Origin Story

The General Strike – The Revolution That Wasn’t

9 snips
Apr 8, 2026
A centenary look at Britain’s 1926 General Strike, exploring why miners became a political flashpoint and how union and government leaders scrambled to respond. The nine‑day showdown brought volunteers from high society, a fierce media battle, and the BBC’s first impartiality crisis. The strike’s dramatic moments versus its ambiguous long‑term impact are the episode’s focus.
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INSIGHT

Government's Secret Logistics Made Strike-Breaking Practical

  • The government built secret regional emergency plans, the Emergency Powers Act and OMS to coordinate volunteers, transport and supplies.
  • Those preparations institutionalized strike-breaking capability used in May 1926.
ANECDOTE

Massive TUC Vote Backed The Strike Despite Leaders' Doubts

  • On 29 April 1926, 828 TUC delegates approved a general strike plan covering transport, printing, power and key industries.
  • The vote was 3.7 million to 50,000, showing overwhelming mobilization despite leadership reluctance.
INSIGHT

Media Incidents Helped End Negotiations

  • The Daily Mail's refusal to publish a pro-strike editorial and the printers' stance gave Baldwin a pretext to end talks using 'freedom of the press.'
  • A leaked OMS poster and press events pushed the government into a hard line.
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