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词条 1987 United Kingdom general election
释义

  1. Campaign and policies

  2. Endorsements

  3. Opinion polling

  4. Results

     Votes summary  Seats summary 

  5. Incumbents defeated

  6. See also

  7. References

     Biographies  Scholarly sources 

  8. Manifestos

{{Use British English|date=May 2014}}{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2010}}{{Infobox Election
| election_name = 1987 United Kingdom general election
| country = United Kingdom
| type = parliamentary
| ongoing = no
| previous_election = 1983 United Kingdom general election
| previous_year = 1983
| outgoing_members = List of MPs elected in the United Kingdom general election, 1983
| next_election = 1992 United Kingdom general election
| next_year = 1992
| elected_members = List of MPs elected in the United Kingdom general election, 1987
| seats_for_election = All 650 seats in the House of Commons | majority_seats = 326
| elected_mps = List of MPs elected in the United Kingdom general election, 1987
| election_date = 11 June 1987
| turnout = 75.3%, {{increase}}2.6%
| image1 =
| leader1 = Margaret Thatcher
| leader_since1 = 11 February 1975
| party1 = Conservative Party (UK)
| leaders_seat1 = Finchley
| last_election1 = 397 seats, 42.4%
| seats1 = 376
| seat_change1 = {{decrease}}21
| popular_vote1 = 13,760,583
| percentage1 = 42.2%
| swing1 = {{decrease}}0.2%
| image2 =
| leader2 = Neil Kinnock
| leader_since2 = 2 October 1983
| party2 = Labour Party (UK)
| leaders_seat2 = Islwyn
| last_election2 = 209 seats, 27.6%
| seats2 = 229
| seat_change2 = {{increase}}20
| popular_vote2 = 10,029,807
| percentage2 = 30.8%
| swing2 = {{increase}}3.2%
| image3 =
{{Photomontage |photo1a=DavidSteel1987 cropped.jpg |photo2a=David Owen-1.jpg |size=54 |position=center |border=0}}

| leader3 = {{ubl|David Steel (Lib)|David Owen (SDP)}}
| leader_since3 = {{ubl|7 July 1976 (Steel)|21 June 1983 (Owen)}}
| party3 = SDP–Liberal Alliance
| leaders_seat3 = {{ubl|Tweeddale, Ettrick & Lauderdale (Steel)|Plymouth Devonport (Owen)}}
| last_election3 = 23 seats, 25.4%
| seats3 = 22
| seat_change3 = {{decrease}}1
| popular_vote3 = 7,341,633
| percentage3 = 22.6%
| swing3 = {{decrease}}2.8%
| map_image = UK General Election, 1987.svg
| map_size = 380px
| map_caption = Colours denote the winning party—as shown in {{slink||Results}}
| title = Prime Minister
| posttitle = Appointed Prime Minister
| before_election = Margaret Thatcher
| before_party = Conservative Party (UK)
| after_election = Margaret Thatcher
| after_party = Conservative Party (UK)
| opinion_polls=Opinion polling for the United Kingdom general election, 1987
}}

The 1987 United Kingdom general election was held on Thursday 11 June 1987, to elect 650 members to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom. The election was the third consecutive general election victory for the Conservative Party, and second landslide under the leadership of Margaret Thatcher, who became the first Prime Minister since the Earl of Liverpool in 1820 to lead a party into three successive electoral victories.

The Conservatives ran a campaign focusing on lower taxes, a strong economy and strong defence. They also emphasised that unemployment had fallen below the 3 million mark for the first time since 1981, and inflation was standing at 4%, its lowest level for some twenty years. The tabloid media also had strong support for the Conservative Party, particularly The Sun, which ran anti-Labour articles with headlines such as "Why I'm backing Kinnock, by Stalin".

The Labour Party, led by Neil Kinnock, was slowly moving towards a more centrist policy platform. The main aim of the Labour Party was simply to re-establish itself as the main progressive centre-left alternative to the Conservatives, after the rise of the Social Democratic Party (SDP) forced Labour onto the defensive. Indeed, the Labour Party succeeded in doing so at this general election. The Alliance between the SDP and the Liberal Party was renewed but co-leaders David Owen and David Steel could not agree whether to support either major party in the event of a hung parliament.

