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Sir Graham Day Who Relaunched Bl As The Rover Group Has Died


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#1 mab01uk

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Posted 20 August 2025 - 10:50 PM

"Sir Graham Day, who has died aged 92, was a hard-nosed, inspirational Canadian lawyer who slowed the decline of Britain’s shipbuilding industry and relaunched British Leyland as the Rover Group; he also chaired British Aerospace and Cadbury Schweppes.
As BL Chairman in 1986, he sold off sectors of the company to concentrate on Austin Rover’s volume car operation. He stayed when the government sold Rover to BAe, leaving in 1993 not long before its further sale to BMW briefly seemed to guarantee Rover’s future. With no grounding in manufacturing, Day argued: “I may be a lawyer but I reckon my numbers are pretty good.” Arriving at BL, he told employees: “Work hard, keep your nose clean and hope like hell you have a job tomorrow.” He insisted he was not a hatchet man, and won over journalists by telling them: “I’m generally available on the bad news days as well as the good.”
In June 1986, weeks after arriving, Day relaunched BL as the Rover Group. His priorities were to sell off fringe businesses, put more “commercial punch” into Austin Rover and stem losses at Leyland Trucks, which he merged with DAF, bringing plant closures and 2,600 redundancies.
In 1987 – with losses peaking at £892 million (£1,800 for each car sold) – Day signed an agreement strengthening Rover’s ties with Honda, with a new medium-sized car range. He ended the Austin marque, and put £35 million towards a better-trained workforce.
In 1988 the Government sold its 99.8 per cent shareholding in Rover to BAe, who received a “dowry” of £650 million towards new model development. The deal – cleared with Honda and Brussels – was a coup for Day, who had insisted on a private sale as an auction would damage the business.
Day told the Trade and Industry Select Committee he did not expect the takeover to lead directly to redundancies. Weeks later, Rover announced the closure of its Llanelli and Cowley (South) plants, with a loss of 3,400 jobs. The MPs recalled Day, who apologised but said the closures had been “long on the cards”.
He turned down the chance to succeed Admiral Sir Raymond Lygo as BAe’s chief executive, and in 1988 handed over his chief executive’s duties at Rover to the Leyland veteran George Simpson, who would negotiate the company’s sale to BMW before overseeing the collapse of GEC. In 1988-89 Rover made a £65 million profit.
In 1993 Day gave up all his chairmanships and returned to Canada. He departed with a scathing attack on education in Britain, saying there was a growing division between an elite workforce and an unemployable, semi-literate mass which spent its days watching videos.
Sir Graham Day, born May 3 1933, died July 31 2025:-​
https://archive.ph/fwyiJ


Edited by mab01uk, 20 August 2025 - 10:50 PM.


#2 mab01uk

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Posted 20 August 2025 - 10:52 PM

Back in early 1987 after seeing reports in the Motoring press and media that Graham Day (the then new Rover Group Chairman), was determined to keep selling the Mini and advertise that it was still in current production (unknown to many since the launch of the Metro in 1980) and despite several years of neglect of the Mini and its marketing by Austin-Rover....I was therefore inspired to write a letter to him outlining how easy it would be technically for Austin-Rover Engineers to revive the 1275cc Mini Cooper by using the MG Metro engine and gearbox, just like many of us were doing as enthusiasts at that time. I was quite surprised to get this reply below, rediscovered a while back in a box of my old papers......

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Some may remember my original post below back in 2018.
Letter from Rover Chairman, Graham Day - 1987:-
https://www.theminif...raham-day-1987/

 

 

 



#3 MatthewsDad

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Posted Yesterday, 07:23 PM

Perhaps it's just me but I recall that chief execs and industrialists from the 70s and 80s were household names and far more prominent than they are these days. Perhaps it was because industrial conflict was reported on the TV news every night? John Edwards, John Egan, John Harvey Jones, Ian MacGregor, Graham Day. Different times.




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