Deutsche Welle, 8 April 2013
Former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher has died of a stroke at the age of 87. She was the most important British politician of the post-war period.
Former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher has died of a stroke at the age of 87. She was the most important British politician of the post-war period.
Margaret
Thatcher was the politician by whom all her successors measured themselves.
Both Labour and Conservative leaders are still defined - and often define
themselves - by their stand on the mix of policies which became known as
Thatcherism.
The woman
who was to become one of the most influential politicians of the 20th century
had famously modest origins. She was born Margaret Hilda Roberts on October 13
1925 in the small town of Grantham, Lincolnshire. Her father was a grocer and
Methodist lay preacher who was actively involved in local politics.
The young
Margaret became president of the university's student Conservative Association.
After graduating, she worked as a research chemist, but continued to pursue her
interest in politics.
Thatcher couldn't win over enough voters in her first election |
'Milk
snatcher'
She was
finally elected to parliament as member for Finchley in North London in 1959,
becoming a junior minister, and when the Conservatives went into opposition in
1964 she became their spokeswoman on Housing and Land, promoting the right of
council tenants to buy their own homes, a policy she successfully implemented
when she eventually came to power. An estimated 2 million council tenants
became home owners, at the cost of sharply reducing the stock of social
housing.
When the
Conservatives came back to power in 1970, Thatcher was promoted to Education
Secretary. Told to make cuts in her department, she stopped free school milk
for primary school children, winning herself the famous headline:
"Margaret Thatcher, milk snatcher."
Thatcher had plenty of reason to celebrate political victories |
Tough
policies
Thatcherism,
as her policies came to be known, was characterized by an emphasis on low
inflation, privatization, a free market economy, control of the money supply,
and controls on the power of the labor movement. The policy was to have a
profound and lasting effect on British society.
Thatcher was fascinated by Reagan - she even kept his doodles from a G7 summit |
Thatcher
was said to have liked her nickname "The Iron Lady", bestowed upon
her by a Soviet newspaper in 1976 after she criticized the Soviet Union. She
was a staunch ally and friend of her American counterpart, Ronald Reagan,
throughout the Cold War, allowing the United States to deploy nuclear missiles
in Britain and tripling the UK's nuclear forces with US Trident nuclear-armed
submarines.
Winning in
the Falklands, and at home
On 2 April
1982 the military junta in Argentina invaded the British Falkland Islands,
claiming that they belonged to Argentina. She dispatched a naval task force and
two months later Argentina surrendered. The victory ensured Thatcher's
re-election in a Conservative landslide the following year.
In her
second term, Thatcher continued to implement her monetary policies, including
stepping up the privatization of state industries. Millions of ordinary people
were encouraged to buy shares in industries such as British Telecom, British
Gas, Rolls-Royce and British Airways as they were sold off.
Thatcher's
hard-line approach also extended to the conflict in Northern Ireland. On 12
October 1984 the IRA bombed a Brighton hotel where she was staying for a party
conference. Five people were killed, but Thatcher escaped unharmed, and
delivered her speech as planned. The following year Thatcher and the Irish
premier Garret FitzGerald signed the Anglo-Irish Agreement, giving the Republic
of Ireland an advisory role in the governance of Northern Ireland for the first
time.
Opposed to
German reunification
Thatcher did not support Helmut Kohl's wish to reunify Germany. |
Thatcher's
"Iron Lady" stance was eventually to prove her downfall. Ever
skeptical where Brussels was concerned, in 1990 she gave a speech stoutly
rejecting any increase in the power of what was then the European Community.
The speech outraged many of her colleagues, and moved two prominent
Conservative ministers to rise up against her. She was advised that, if she
tried to defend her position, she would lose. The defeat was a bitter blow:
"It was treachery with a smile on its face," she said later.
British prime minister David Cameron emphasizes his debt to Thatcher |
In 2002
Thatcher suffered several small strokes and was advised not to engage in public
speaking. She also began to suffer from dementia. She did, however,
occasionally appear in public, notably for the unveiling of a bronze statue of
herself in the House of Commons in 2007. "I might have preferred
iron," Thatcher said, "but bronze will do. It won't
rust."
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