The Conservatives were returned to government, having suffered a net loss of only 21 seats, leaving them with 376 MPs and a second landslide majority of 102. Labour succeeded in resisting the challenge by the SDP–Liberal Alliance to become the main opposition. Moreover, Labour managed to increase its vote share in Scotland, Wales and the North of England. Yet Labour still returned only 229 MPs to Westminster, and in certain London constituencies which Labour had held before the election, the Conservatives actually made gains.

The election was a disappointment for the Alliance, who saw its vote share fall and suffered a net loss of one seat as well as former SDP leader Roy Jenkins losing his seat. This led to the two parties eventually merging completely to become the Liberal Democrats. In Northern Ireland, the main unionist parties maintained their alliance in opposition to the Anglo-Irish Agreement, however the Ulster Unionists lost two seats to the Social Democratic and Labour Party.

The 1987 election is the last to date in which the Conservatives won the popular vote in a general election by more than 10 points and the last time they held more than 336 seats in the House of Commons, and the 49th Parliament is the last time a Conservative government has lasted a full term with an overall majority of seats in Parliament.

The election night was covered live on the BBC and presented by David Dimbleby, Peter Snow and Sir Robin Day.[1] It was also broadcast on ITV and presented by Sir Alastair Burnet, Peter Sissons and Alastair Stewart.

The 1987 general election saw the election of the first Afro-Caribbean members of Parliament: Diane Abbott, Paul Boateng and Bernie Grant. MPs leaving Parliament as a result of this election included former Labour Prime Minister James Callaghan, Keith Joseph, James Prior, Ian Mikardo, Roy Jenkins, former Health Minister Enoch Powell and Clement Freud.

{{UK general election navigation|clear=none|1979|1983|1987|1992|1997}}

Campaign and policies

The Conservatives' campaign emphasised lower taxes, a strong economy and defence, and also employed rapid-response reactions to take advantage of Labour errors. Norman Tebbit and Saatchi and Saatchi spearheaded the Conservative campaign. However, when on "Wobbly Thursday" it was rumoured a Marplan opinion poll showed a 2% Conservative lead, the "exiles" camp of David Young, Tim Bell and the Young & Rubicam firm advocated a more aggressively anti-Labour message. This was when, according to Young's memoirs, Young got Tebbit by the lapels and shook him, shouting: "Norman, listen to me, we're about to lose this fucking election."{{sfn|Campbell|2003|p=522}}[2] In his memoirs Tebbit defends the Conservative campaign: "We finished exactly as planned on the ground where Labour was weak and we were strong—defence, taxation, and the economy."{{sfn|Tebbit|1988|p=336}} During the election campaign however Tebbit and Thatcher argued.{{sfn|Thatcher|1993|p=584}}

Bell and Saatchi and Saatchi produced memorable posters for the Conservatives, such as a picture of a British soldier's arms raised in surrender with the caption "Labour's Policy On Arms"—a reference to Labour's policy of unilateral nuclear disarmament. The first Conservative party political broadcast played on the theme of "Freedom" and ended with a fluttering Union Jack, the hymn I Vow to Thee, My Country (which Thatcher would later quote in her "Sermon on the Mound") and the slogan "It's Great To Be Great Again".

The Labour campaign was a marked change from previous efforts; professionally directed by Peter Mandelson and Bryan Gould, it concentrated on presenting and improving Neil Kinnock's image to the electorate. Labour's first party political broadcast, dubbed Kinnock: The Movie, was directed by Hugh Hudson of Chariots of Fire fame, and concentrated on portraying Kinnock as a caring, compassionate family man. It was filmed at the Great Orme in Wales and had "Ode to Joy" as its music.[3] He was particularly critical of the high unemployment that the government's economic policies had resulted in, as well as condemning the wait for treatment that many patients had endured on the National Health Service. Kinnock's personal popularity jumped 16 points overnight after the initial broadcast.{{sfn|Butler|Kavanagh|1988|p=154}}

