翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ War of the Worlds - The True Story
・ War of the Worldviews
・ War of Urbino
・ War of Vesosis and Tanausis
・ War of Will
・ War of Words
・ War of Words (Fight album)
・ War of ideas
・ War of Illusions
・ War of independence
・ War of Independence Museum
・ War of Independence of Brazil
・ War of Independence Victory Column
・ War of Internet Addiction
・ War of Jenkins' Ear
War of Jennifer's Ear
・ War of Kings
・ War of Kings (album)
・ War of Kings (disambiguation)
・ War of Knives
・ War of Laws
・ War of Legends
・ War of Metz
・ War of Money
・ War of Movement
・ War of Nerves
・ War of Nerves (M*A*S*H)
・ War of Religion
・ War of Resistance (film)
・ War of Saint Sabas


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War of Jennifer's Ear : ウィキペディア英語版
War of Jennifer's Ear
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.
==Election Broadcast==
In the midst of the 1992 general election campaign, on 24 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 vents. This case was contrasted with the ability of those able to afford private treatment – which had been granted tax breaks by the Conservatives – to get treatment quickly. 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".

Under British election regulations, such broadcasts are rationed by formula 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.
The story of the broadcast was described by one press officer – Julie Hall, Neil Kinnock's press secretary, as based on an actual case. In fact while a particular case had been the starting point of the creative team that had produced the broadcast – working from a letter by the girl's parent to Robin Cook, the shadow health secretary, they denied it was meant to be a recounting of her case.
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?". This was one of several anti-Kinnock headlines that the tabloid ran in the run-up to the 1992 general election, and it has often been said that The Sun's unshakeable support for the Tories and opposition to Labour helped win the election for the Tories. The story though was broken by Peter Hitchens,〔
(8 days to go: Bravura performances: Hack of the Day ) ''guardian.co.uk'', 30 May 2001〕〔Peter Hitchens (Public Schools, and not so public ones ) ''Mail Online'', 25 March 2009〕 then of the ''Daily Express''.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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