In this issue we celebrate the memory of MG/Rover and the factory where it all ended, Longbridge. April 2005 was a dark month for British motor manufacturing, but it was a full stop that came at the end of a very long chapter. Years of decline, the result of poor management and lack of government support, combined with combustible labour relations, had left our domestic mass production facilities facing inevitable demise.
Of course cars are still being made here, but none are owned domestically and I think that is significant. A globalised economy means that we are simply a place where a multinational’s manufacturing occurs. As Honda, Peugeot and Stellantis have proved, it leaves us more vulnerable to the ebb and flow of international commerce and politics.
Personally I am…