On 24 May, Kinnock was interviewed by David Frost and claimed that Labour's alternative defence strategy in the event of a Soviet attack would be "using the resources you've got to make any occupation totally untenable".{{citation needed|date=April 2013}} In a speech two days later Thatcher attacked Labour's defence policy as a programme for "defeat, surrender, occupation, and finally, prolonged guerrilla fighting ... I do not understand how anyone who aspires to Government can treat the defence of our country so lightly".[4]

Endorsements

The following newspapers endorsed political parties running in the election in the following ways:[5]

NewspaperParty/ies endorsed
The Sun Conservative Party
Daily Mirror Labour Party
Daily Mail Conservative Party
Daily Express Conservative Party
Daily Telegraph Conservative Party
The Guardian Labour Party
The Independent None
The TimesConservative Party

Opinion polling

{{main|Opinion polling for the United Kingdom general election, 1987}}

Results

The Conservatives were returned by a third landslide victory with a comfortable majority, down slightly on 1983 with a swing of 1.5% towards Labour. The BBC announced the result at 02:35. Increasing polarisation marked divisions across the country; the Conservatives dominated Southern England and took additional seats from Labour in London and the rest of the South, but performed less well in Northern England, Scotland and Wales, losing many of the seats they had won there in previous elections. Yet the overall result of this election proved that the policies of Margaret Thatcher retained significant support, with the Conservatives given a third convincing majority.

Despite initial optimism and the professional campaign run by Neil Kinnock, the election brought only twenty additional seats for Labour from the 1983 Conservative landslide. In many southern areas, the Labour vote actually fell, with the party losing seats in London. However, it represented a decisive victory against the SDP–Liberal Alliance and marked out the Labour Party as the main opposition to the Conservative Party. This was in stark contrast to 1983, when the Alliance almost matched Labour in terms of votes—although Labour had almost 10 times as many seats as the Alliance.

The result for the Alliance was a disappointment, in that they had hoped to overtake Labour as the second party in the UK in terms of vote share. Instead, they lost one net seat and saw their vote share drop by almost 3%, with a widening gap of 8% between them and the Labour Party (compared to a 2% gap four years before). These results would eventually lead to the end of the Alliance and the birth of the Liberal Democrats.

Most of the prominent MPs retained their seats. Notable failures included Enoch Powell (the controversial former Conservative MP who had defected to the Ulster Unionist Party) and two Alliance members: Liberal Clement Freud and former SDP leader Roy Jenkins (a one-time Labour government minister).

In Northern Ireland, the various unionist parties maintained an electoral pact (with few dissenters) in opposition to the Anglo-Irish Agreement. However, the Ulster Unionists lost two seats to the Social Democratic and Labour Party.

The election victory won by the Conservatives could also arguably be attributed to the rise in average living standards that had taken place during their time in office. As noted by Dennis Kavanagh and David Butler in their study on the 1987 election:{{quote|Since 1987 the Conservatives had located a large constituency of "winners", people who have an interest in the return of a Conservative government. It includes much of the affluent South, home-owners, share-owners, and most of those in work, whose standard of living, measured in post-tax incomes, has risen appreciably since 1979.{{sfn|Butler|Kavanagh|1988|p=277}}


}}
↓{{fsp}}
3762292223
Conservative Labour Alliance O

:

