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25 January - Government bans GCHQ staff from belonging to any trade
union.[2]
1 February - Japanese
carmaker Nissan signs an agreement with the British
government to build a car factory in Britain. This landmark deal
means that "foreign" cars will be built in Britain for the first
time. [1]
March - Nissan chooses a greenfield site near Sunderland as the location of
its new car factory, and hopes to have the factory ready within two
years.
2 March - Just five months after becoming Labour
Party leader, Neil
Kinnock's ambition of becoming prime minister at the next
election (due to be held by June 1988) are given a boost when
Labour come top of a MORI poll with 41% of the vote (compared to
the 38% attained by the Tories). Just over six months ago, the
Tories had a 16-point lead over Labour in the opinion polls. [2]
9 April - More than 100 pickets are arrested in violent clashes
at the Creswell colliery
in Derbyshire and the
Babbington colliery in
Nottinghamshire. It is estimated that
46 out of 176 British coalmines are currently active as miners
fight government plans to close 20 coalmines across Britain.[8]
12 April - Arthur Scargill, leader of the National
Union of Mineworkers, rules out a national ballot of miners on
whether to continue their strike, which has already lasted five
weeks.[9]
22 April - In the wake of Yvonne Fletcher's death, Britain
severs diplomatic relations with Libya and serves warning on its seven remaining
Libyan diplomats to return to their homeland.
25 April - Austin Rover launches its new Montego four-door
saloon, which replaces the outdated Morris Ital and competes head-to-head with
the Ford Sierra and
Vauxhall
Cavalier. The demise of the Ital coincides with the demise of
the 72-year-old Morris marque, as the
restructuring of Austin Rover will result in the discontinuation of
several less popular marques as well as a less extensive model
range.
The Queen officially opens a new terminal at Birmingham International Airport. The
terminal has been in use since the start of last month, replacing
the original terminal that opened in 1939.[12]
29 May - Fighting at Orgreave colliery between police and
striking miners leaves 64 injured.[2]
20 June - The biggest exam shake-up in the education system in
over 10 years is announced with O-level and CSE exams to be
replaced by a new exam, the GCSE. The first GCSE courses will begin in
September 1986 and will be completed in the summer of 1988.[14]
23 July - Austin Rover announces its second new car
launch of the year - the Rover 200, a four-door saloon which
replaces the Triumph Acclaim and is the combine's
second product from its venture with Japanese carmaker Honda. As a result, the Triumph marque is the second
marque to be discontinued by Austin Rover this year.
26 July - Trade Union Act prohibits unions
from striking without a ballot.[2]
5 October - Police in Essex
make the largest cannabis seizure in British criminal history when
a multi-million pound stash of the drug is found on a schooner that was moored on
the River Crouch
near North
Fambridge village.[21]
23 October - BBC News
newsreader Michael
Buerk gives powerful commentary of the famine in Ethiopia which has already
claimed thousands of lives and reportedly has the potential to kill
as many as 7million people. Numerous British charities including Oxfam and Save the
Children begin collection work to aid the famine victims, who
are mostly encamped near the town of Korem.
12 November - The English one pound note
withdrawn after 150 years in circulation.[23]
30 November - Tension in the miners' strike increases when two
South Wales miners
are charged with the murder of taxi driver David Wilkie, 35, who
died when a concrete block was dropped on his car from a road
overbridge. The passenger in his car, who escaped with minor
injuries, was a miner who had defied the strike and continued going
to work.
Richard
Stone wins the Nobel Prize in
Economics "for having made fundamental contributions to the
development of systems of national accounts and hence greatly
improved the basis for empirical economic analysis".[25]
14 December - Arthur Scargill, president of the NUM,
is fined £250 and ordered to pay £750 for his involvement in the
rioting at Ogreave coking plant on 29 May this year. [7]
Vauxhall
had a successful year in the motor industry. It reported that its
market share has doubled since 1981, and the year ended on an even
bigger high when its MK2 Astra range was elected European Car of the Year.
Despite unemployment reaching a peak of nearly 3.3million this
year, inflation is still low at 5%. [9]