MARGARET THATCHER, THE IRON LADY DIES AT 87
Even if you aren´t a follower of her ideas, the same ideas that now the
Spanish’s PM (Mariano Rajoy), is doing with his country (no public health
service, no public education…). We need to admit that this woman has been one
of the most influential people in the 20th century in the world as well as one
of the most influential people of the whole history. And when the people loose
such an important person (even if she didn´t do the things rights in my
opinion), we need to recognise her as a fundamental person of the Human History.
The funeral will happen next Wednesday at St Paul´s Cathedral in London with
more than 2000 guests, including most of the politicians of the whole world
like David Cameron or her Majesty, the Queen Elizabeth II:
“Margaret Thatcher, the most dominant British prime minister since
Winston Churchill in 1940 and a global champion of the late 20th-century free
market economic revival, has died.
Her spokesman, Lord
Bell, said on Monday: "It is with great sadness that Mark and Carol
Thatcher announced that their mother Baroness Thatcher died peacefully
following a stroke this morning. A further statement will be made later."
Downing Street
announced that she would receive a ceremonial funeral with military honours at
St Paul's Cathedral.
David Cameron, who is
cutting short his trip to Europe to return to London following the news, said:
"It was with great sadness that l learned of Lady Thatcher's death. We've
lost a great leader, a great prime minister and a great Briton."
He told the BBC:
"As our first woman prime minister, Margaret Thatcher succeeded against
all the odds, and the real thing about Margaret Thatcher is that she didn't
just lead our country, she saved our country, and I believe she will go down as
the greatest British peacetime prime minister."
Cameron later said
parliament would be recalled on Wednesday "for a special session in which
tributes will be paid" to Lady Thatcher.
In a statement,
President Barack Obama said that, "the world has lost one of the great
champions of freedom and liberty, and America has lost a true friend."
"Here in
America, many of us will never forget her standing shoulder to shoulder with
President Reagan, reminding the world that we are not simply carried along by
the currents of history—we can shape them with moral conviction, unyielding
courage and iron will."
He added that her
premiership was "an example to our daughters that there is no glass
ceiling that can't be shattered".
Buckingham Palace
said the Queen was sad to hear the news and that she would be sending a private
message of sympathy to the family.
The first woman
elected to lead a major western state, Lady Thatcher, as she became after the
longest premiership since 1827, served 11 unbroken years at No 10. She was only
overthrown by an internal Tory party coup in 1990 after her reckless promotion
of the poll tax led to rioting in Trafalgar Square.
Thatcher, who was 87,
had been in declining health for some years, suffering from dementia. The death
of Sir Denis Thatcher, her husband of 50 years and closest confidante,
intensified her isolation in what had proved a frustrating retirement, despite
energetic worldwide activity in the early years.
After a series of mini-strokes
in 2002 Thatcher withdrew from public life, no longer able to make the kind of
waspish pronouncements that had been her forte in office – and beyond.
Her death was greeted with
tributes from across the political spectrum.
As Labour sources
announced the party would suspend campaigning in the local election as a mark
of respect, its leader, Ed Miliband, said: "She will be remembered as a
unique figure. She reshaped the politics of a whole generation. She was
Britain's first woman prime minister. She moved the centre ground of British
politics and was a huge figure on the world stage.
"The Labour
party disagreed with much of what she did and she will always remain a
controversial figure. But we can disagree and also greatly respect her
political achievements and her personal strength."
The deputy prime
minister, Nick Clegg, said: "Margaret Thatcher was one of the defining
figures in modern British politics. Whatever side of the political debate you
stand on, no one can deny that as prime minister she left a unique and lasting
imprint on the country she served.
"She may have
divided opinion during her time in politics but everyone will be united today
in acknowledging the strength of her personality and the radicalism of her
politics."
The work and pensions
secretary, Iain Duncan Smith, said: "Watching her set out to change
Britain for the better in 1979 made me believe there was, at last, real purpose
and real leadership in politics once again. She bestrode the political world
like a colossus."
