Glad you semi-agree. To be honest I know little of Scargill and the battles so you may be right there. People my age know it anecdotally rather than directly. Don’t get me wrong, I’m sure there are plenty that side with their parents/grandparents(?) and feel the injustice, but there will be a decent sized 20-something audience who’s lives have not been affected and they don’t know of the struggle.
I think a lot of people were tired of unions. Particularly car manufacturing. I read a stat that Red Robbo was involved in 530 strikes in the late 60s / seventies. The members turned and eventually went back to work.
Thatcher came at the time when people needed change and she had the perfect formula at the time. A lot of young people embraced it. Then the stockpiling of coal to break the miners...
Many people saw the injustice and brutality of the closure of pits. It devastated communities. But others were under the spell of Thatcher et al. And had Michael Foot and Kinnock as the other choices.
in my view the silent majority chose the lesser of the two evils. And hopefully killed the Corbyn plan (I never really heard what Labour were going to do because they were too busy shouting and always seemed to be bitter,nasty and the vocal ones just ranted. Scary for the silent majority of voters.
What changed for the young voters. Some clearly like Corbyn but I didn’t see droves at polling stations. Maybe they saw through the dreamland Corbyn was creating for them?
As for sanctity of the vote...I think it is saved for a while now. We didn’t buy Corbyn. Many needed Brexit to be done..scary as that may seem to Remainers and leavers alike.