
The Daily Mirror reports the 1978 May Day Holiday
May Day Public Holidays: 1978-2026. From Michael Foot to Keir Starmer
The May Day Bank Holiday on 4th May looks set fair weatherwise, quite unusual for UK Bank Holidays!
The current structure of public holidays goes back to the Bank Holidays Act of 1871 which recognised the principle of a very small amount of paid time off for the new industrial workforce, and of course bank employees.
The framework has been tweaked since then to add New Year’s Day and differs in Scotland and Northern Ireland.
Another recent addition is the May Day Bank Holiday. 2025 is the 47th anniversary of its introduction in 1978 by the Callaghan Labour Government. The Minister responsible was Michael Foot.
The Tories didn’t much like it then and many still don’t. Calls for its abolition and replacement by Trafalgar Day later in the year, or very probably a Thatcher Day, are heard from time to time.
The TUC’s view remains that Britain has the fewest public holidays in Europe.
May Day has been a traditional day of celebration, both of spring and of Labour and it is marked in one or other and sometimes both contexts around the world.
The introduction of the official holiday in 1978 did not come without some issues.
Firstly a labour movement tradition has been not to work on May Day, or at least the afternoon of May Day so people could actually walk out of work, even if this meant taking unofficial strike action.
The traditional London May Day March is still held on the day itself (except in 2026 to mark the 100th anniversary of the General Strike), and prior to 1978 strike action in some years was quite widespread.
The appearance of the official holiday can be seen as a way of trying to stop such- to those in authority- unfortunate occurrences.
At the same time the complaint of many in the labour movement was that the bank holiday was only on May Day itself if it coincided with a Monday. Otherwise it was on the next available Monday.
It is interesting to look back on views of that May Day 48 years ago
Fortunately we can do this via a House of Lords debate on the holiday that took place on May 9th 1978.
The debate was led off by Viscount Davidson who asked the question whether the Government thought having a May Day bank-holiday was ‘wise’ and whether they planned to continue with it.
The Tory Peer claimed that the idea of having a public holiday on May Day was a matter of ‘political ideology’.
Lord Wallace for Labour pointed out that the Christian church had for centuries celebrated May 1st as the day of St Joseph the Worker so the decision to have a UK public holiday was clearly a ‘very respectable’ one.
He went on to point out that the only bad thing about the 1978 May Day holiday had been that it rained but even the then Lib-Lab Pact could not control the elements. In response Lord Alport demanded that if the Government planned to persist with a May Day holiday they must act to ensure that the weather was better.
It might thought the Thatcher Government after 1979 would have abolished the May Day holiday. Checking the Thatcher Archive however one finds that on Monday May 4th 1981 Mrs T enjoyed lunch with Denis, Mark and Carol, happy as others to have a day off.
In 2026 so far Keir Starmer seems to have forgotten May Day altogether.
This post appeared in the Morning Star 1st May 2025


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