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Scargill

Arthur Scargill
Scargill cropped.jpg
Scargill in 2010
Born (1938-01-11) 11 January 1938 (age 79)
Worsbrough Dale, West Riding of Yorkshire, England
Occupation Former coal miner
Former General Secretary of the National Union of Mineworkers
Leader of the Socialist Labour Party
Spouse(s) Anne Harper
(m. 1961; div. 2001)

Arthur Scargill (born 11 January 1938) is a British trade unionist and politician who was President of the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) from 1982-2002. Joining the NUM at the age of nineteen in 1957, he became one of its leading activists in the late 1960s. He led an unofficial strike in 1969, and played a key organising role during the strikes of 1972 and 1974, the latter of which helped in the downfall of Edward Heath's Conservative government.

A decade later, he led the union through the 1984–85 miners' strike, a major event in the history of the British labour movement. It turned into a confrontation with the Conservative government of Margaret Thatcher in which the miners' union was heavily suppressed. A former Labour Party member, he is now the party leader of the Socialist Labour Party (SLP), which he founded in 1996.

Scargill was born in Worsbrough Dale near Barnsley, West Riding of Yorkshire. His father, Harold, was a miner and a member of the Communist Party of Great Britain. His mother, Alice (née Pickering), was a professional cook. He did not take the Eleven-Plus exam and went to Worsbrough Dale School (now called the Elmhirst School). He left school at fifteen years old to work as a coal miner at Woolley Colliery in 1953, where he worked for nineteen years.

Scargill joined the Young Communist League in 1955, becoming its Yorkshire District Chair in 1956 and shortly after a member of its National Executive Committee. In 1957 he was elected NUM Yorkshire Area Youth Delegate, and attended the 6th World Festival of Youth and Students in Moscow as a representative of the Yorkshire miners. In 1958, he attended the World Federation of Trade Unions youth congress in Prague. In a 1975 interview with New Left Review Scargill stated:


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