{{Election Summary Begin with Leaders| title = UK General Election 1987}}{{Election Summary Party with Leaders|
|party = Conservative Party (UK)
|leader = Margaret Thatcher
|candidates = 633
|seats = 376
|gain = 9
|loss = 30
|net = −21
|votes = 13,760,583
|votes % = 42.2
|seats % = 57.85
|plus/minus = −0.2
|government = yes
}}{{Election Summary Party with Leaders|
|party = Labour Party (UK)
|leader = Neil Kinnock
|candidates = 633
|seats = 229
|gain = 26
|loss = 6
|net = +20
|votes = 10,029,807
|votes % = 30.8
|seats % = 35.23
|plus/minus = +3.2
}}{{Election Summary Party with Leaders|
|party = SDP-Liberal Alliance
|leader = David Owen & David Steel
|candidates = 633
|seats = 22
|gain = 5
|loss = 6
|net = −1
|votes = 7,341,633
|votes % = 22.6
|seats % = 3.38
|plus/minus = −2.8
}}{{Election Summary Party with Leaders|
|party = Scottish National Party
|leader = Gordon Wilson
|candidates = 72
|seats = 3
|gain = 3
|loss = 2
|net = +1
|votes = 416,473
|votes % = 1.3
|seats % = 0.46
|plus/minus = +0.2
}}{{Election Summary Party with Leaders|
|party = Ulster Unionist Party
|leader = James Molyneaux
|candidates = 12
|seats = 9
|gain = 0
|loss = 2
|net = −2
|votes = 276,230
|votes % = 0.8
|seats % = 1.38
|plus/minus = 0.0
}}{{Election Summary Party with Leaders|
|party = Social Democratic and Labour Party
|leader = John Hume
|candidates = 13
|seats = 3
|gain = 2
|loss = 0
|net = +2
|votes = 154,067
|votes % = 0.5
|seats % = 0.46
|plus/minus = +0.1
}}{{Election Summary Party with Leaders|
|party = Plaid Cymru
|leader = Dafydd Elis-Thomas
|candidates = 38
|seats = 3
|gain = 1
|loss = 0
|net = +1
|votes = 123,599
|votes % = 0.4
|seats % = 0.46
|plus/minus = 0.0
}}{{Election Summary Party with Leaders|
|party = Green Party (UK)
|leader = N/A
|candidates = 133
|seats = 0
|gain = 0
|loss = 0
|net = 0
|votes = 89,753
|votes % = 0.3
|seats % =
|plus/minus = +0.1
}}{{Election Summary Party with Leaders|
|party = Democratic Unionist Party
|leader = Ian Paisley
|candidates = 4
|seats = 3
|gain = 0
|loss = 0
|net = 0
|votes = 85,642
|votes % = 0.3
|seats % = 0.46
|plus/minus = −0.2
}}{{Election Summary Party with Leaders|
|party = Sinn Féin
|leader = Gerry Adams
|candidates = 14
|seats = 1
|gain = 0
|loss = 0
|net = 0
|votes = 83,389
|votes % = 0.3
|seats % = 0.15
|plus/minus = 0.0
}}{{Election Summary Party with Leaders|
|party = Alliance Party of Northern Ireland
|leader = John Alderdice
|candidates = 16
|seats = 0
|gain = 0
|loss = 0
|net = 0
|votes = 72,671
|votes % = 0.2
|seats % =
|plus/minus = 0.0
}}{{Election Summary Party with Leaders|
|party = Workers' Party of Ireland
|leader = Tomás Mac Giolla
|candidates = 14
|seats = 0
|gain = 0
|loss = 0
|net = 0
|votes = 19,294
|votes % = 0.1
|seats % =
|plus/minus = +0.1
}}{{Election Summary Party with Leaders|
|party = Ulster Popular Unionist Party
|leader = James Kilfedder
|candidates = 1
|seats = 1
|gain = 0
|loss = 0
|net = 0
|votes = 18,420
|votes % = 0.1
|seats % = 0.15
|plus/minus = 0.0
}}{{Election Summary with Leaders|
|party = Real Unionist
|leader = Robert McCartney
|candidates = 1
|seats = 0
|gain = 0
|loss = 0
|net = 0
|votes = 14,467
|votes % = 0.1
|seats % =
|plus/minus = N/A
}}{{Election Summary Party with Leaders|
|party = Communist Party of Great Britain
|leader = Gordon McLennan
|candidates = 19
|seats = 0
|gain = 0
|loss = 0
|net = 0
|votes = 6,078
|votes % = 0.0
|seats % =
|plus/minus = 0.0
}}{{Election Summary with Leaders|
|party = Protestant Unionist
|leader = George Seawright
|candidates = 1
|seats = 0
|gain = 0
|loss = 0
|net = 0
|votes = 5,671
|votes % = 0.0
|seats % =
|plus/minus = N/A
}}{{Election Summary with Leaders|
|party = Red Front
|leader = N/A
|candidates = 14
|seats = 0
|gain = 0
|loss = 0
|net = 0
|votes = 3,177
|votes % = 0.0
|seats % =
|plus/minus = N/A
}}{{Election Summary with Leaders|
|party = Orkney and Shetland Movement
|leader = John Goodlad
|candidates = 1
|seats = 0
|gain = 0
|loss = 0
|net = 0
|votes = 3,095
|votes % = 0.0
|seats % =
|plus/minus = N/A
}}{{Election Summary with Leaders|
|party = Moderate Labour
|leader = Brian Marshall
|candidates = 2
|seats = 0
|gain = 0
|loss = 0
|net = 0
|votes = 2,269
|votes % = 0.0
|seats % =
|plus/minus = N/A
}}{{Election Summary Party with Leaders|
|party = Official Monster Raving Loony Party
|leader = Screaming Lord Sutch
|candidates = 5
|seats = 0
|gain = 0
|loss = 0
|net = 0
|votes = 1,951
|votes % = 0.0
|seats % =
|plus/minus = 0.0
}}{{Election Summary Party with Leaders|
|party = Workers Revolutionary Party (UK)
|leader = Sheila Torrance
|candidates = 10
|seats = 0
|gain = 0
|loss = 0
|net = 0
|votes = 1,721
|votes % = 0.0
|seats % =
|plus/minus = 0.0
}}{{Election Summary Party with Leaders|
|party = Independent Liberal
|leader = N/A
|candidates = 1
|seats = 0
|gain = 0
|loss = 0
|net = 0
|votes = 686
|votes % = 0.0
|seats % =
|plus/minus = 0.0
}}{{Election Summary Party with Leaders|
|party = British National Party
|leader = John Tyndall
|candidates = 2
|seats = 0
|gain = 0
|loss = 0
|net = 0
|votes = 553
|votes % = 0.0
|seats % =
|plus/minus = 0.0
}}{{Election Summary with Leaders|
|party = Save the Earth
|leader = N/A
|candidates = 1
|seats = 0
|gain = 0
|loss = 0
|net = 0
|votes = 522
|votes % = 0.0
|seats % =
|plus/minus = N/A
}}
|-
|+ style="caption-side: bottom; font-weight:normal" |All parties gaining over 500 votes listed.
|}
Government's new majority102
Total votes cast32,529,578
Turnout75.3%

