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Prime Ministers
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1990 - 1997 |
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| John
Major |
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| Party - Conservative |
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b-March 29, 1943, London, England
The son of a former circus performer and vaudeville manager, Major left
school at age 16 to help support his family. He worked as a bank accountant for
some years and eventually tried to enter politics, twice standing unsuccessfully
for Parliament in 1974. He gained a seat in the House of Commons during the
Conservative Party landslide of 1979, and his subsequent rise through that
party's ranks was rapid, owing in part to the interested patronage of high party
officials from Prime Minister
Margaret
Thatcher on down. He became a junior minister in 1986 and chief secretary to
the Treasury in 1987, and in July 1989 Thatcher appointed him to the important
Cabinet post of foreign secretary. Major had hardly been in this post three
months when another Cabinet reshuffle resulted in his becoming chancellor of the
Exchequer. In this post he was well placed to contend for the leadership of the
Conservative Party (and the post of prime minister) in November 1990 when
Thatcher unexpectedly announced her intention to resign. With Thatcher's
unofficial support, Major won a three-way contest for the party leadership and
consequently became prime minister of Great Britain on Nov. 28, 1990. Major
shared most of Thatcher's conservative views, but as prime minister he showed
himself to be more pragmatic and consensus-oriented in his approach. In April
1992, in the first general elections after his ascendancy, the Conservatives
won, confirming his leadership.
Major's first years in office coincided with the longest economic recession
(1990-93) in Britain since World War II. His government became increasingly
unpopular despite an economic recovery in the mid-1990s that combined steady
growth and drastically falling unemployment with low levels of inflation. A
joint British-Irish initiative obtained a temporary ceasefire in 1995-96 by both
Protestants and Roman Catholics in the long-running conflict in Northern
Ireland. Major's poll ratings remained strikingly low, partly because the large
tax increases undertaken by his government in 1993 were unpopular and partly
because Major himself was perceived as a colourless and indecisive leader.
Moreover, there was a general feeling of weariness and impatience in Britain
with the Conservative Party, which had ruled uninterruptedly for 18 years and
had recently weathered several scandals involving Cabinet ministers. As a
result, the Conservatives lost by a landslide to a reinvigorated Labour Party
led by Tony Blair
in general elections held on May 1, 1997. Major resigned both the prime ministry
and the party leadership soon afterward.
At present, no material has been deposited in archival institutions by John
Major.