The former Prime
Minister Tony Blair said: "Margaret Thatcher was a towering political
figure. Very few leaders get to change not only the political landscape of
their country but of the world. Margaret was such a leader. Her global impact
was vast. And some of the changes she made in Britain were, in certain respects
at least, retained by the 1997 Labour government, and came to be implemented by
governments around the world."
Blair's successor as
prime minister, Gordon Brown, said: "She will be remembered not only for
being Britain's first female prime minister and holding the office for 11
years, but also for the determination and resilience with which she carried out
all her duties throughout her public life. Even those who disagreed with her
never doubted the strength of her convictions and her unwavering belief in
Britain's destiny in the world."
Describing her as a
political phenomenon, the former Tory prime minister Sir John Major said:
"Her outstanding characteristics will always be remembered by those who
worked closely with her: courage and determination in politics, and humanity
and generosity of spirit in private."
The mayor of London,
Boris Johnson, said: "Her memory will live long after the world has
forgotten the grey suits of today's politics."
The "Iron
Lady" proved a significant cold war ally of the US president Ronald Reagan
in the final showdown with the Soviet Union, which broke up under reformist
pressures led by Mikhail Gorbachev, a Kremlin leader with whom Thatcher
famously declared she could "do business".
As a result, many
ordinary voters in ex-Soviet bloc states saw her as a bold champion of their
liberty, a view widely shared across the spectrum of mainstream US opinion –
though not at home or among key EU partners.
Thatcher was an
unremarkable mid-ranking Conservative politician – known chiefly for being a
"milk-snatching" education secretary under Edward Heath (1970-74) –
until she unexpectedly overthrew her twice-defeated boss to become party leader
in 1975.
Within a decade she
had become known around the world – both admired and detested – for her
pro-market domestic reforms and her implacable attitudes in foreign policy,
including her long-running battle with the IRA, which almost managed to murder
her when it placed a bomb in the Grand Hotel, Brighton, in 1984.
At home the emerging
doctrine of Thatcherism meant denationalisation of state-owned industry – the
new word "privatisation" came into widespread use in many countries –
and defeat of militant trade unionists, notably the National Union of Miners,
whose year-long strike (1984-85) was bitter and traumatic.
Boosted by the newly
arrived revenues from Britain's North Sea oil fields, Thatcher had room to
manoeuvre and change the ageing industrial economy in ways denied to post-war
predecessors, and she used the opportunity to quell her enemies – including
moderate "wets" in her own party and cabinet.
But she also deployed
her notorious "handbaggings" in the European Union to obtain a
British rebate – "my money" as she called it. She was less successful
in fending off the centralising ambitions of the "Belgian empire",
her description of the European commission, especially in the years when it was
headed by the French socialist Jacques Delors.
A further sign of her
losing her grip came when Thatcher, long a sympathiser with the apartheid
regime in South Africa against the liberation movement, dismissed Nelson
Mandela as a terrorist.
Her allies in the
tabloid press, notably Rupert Murdoch's Sun, egged her on. And, as the British
economy recovered from the severe recession that her monetarist medicine had
inflicted on it – to tame the unions and cure inflation – she briefly seemed
invincible.
But untrammelled
power, with the defeat or retirement of allies who had kept her in check, led
to mistakes and growing unpopularity. When Sir Geoffrey Howe, nominally her
deputy, finally fell out with Thatcher – chiefly over Europe – his devastating
resignation speech triggered Michael Heseltine's leadership challenge.
It had been expected
since he resigned as defence secretary over the Westland helicopter affair in
1986, Thatcher's closest previous brush with political death.
Heseltine denied her
outright victory in the first round of voting – then confined only to MPs – and
she made way for Major rather than risk losing to him in the second ballot.
In retirement she wrote highly successful memoirs in
two volumes and campaigned energetically on behalf of the Thatcher Foundation,
which sought to promote her values – free markets and Anglo-Saxon liberties – around
the world. Speaking engagements made her moderately wealthy and she made her
final home in London's Belgravia.”
(The Guardian, 2013)
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