John Major tried to sweet-talk Margaret Thatcher after she blasted him for dumping the poll tax
Maggie was furious as her successor planned to do away with her flagship policy
PRIME Minister John Major desperately tried to sweet-talk Margaret Thatcher after she turned on him in his first weeks in No 10, newly released files show.
He wrote to his furious predecessor in 1991 when she accused him of ruining her legacy on TV.
He was about to dump her hated poll tax, one of Baroness Thatcher’s flagship policies.
Beginning “Dear Margaret” and ending “Yours ever, John”, he warned voters would be hit by much higher bills.
He added: “I am convinced that it would never be accepted as equitable.”
Sir John, who succeeded Baroness Thatcher just months before, replaced it with the council tax in 1991.
His five-page letter has been made public for the first time by the National Archives in Kew.
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