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Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Who was PM during the best of times for you?

718 replies

verdantverdure · 29/03/2023 22:44

Me?

Blair. Brown, first bit of Cameron.

On paper I earn more money now but everything's tits up isn't it? From the economy to shit on beaches to being able to get access to the NHS when needed.

OP posts:
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carriedout · 29/03/2023 23:53

My grandmother used to call Blair "that man with the teeth". Accurate

TheMarzipanDildo · 29/03/2023 23:55

Blair, my first PM. Probably because I was little and had no responsibilities!

Wedoronron · 29/03/2023 23:56

Notnormalami · 29/03/2023 22:55

Sunak

😂

verdantverdure · 29/03/2023 23:56

carriedout · 29/03/2023 23:53

My life was better under Blair but I preferred Brown.

The recent parade of increasingly useless Tories have made me Angry

I think life has got progressively shitter with each of the last five PMs although Truss fucking our economy, trashing our pensions and putting up everyone's mortgage in just a few weeks gets a special mention.

OP posts:
Normandy144 · 29/03/2023 23:57

Blair. I can't honestly believe how stretched I feel financially compared to a year ago. Yet I earn more than ever. We used to have disposable income each month to save and spend a bit. That's all gone now in rising costs and mortgage rates.

whenindoubtgotothelibrary · 29/03/2023 23:58

Blair/Brown. Without a doubt. All the good things happened in those years for me. It also felt like the UK was led by grownups.

I was a very skint student during the Thatcher years and graduated into a recession. People forget that interest rates were between 10 and 15 % for most of the 1980s. It was not remotely fun for people with a mortgage, like my parents.

IntheJingelyJangelyJungle · 29/03/2023 23:58

I’d say Blair- although I was a junior Doc in A&E at the time and boy did that 4 hour target bust our balls. Health care was undoubtedly at its best (imo) at that point.

I liked Cameron to some degree until he hosted in the Brexit referendum as some sort of misjudged popularity vote…. and here we are 🫣

Wedoronron · 29/03/2023 23:59

Blair/Brown.
We were much better off than we ever have been since despite earning more and endless promotions.
It was a positive time, it felt like people were less small minded, and we're trying to improve the country rather than their own lot. I can't quite believe what Johnson has done to our country.
Vile piece of shite.

RosaCaramella · 30/03/2023 00:04

Blair and Brown - I also worked in education and my service was awash with extra funding then. My role and salary was also augmented. It all went tits-up not long after Cameron took over and my service was closed down and I was made redundant! Made redundant again during era of Johnston / Truss…

verdantverdure · 30/03/2023 00:04

whenindoubtgotothelibrary · 29/03/2023 23:58

Blair/Brown. Without a doubt. All the good things happened in those years for me. It also felt like the UK was led by grownups.

I was a very skint student during the Thatcher years and graduated into a recession. People forget that interest rates were between 10 and 15 % for most of the 1980s. It was not remotely fun for people with a mortgage, like my parents.

When I was a teenager a family friend moved in with us with her kids for a while because they had been repossessed due to a 15% interest rate. It happened to a lot of families we knew. Two in our close.

OP posts:
Lincslady53 · 30/03/2023 00:05

Heath, Callaghan, Thatcher. Rampant inflation in the 70s, 3 day week, strikes. IRA bombs, Winter of discontent. Grim for the country, but I had just left home, moved from small town Lincolnshire to London, living in a series of crappy flats, but I worked for a supermarket that was rapidly expanding so promotion every 6 months, pay rise every month during the worst inflation, lots of overtime, lots of fun with the pub rock scene in London in the 70s, got married and bought our first home, a flat, then changed job to one with a company car. Look back on those days with good memories, but wouldn't want to return, especially to the days of 17% mortgage rates.

9toenails · 30/03/2023 00:05

Clem Attlee.

Seriously. Yes I am old. But, also seriously, Atlee was by far the best PM this country ever had, by a long long way.

He took the accoutrements of establishment success a little over-seriously, perhaps:
"Few thought he was even a starter,
There were many who thought themselves smarter,
But he ended PM,
CH and OM,
An earl and a knight of the garter."
[By C. Atlee, in case you didn't know.]

... But, really seriously, the achievements of that post-war Labour government were astounding: welfare state, NHS, education, exit from empire, public ownership ... And all in a wholly ruined economy. How my life - and that of all my family and the rest of them - was changed by good old Clem.

{And if it hadn't been for that terrible winter, ... ]

MarshaBradyo · 30/03/2023 00:09

Were people here in recession proof sectors at the end of Blair / Brown

Our sector was hit hard, I’d say a quarter gone, a quarter in my agency alone redundant, house value tanked

What goes up comes down and all that

Snozzlemaid · 30/03/2023 00:27

Financially we're much better off now (dc grown up, no mortgage) but Blair for me too.

Having young children at the time, the introduction of tax credits was a life saver for us.
I really felt he was doing all he could to support families.

TooBigForMyBoots · 30/03/2023 00:28

The last global banking crisis happened in 2008. It wasn't like Labour tanked the economy the way Cameron, Johnson and Truss did.

TrickorTreacle · 30/03/2023 00:39

The best era of my life was the 2000s, which would have meant Blair and Brown. I wasn't too keen on either though, or anyone after Blair/Brown, but now we have Rishi Sunak and he comes across (in my mind) as a bit more sensible than his 4 Tory predocessors (Cameron/May/Johnson/Truss). Thatcher was before my time, and all I remember about Major was him making frequent appearances on Spitting Image, totally grey :-)

ashitghost · 30/03/2023 00:42

Tony Blair absolutely nailed on.

Gooseysgirl · 30/03/2023 00:51

Blair/Brown for us too

whitesnowflake · 30/03/2023 00:53

Blair/Brown

jennytheonionslayer · 30/03/2023 01:01

Margaret Thatcher.

79-90 were good times for me.

Iflyaway · 30/03/2023 01:02

Blair yea.
But he fucked up going into Iraq with US.

Iraq is still fucked up even now.

John Mayor. Elder Statesman, who was instrumental in the Good Friday Agreement.

You may think N.I. politics is nothing to do with you living in England, but many bombs went off there....

headingtosun · 30/03/2023 01:08

HelloBunny · 29/03/2023 22:50

Tony Blair. Lived in London. Was in my early 20s. Had a laugh! Life was good.

This was me and now DH.

HowardKirksConscience · 30/03/2023 01:15

MarshaBradyo · 29/03/2023 23:50

Life is good for us now but it was too with Cameron

I dread Starmer getting in, if he does I’ll have to avoid some specific radio for a while, just hearing them

My life and its ups and downs is mostly separate to government though. It doesn’t impact me that much - 30 hours cc was really good and lockdown was utterly hideous but beyond that my happiness isn’t related to them

Why do you dread Starmer getting in, out of interest? I’m not really sure what he’s going to do…

LordBuckley · 30/03/2023 01:16

Harold Wilson.

It was a really great time to be young.

XDownwiththissortofthingX · 30/03/2023 01:26

HowardKirksConscience · 30/03/2023 01:15

Why do you dread Starmer getting in, out of interest? I’m not really sure what he’s going to do…

We're still a while away from the GE, so the Tory press has yet to invent what Starmer will supposedly do.