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The Miners Strike & the Brighton Bomb In March 1984 the miners' strike began. Once more, a Tory government believed this was a direct challenge to the rule of government rather than an industrial dispute. It was generally depicted as a confrontation between the PM, Margaret Thatcher and the President of the NUM (the National Union of Mineworkers) Arthur Scargill. What followed has been described as some of the most violent confrontations between trade unionists and police ever seen in England. During the following twelve months, the miners drifted back to work. The strike collapsed. It did not end in a negotiated settlement. From that point, Thatcher had enhanced her image as an Iron Lady and Scargill was discredited enough never again to have any real industrial clout. If the PM felt any sense of success over the miners, she felt none in the battle to counter Ulster terrorism. On 12 October, the IRA bombed the Grand Hotel in Brighton where the Prime Minister and most of her Party were staying while attending the Conservative Party Conference. Five people died as a result of the bomb.
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