The incident led to a decrease in public support for the striking miners, and to an increase in the number of workers in other industries who crossed miners' picket lines (e.g. at power plants). The group
Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners said that their collectors in London were abused as "murderers" after the incident.
Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher said, "My reaction is one of anger at what this had done to a family of a person only doing his duty and taking someone to work who wanted to go to work."
Kim Howells, speaking for the South Wales
National Union of Mineworkers, blamed the attack on the attempts to persuade miners to return to work.
David Owen, the leader of the
Social Democrats, called on all miners to return to work for one day on the following Monday as a "gut reaction" protest against the killing. Labour Party leader
Neil Kinnock was scheduled to appear at a Labour Party rally alongside Scargill in
Stoke-on-Trent on the day of the tragedy. Kinnock's speech developed into an argument with some hecklers who saw him as having betrayed the NUM by failing to support the strike. Kinnock shouted back, "Well, I was not telling them lies. That's what I was not doing during that period." Wilkie lived with his fiancée Janice Reed, who was the mother of his two-year-old daughter and was pregnant with a baby who was born six weeks later. He also had a 12-year-old daughter and a five-year-old son by a previous partner. Funds were opened to help the family; among the donors was philanthropist
Paul Getty. The
Bishop of Llandaff led Wilkie's funeral service; he called for "some sort of moratorium" and a return to work by the miners in return for an impartial board to investigate conditions in the coal industry. ==Murder trial==