º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Opinionopinion

Why leaving 'Red Robbo' far behind put us on the right road

Nobody summed up the worker-management divide of late 70s Britain as potently as the stocky, balding figure with the microphone in Cofton Park.

Derek "Red Robbo" Robinson speaking at Cofton Park, near Longbridge works, on 20 February 1980.

If ever a picture was worth a thousand words, it’s surely that famous image of Derek ‘Red Robbo’ Robinson addressing a mass rally of workers at Cofton Park, near Longbridge.

It depicts the most notorious union leader in the history of British car-making at the height of his infamy, a man credited with causing 523 walkouts at British Leyland between 1978 and 1979, costing an estimated £200 million in lost production.

Massed ranks of workers gathered under leaden wintry skies, Robbo in full oratorical flight, the phalanx of press guys in the foreground, the duffle-coats, the 70s hairstyles... it’s an image from another age, an era of wildcat strikes, the Winter of Discontent, rampant inflation, interest rates of 15 per cent and all the rest.

But, even as that photograph was being taken, the tide was turning irrevocably against Red Robbo and everything the man subsequently described by Margaret Thatcher as a ‘notorious agitator’ stood for.

The aforementioned Mrs T had been swept to power in May 1979 with a mandate from the country to turn the economy around after years of strikes, power cuts, three-day weeks and governments routinely held to ransom by all-powerful unions.

Nobody summed up the worker-management divide of late 70s Britain as potently as the stocky, balding figure with the microphone in Cofton Park.

But the mood of the country was to change irreversibly with the Thatcher revolution and wholesale reforms of a nation’s industrial base.

In truth, Mrs T would eventually divide the country just as much as Derek Robinson divided the workforce at Longbridge.