | 0 |
| 2015 | 8 | 3,481 | 0.0% | 0 |
| 2017 | 3 | 1,154 | 0.0% | 0 |
| 2019 | 1 | 494 | 0.0% | 0 |
| 2024 | 12 | 3,609 | 0.0% | 0 |