Votes summary

{{Plain image with caption |Results of the UK General Election, 1987.svg |Seats won in the election (outer ring) against number of votes (inner ring) |250px |left |top |triangle}}{{bar box
|title=Popular vote
|titlebar=#ddd
|width=600px
|barwidth=410px
|bars={{bar percent|Conservative|{{Conservative Party (UK)/meta/color}}|42.3}}{{bar percent|Labour|{{Labour Party (UK)/meta/color}}|30.8}}{{bar percent|SDP–Liberal|{{SDP-Liberal Alliance/meta/color}}|22.6}}{{bar percent|Scottish National|{{Scottish National Party/meta/color}}|1.3}}{{bar percent|Ulster Unionist|{{Ulster Unionist Party/meta/color}}|0.9}}{{bar percent|Others|#777777|2.2}}
}}

Seats summary

{{bar box
|title=Parliamentary seats
|titlebar=#ddd
|width=600px
|barwidth=410px
|bars={{bar percent|Conservative|{{Conservative Party (UK)/meta/color}}|57.9}}{{bar percent|Labour|{{Labour Party (UK)/meta/color}}|35.2}}{{bar percent|SDP–Liberal|{{SDP-Liberal Alliance/meta/color}}|3.4}}{{bar percent|Ulster Unionist|{{Ulster Unionist Party/meta/color}}|1.4}}{{bar percent|Others|#777777|2.2}}
}}{{Plain image with caption |1987 UK General Election Gallagher Index.png |The disproportionality of the house of parliament in the 1987 election was "17.82" according to the Gallagher Index, mainly between the Conservatives and the Alliance. |450px |left |bottom |triangle}}{{clear}}

