Modern Era · Europe · Politics
1926
British General Strike
May 3, 1926
Coal miners walked out, then transport workers, printers, dockers, and ironworkers joined them in solidarity. For nine days Britain held its breath as middle-class volunteers drove buses and the cabinet nearly panicked at the specter of revolution. The TUC called it off without winning anything. The defeat shaped British labor relations, and the left's sense of its own limits, for half a century.