The
Conservative campaign emphasised lower taxes, a strong economy and defence, and also employed rapid-response reactions to take advantage of
Labour errors.
Norman Tebbit and
Saatchi & Saatchi spearheaded the Conservative campaign. However, when on "Wobbly Thursday" it was rumoured a Marplan opinion poll showed a narrow 2% Conservative lead, the "exiles" camp of
David Young,
Tim Bell and the advertising firm
Young & Rubicam advocated a more aggressively anti-Labour message. This was when, according to Young's memoirs, Young grabbed Tebbit by the lapels and shook him, shouting: "Norman, listen to me, we're about to lose this fucking election." In his memoirs, Tebbit defends the Conservative campaign: "We finished exactly as planned on the ground where Labour was weak and we were strong—defence, taxation, and the economy." During the election campaign, however, Tebbit and party leader
Margaret Thatcher argued. Bell and Saatchi & Saatchi produced memorable posters for the Conservatives, such as a picture of a British soldier's arms raised in surrender with the caption "Labour's Policy On Arms"—a reference to Labour's policy of
unilateral nuclear disarmament. The first Conservative
party political broadcast played on the theme of "Freedom" and ended with a fluttering Union Jack, the hymn
I Vow to Thee, My Country (which Thatcher would later quote in her "
Sermon on the Mound") and the slogan "It's Great To Be Great Again". The Labour campaign was a marked change from previous efforts; professionally directed by
Peter Mandelson and
Bryan Gould, it concentrated on presenting and improving
Neil Kinnock's image to the electorate. Labour's first party political broadcast, dubbed
Kinnock: The Movie, was directed by
Hugh Hudson of
Chariots of Fire fame, and concentrated on portraying Kinnock as a caring, compassionate family man. It was filmed at the Great Orme in Wales and had "
Ode to Joy" and Brahms'
1st Symphony as its music. He was particularly critical of the high unemployment that the government's economic policies had resulted in, as well as condemning the wait for treatment that many patients had endured on the
National Health Service. Kinnock's personal popularity jumped 16 points overnight following the initial broadcast. On 24 May, Kinnock was interviewed by
David Frost and claimed that Labour's alternative defence strategy in the event of a Soviet attack would be "using the resources you've got to make any occupation totally untenable". In a speech two days later Thatcher attacked Labour's defence policy as a programme for "defeat, surrender, occupation, and finally, prolonged guerrilla fighting ... I do not understand how anyone who aspires to Government can treat the defence of our country so lightly". During the 1987 election campaign the Conservative Party issued attack posters which claimed that the Labour Party wanted the book
Young, Gay and Proud to be read in schools, as well as
Police: Out of School,
The Playbook for Kids about Sex, and ''The Milkman's on his Way'', which, according to the
Monday Club's
Jill Knight MP – who introduced
Section 28 and later campaigned against
same-sex marriage – were being taught to "little children as young as five and six", which contained "brightly coloured pictures of little stick men showed all about homosexuality and how it was done", and "explicitly described homosexual intercourse and, indeed, glorified it, encouraging youngsters to believe that it was better than any other sexual way of life". == Endorsements ==