Incumbents defeated

{{Party name with colour|Scottish National Party}}{{Party name with colour|Ulster Unionist Party}}
PartyNameConstituencyOffice held whilst in powerYear electedDefeated byParty
{{Party shortname|Conservative Party (UK)}}Gerry MaloneAberdeen South1983Frank Doran{{Party name with colour|Labour Party (UK)}}
The Rt Hon Peter FraserEast AngusSolicitor General for Scotland1979Andrew Welsh{{Party name with colour|Scottish National Party}}
John MacKayArgyll and ButeUnder-Secretary of State for Scotland1979Ray Mitchie{{Party name with colour|Liberal Party (UK)}}
Sir Albert McQuarrieBanff and Buchan1979Alex Salmond{{Party name with colour|Scottish National Party}}
Geoffrey LawlerBradford North1983Pat Wall{{Party shortname|Labour Party (UK)}}
Peter Hubbard-MilesBridgendParliamentary Private Secretary to the Secretary of State for Wales1983Win Griffiths
Stefan TerlezkiCardiff West1983Rhodri Morgan
Robert HarveyClwyd South-West1983Martyn Jones
John CorrieCunninghame North1974Brian Wilson
John WhitfieldDewsbury1983Ann Taylor
Alexander MacPherson FletcherEdinburgh Central1973Alistair Darling
Steven NorrisOxford East1983Andrew Smith
Barry HendersonNorth East Fife1979Menzies Campbell{{Party name with colour|Liberal Party (UK)}}
Richard HickmetGlanford and Scunthorpe1983Elliot Morley{{Party shortname|Labour Party (UK)}}
Roy GalleyHalifax1983Alice Mahon
Peter BruinvelsLeicester East1983Keith Vaz
Derek SpencerLeicester South1983Jim Marshall
Fred SilvesterManchester Withington1974Keith Bradley
Alexander PollackMorayParliamentary Private Secretary to the Secretary of State for Defence1979Margaret Ewing{{Party name with colour|Scottish National Party}}
Piers MerchantNewcastle upon Tyne Central1983Jim Cousins{{Party shortname|Labour Party (UK)}}
Mark RobinsonNewport West1983Paul Flynn
Richard OttawayNottingham North1983Graham Allen
Anna McCurleyRenfrew West and Inverclyde1983Tommy Graham
Michael HirstStrathkelvin and Bearsden1983Sam Galbraith
Warren HawksleyThe Wrekin1979Bruce Grocott
John PowleyNorwich South1983John Garrett
The Rt Hon Michael Ancram, Earl of AncramEdinburgh South1979Nigel Griffiths
{{Party shortname|Labour Party (UK)}}Alfred DubsBattersea1979John Bowis{{Party shortname|Conservative Party (UK)}}
Willie HamiltonCentral Fife (stood in South Hams)1950Anthony Steen
Nick RaynsfordFulham1986Matthew Carrington
Kenneth WeetchIpswich1974Michael Irvine
Oonagh McDonaldThurrockOpposition Spokesman on Treasury and Economic Affairs1976Tim Janman
Eric DeakinsWalthamstow1970Hugo Summerson
{{Party shortname|Liberal Party (UK)}}Sir Clement FreudNorth East Cambridgeshire1973Malcolm Moss
Michael MeadowcroftLeeds West1983John Battle{{Party name with colour|Labour Party (UK)}}
Elizabeth ShieldsRyedale1986John Greenway{{Party name with colour|Conservative Party (UK)}}
{{Party shortname|Social Democratic Party (UK)}} The Rt Hon Roy JenkinsGlasgow HillheadFormer Leader of the Social Democratic Party1982George Galloway{{Party name with colour|Labour Party (UK)}}
Mike HancockPortsmouth South1984David Martin{{Party shortname|Conservative Party (UK)}}
Ian WrigglesworthStockton South1974Tim Devlin
Gordon WilsonDundee EastLeader of the Scottish National Party1974John McAllion{{Party name with colour|Labour Party (UK)}}
The Rt Hon Brig Enoch PowellSouth Down1950Eddie McGrady{{Party name with colour|Social Democratic and Labour Party}}

