- Apr 5, 2014
- 26,001
For those too young to remember...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poll_Tax_Riots
The Albion played at Newcastle that day. Was anyone in London ?
For those too young to remember...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poll_Tax_Riots
The Albion played at Newcastle that day. Was anyone in London ?
why are you putting your thumbs down to all my comments on here if you dont like them you need to read them ffs you are really annnoying meYes i was there. Not for long mind you as i ended up in hospital and on ITN news at 10
Well stop doing it to me you absolute cretin.why are you putting your thumbs down to all my comments on here if you dont like them you need to read them ffs you are really annnoying me
I was there all right. I remember the sight when we walked into Kennington Park and saw the crowds of people for the first time.
Most of all, I remember the first speaker: the secretary of the London anti-poll tax campaign, a feisty woman who got the crowd fired up. I remember thinking to myself, I bet she'd be a bit of a handful....
We've been together nearly 15 years now and she's not, she's really not
Putting aside who introduced the 'Poll Tax', personally I think it was a fairer system than rates or council tax.
I was a young man earning half the average wage.
The introduction of the Poll Tax cost me about 8% of my monthly income, whilst the top earners gained considerably more than that. There will be differing views, but I felt a little hard done by.
Political suicide by Mrs T, although as Kinnock led Labour they still failed to oust the Tories at the next election which was a massive cock up.
It was one of the nails in the coffin,as time goes by it does amaze me people on the left now like to claim opposing the poll tax brought down the Thatcher.government immediately etc etc,The truth is it was 8 months later she resigned and the reasons are far more interesting