John Major

John Major

82 · Born: Mar 29, 1943

Personal Details

Height6' 0"
BornMar 29, 1943 Carshalton, Surrey, England, UK

Biography

John Major's biography:

John Major was born on March 29, 1943, in London, to Tom Major-Ball, a retired circus performer, who was 65 when John was born. John attended Cheam Common Primary School and Rutlish Grammar School, where he had an undistinguished academic career.

In the mid-1950s, his family moved to Brixton, a poor neighborhood in South London, and lived in a cramped flat on Coldharbour Lane. John did not do well in secondary school and dropped out at age 16. Later, he said that he could have been a better student and wished he had stayed in school.

Throughout the early 1960s, John worked odd jobs, but was unemployed for much of the time. He occupied himself by joining the Young Conservatives. He finally found steady employment in 1963, working for the London Electricity Board. He also took a correspondence course in banking, which would become his main career.

John married his wife, Norma Wagstaff, in October 1970, and they have two children. In the 1979 General Election, John was elected Conservative MP for Huntington. He served in Parliament for twenty-two years.

John was appointed Minister for Pensions and Social Security in 1985, Chief Secretary to the Treasury in 1987, and Foreign Secretary in 1989. He accompanied Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher on a trip to Malaysia to meet with heads of other Commonwealth Countries.

In November 1990, Michael Heseltine contested Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher for the leadership of the Conservative Party. Margaret Thatcher did not win the required two-thirds majority to remain leader, so a second ballot was held. Margaret Thatcher's cabinet all told her that she would lose a leadership ballot to Michael Heseltine and encouraged her to resign.

So on November 22, 1990, Margaret Thatcher stood down as Prime Minister. But the Conservatives still had to elect a new leader. Michael Heseltine was in for the second ballot. John Major now entered the contest, as Margaret Thatcher's preferred candidate. So did Douglas Hurd, the Foreign Secretary. John Major won the second ballot and went on to become Prime Minister.

John Major had some giant shoes to fill on becoming Prime Minister. At first, people welcomed his quiet, low-key, and modest public manner, but it quickly became clear that John Major was just not up to the job. Nonetheless, he narrowly won the 1992 General Election for the Conservative Party.

John Major's term in office brought Britain's humiliating withdrawal from the ERM in late-1992. He tried to steer a middle course on Europe, but only angered both the pro-Europeans and the Eurosceptics in the Conservative Party. His failure to ratify the Maastrict Treaty in Britain cost him.

He tried to re-focus the Conservative Party on "basics" - rule of law, police, family values, education - but this backfired as the media was encouraged to start digging for scandal, and they found it.

His authority was so badly diminished that in 1995, he brought matters to a head by calling a leadership ballot for July and vowing to step down if he did not receive the required majority. His line to his opponents was "Put up or shut up." He won the ballot, but it resolved nothing and he spent his last two years in office marking time.

The Conservative Party lost its majority in Parliament in December 1996, but John Major managed to stay in office for a few more months. Finally, his term ran out and he called a General Election for May 1997. It was a long campaign, in which he hoped to stave off defeat and give the Labour Party, now led by Tony Blair, enough time to trip up and lose the election. But on May 1, 1997, the Conservative Party suffered its worst-ever defeat. Labour won by a landslide, with a 179-seat majority in Parliament. John Major held his seat, but a number of cabinet ministers went down to defeat. John Major resigned as leader of the Conservative Party immediately after the election, but he remained in Parliament until he stood down in the 2001 election.

As Prime Minister, John Major engaged in the first real negotiations with Sinn Fein to bring about peace in Northern Ireland and lay the groundwork for the Good Friday Agreement of 1998, which ended the thirty years of violence in Northern Ireland.

Career

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2021
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2011
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2009
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2007
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2003
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2001
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1994
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1991