See also

  • MPs elected in the United Kingdom general election, 1987

References

1. ^{{YouTube |id=wTPxE8oC0bI |title=BBC Election 1987 coverage}}
2. ^{{Cite news|url=https://www.spectator.co.uk/2005/03/has-gordon-brown-delivered-his-last-budget-the-truth-is-that-blair-hasnt-yet-decided |title=Has Gordon Brown delivered his last Budget? The truth is that Blair hasn't yet decided |date=19 March 2005 |work=The Spectator |first=Peter |last=Oborne |accessdate=2 July 2018}}
3. ^{{citation |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b07pr1b5 |work=The 80s with Dominic Sandbrook |title=World in Motion |publisher=BBC |accessdate=2 July 2018}}
4. ^{{citation |url=http://www.margaretthatcher.org/speeches/displaydocument.asp?docid=106843 |title=Speech to Conservative Rally in Newport |date=26 May 1987 |publisher=Margaret Thatcher Foundation |accessdate=2 July 2018}}
5. ^'[https://www.theguardian.com/news/datablog/2010/may/04/general-election-newspaper-support Newspaper support in UK general elections]' (2010) on The Guardian

Biographies

{{refbegin}}
  • {{citation |last=Campbell |first=John |authorlink=John Campbell (biographer) |year=2003 |title=Margaret Thatcher: The Iron Lady |volume=2 |publisher=Pimlico |isbn=978-0-7126-6781-4 |ref=harv}}
  • {{citation |last=Tebbit |first=Norman |author-link=Norman Tebbit |year=1988 |title=Upwardly Mobile |publisher=Weidenfeld & Nicolson |isbn=978-0-297-79427-1 |ref=harv}}
  • {{citation |last=Thatcher |first=Margaret |authorlink=Margaret Thatcher |year=1993 |title=The Downing Street Years |publisher=HarperCollins |isbn=978-0-00-255354-4 |ref=harv}}
{{refend}}

Scholarly sources

{{refbegin}}
  • {{citation |last=Butler |first=David E. |authorlink=David Butler (psephologist) |last2=Kavanagh |first2=Dennis |authorlink2=Dennis Kavanagh |title=The British General Election of 1987 |year=1988 |postscript=, the standard scholarly study |ref=harv}}
  • {{citation |authorlink=F. W. S. Craig |first=F. W. S. |last=Craig |title=British Electoral Facts: 1832–1987 |year=1989 |location=Dartmouth |publisher=Gower |isbn=0900178302 }}
  • {{citation |editor-last=Craig |editor-first=F. W. S. |title=British General Election Manifestos, 1959–1987 |year=1990}}
  • {{citation |last=Crewe |first=Ivor |authorlink=Ivor Crewe |last2=Harrop |first2=Martin |title=Political Communications: The General Election Campaign of 1987 |year=1989 |p=316}}
  • {{citation |last=Galbraith |first=John W. |last2=Rae |first2=Nicol C. |title=A Test of the Importance of Tactical Voting: Great Britain, 1987 |journal=British Journal of Political Science |year=1989 |volume=19 |number=1 |pp=126–136 |jstor=193792}}
  • {{citation |last=Scott |first=Len |title=Selling or Selling Out Nuclear Disarmament? Labour, the Bomb, and the 1987 General Election |journal=International History Review |year=2012 |volume=34 |number=1 |pp=115–137}}
  • {{citation |last=Stewart |first=Marianne C. |last2=Clarke |first2=Harold D. |title=The (un)importance of party leaders: Leader images and party choice in the 1987 British election |journal=Journal of Politics |year=1992 |volume=54 |number=2 |pp=447–70 |postscript=, says the well-organised, media-wise Labour campaign helped Kinnock, but he was hurt by Conservative momentum and Thatcher's image as a decisive leader. Leadership images proved more important in voters' choices than did party identification, economic concerns, etc.}}
{{refend}}

Manifestos

  • The Next Moves Forward, 1987 Conservative Party manifesto
  • Britain will win with Labour, 1987 Labour Party manifesto
  • Britain United: The Time Has Come, 1987 SDP–Liberal Alliance manifesto
{{British elections}}{{Margaret Thatcher}}{{Neil Kinnock}}

4 : General elections to the Parliament of the United Kingdom|1987 United Kingdom general election|1987 elections in the United Kingdom|June 1987 events in Europe

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