War of Jennifer's Ear
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The War of Jennifer's Ear is the name given to a 1992 controversy in United Kingdom politics, between the opposition Labour Party and the governing Conservative Party. The name is an allusion to the War of Jenkins' Ear, an actual armed conflict of the 18th century.
In the midst of the 1992 general election campaign, on Tuesday 24th March, Labour ran a Party Election Broadcast about a five year old girl with glue ear who waited a year for the simple operation to insert s vents. The party hoped to highlight what it saw as the mismanagement and underfunding of the National Health Service (NHS) under the Conservative government. Labour leader Neil Kinnock employed the slogan If you want to vote Conservative, don't fall ill.
The story of the broadcast was described as based on an actual case. Under British election regulations, such broadcasts are rationed equally among main parties, and terrestrial broadcasters are obliged to run them on set days, in peaktime schedules. Each broadcast therefore has more impact on political debate than in unregulated systems.
Unfortunately for the Labour Party, the girl in question was the granddaughter of a Conservative Party member, who gave the Conservatives advance warning of the claims to be made in the broadcast. Conflicting accounts of the details of the case quickly surfaced. The mass circulation tabloid, The Sun, ran the story: If Kinnock will tell lies about a sick little girl, will he ever tell the truth about anything?.[citation needed]
Labour's political point was immediately sunk in a storm of editorializing and outrage over the ethics of involving a young girl in national politics, and over which side made her identity public (Her first name, Jennifer, was leaked by Labour press secretary Julie Hall on the 26th March). The War of Jennifer's Ear did no good - and probably some damage - to the Labour party, which had been leading in opinion polls before election day.
The Conservative Party went on to win the 1992 election by a narrow majority of 21 seats. Labour leader Neil Kinnock resigned three days afterwards. Jennifer's father, John Bennett, went on to become a critic of the health provision achieved by Tony Blair's Labour government.
[edit] Other 'Health War' Controversies
The War of Jennifer's Ear now serves as the type specimen in British political discussions, for political rhetoric that leans on specific cases, as opposed to broad statistics, particularly in the context of debates over healthcare. Such foundations are acknowledged to be hazardous for politicians to employ in any decisive argument. The tactic has nonetheless been repeated on several occasions, at each of which headline writers attempt to formulate a new version of the 'war of' label:
- Mavis Skeet 2000 - A cancer patient died in Leeds after four times having surgery postponed by a lack of available intensive care beds. The scandal was raised by a newspaper, and resulted in significant government reviews [1].
- Rose Addis 2002 - Conservative leader Iain Duncan Smith criticised the government's record by illustrating the case of a 94-year old woman who he claimed had been neglected in a hospital. The Labour Party's story - that Addis had refused care from staff because they were black - was not widely believed when it emerged that several of her regular carers were black.
- Anonymous 2004 - Conservative leader Michael Howard complained that a Folkestone constituent of his was told to wait 20 months for vital radiotherapy. The issue cooled off after he discovered that a clerical error had occurred - the wait was in fact scheduled to be 20 weeks.
- Margaret Dixon 2005 - Conservative leader Michael Howard attempted to show, in the run-up to the United Kingdom general election, 2005, that the incumbent Labour Party was failing the NHS. Mrs Dixon of Warrington was cited to illustrate the increase in cancelled operations, a statistic Labour quickly dismissed as the consequence of increases in overall operations performed.