Margaret Thatcher
By, Kanthi
Margaret
Roberts, the daughter of a grocer, was born in Grantham, Lincolnshire, on 13th
October, 1925. After graduating from Oxford University she worked as a research
chemist. Later she studied law and eventually became a barrister.
On
13th December, 1951 she married Denis Thatcher, a successful businessman. A
member of the Conservative Party, Margaret Thatcher was elected to represent
Finchley in October 1959. Two years later she joined the government of Harold
Macmillan as joint parliamentary secretary for Pensions and National Insurance.
The
Conservative Party was defeated in the 1964 General Election and Harold Wilson
became the new prime minister. Edward Heath, the new leader of the
Conservatives, appointed her as Opposition Spokesman on Pensions and National
Insurance. She later held opposition posts on Housing (October 1965), Treasury
(April 1966), Fuel and Power (October 1967), Transport (November, 1968) and
Education (October, 1969).
Following
the Conservative victory in the 1970 General Election, Thatcher became
Secretary of State for Education and Science. In October 1970 she created great
controversy by bringing an end to free school milk for children over seven and
increasing school meal charges.
Edward
Heath, the prime minister, came into conflict with the trade unions over his
attempts to impose a prices and incomes policy. His attempts to legislate
against unofficial strikes led to industrial disputes. In 1973 a miners'
work-to-rule led to regular power cuts and the imposition of a three day week.
Heath called a general election in 1974 on the issue of "who rules".
He failed to get a majority and Harold Wilson and the Labour Party were
returned to power.
In
January 1975 Thatcher challenged Edward Heath for the leadership of the Conservative
Party. On 4th February Thatcher defeated Heath by 130 votes to 119 and became
the first woman leader of a major political party. Heath took the defeat badly
and refused to serve in Thatcher's shadow cabinet.
James
Callaghan replaced Harold Wilson as prime minister on 16th March 1976. Thatcher
gradually adopted a more right-wing political programme placing considerable
emphasis on the market economy. In January 1978 she was condemned for making a
speech where she claimed that people feared being "swamped" by
immigrants.
In
1978 the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Denis Healey, controversially began
imposing tight monetary controls. This included deep cuts in public spending on
education and health. Critics claimed that this laid the foundations of what
became known as monetarism. In 1978 these public spending cuts led to a wave of
strikes (winter of discontent) and the Labour Party was easily defeated in the
1979 General Election.
Thatcher
now became the first woman in Britain to become prime minister. In November
1979 Thatcher attended a summit meeting of the European Economic Community
where she attempted to renegotiate Britain's contribution to the EEC budget.
Thatcher's
government continued the monetarist policies introduced by Denis Healey. Inflation
was reduced but unemployment doubled between 1979 and 1980. In 1981, Sir
Geoffrey Howe, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, announced further public
spending cuts. During this period public opinion polls suggested that Thatcher
was the most unpopular prime minister in British history.
Thatcher's
government also raised money by a programme of privatization. This included the
denationalization of British Telecom, British Airways, Rolls Royce and British
Steel.
On
2nd April 1982 Argentina invaded the Falkland Islands. The following day the
United Nations passed resolution 502 demanding that Argentina withdrew from the
Falklands. On 5th April the British Navy left Portsmouth for the Falklands.
Britain declared a 200 mile exclusion zone around the Falklands and on 2nd May
1982 the Argentinean battleship General Belgrano was sunk. Two days later HMS
Sheffield was hit by an exocet missile.
British
troops landed on the Falkland Islands at San Carlos on 21st May. Fighting
continued until Port Stanley was captured and Argentina surrendered on 14th
June 1982. Thatcher's personal popularity was greatly boosted by the successful
outcome of the war and the Conservative Party won the 1983 General Election
with a majority of 144.
Thatcher
developed a close relationship with President Ronald Reagan. They both agreed
to take a firm stance with the Soviet Union. This resulted in her being dubbed
the Iron Lady. However, Thatcher was furious in November 1983 when the United
States invaded the British dependency of Grenada without prior consultation.
Thatcher's
government continued its policy of reducing the power of the trade unions.
Sympathy strikes and the closed shop was banned. Union leaders had to ballot
members on strike action and unions were responsible for the actions of its
members. The government took a firm stand against industrial disputes and the
miners' strike that began in 1984 lasted for 12 months without success.
At
the funeral of Konstantin Chernenko on 13th March 1985, Thatcher met the new
leader Mikhail Gorbachev. Thatcher's views on the Soviet Union changed after
Gorbachev announced his new policy of Perestroika (Restructuring). This
heralded a series of liberalizing economic, political and cultural reforms
which had the aim of making the Soviet economy more efficient. Gorbachev also
introduced policies with the intention of establishing a market economy by
encouraging the private ownership of Soviet industry and agriculture.
At
a meeting on 13th November 1985, Thatcher rejected the idea of entering the European
Exchange Rate Mechanism. However, the following month she attended the
Luxembourg European Council and during the meeting Thatcher agreed to sign the
Single European Act.
In
April 1986 Thatcher was widely criticized for giving permission for US bombers
to take off from Britain to bomb Libya following a series of Libyan inspired
terrorist attacks.
Thatcher
was returned to power for a third time when she won the 1987 General Election
with a majority of 102 seats. The following year she became Britain's longest
serving prime minister for over a hundred years. However, her popularity was
severely damaged when the Community Charge (Poll Tax) was introduced in
Scotland in April 1989 (the rest of Britain was to follow a year later). The
new tax was extremely unpopular and led to public demonstrations.
In
November 1990 Thatcher was challenged as leader of the Conservative Party. She
won the first round of the contest but the majority is not enough to prevent a
second round. On 28th November, 1990, Margaret Thatcher resigned as prime
minister and was replaced by John Major.
Thatcher
left the House of Commons in March 1992. Soon afterwards she entered the House
of Lords as Baroness Thatcher of Kesteven.
(1)
Margaret Thatcher, The Path to Power (1995)
The
command economy required in wartime conditions had habituated many people to an
essentially socialist mentality. Within the Armed Forces it was common
knowledge that left-wing intellectuals had exerted a powerful influence through
the Army Education Corps, which as Nigel Birch observed was 'the only regiment
with a general election among its battle honours'. At home, broadcasters like
J.B. Priestley gave a comfortable yet idealistic gloss to social progress in a
left-wing direction. It is also true that Conservatives, with Churchill in the
lead, were so preoccupied with the urgent imperatives of war that much domestic
policy, and in particular the drawing-up of the agenda for peace, fell largely
to the socialists in the Coalition Government. Churchill himself would have
liked to continue the National Government at least until Japan had been beaten
and, in the light of the fast-growing threat from the Soviet Union, perhaps
beyond then. But the Labour Party had other thoughts and understandably wished
to come into its own collectivist inheritance.
In
I945 therefore, we Conservatives found ourselves confronting two serious and,
as it turned out, insuperable problems. First, the Labour Party had us fighting
on their ground and were always able to outbid us. Churchill had been talking
about post-war 'reconstruction' for some two years, and as part of that
programme Rab Butler's Education Act was on the Statute Book. Further, our
manifesto committed us to the so-called 'full employment' policy of the 1944
Employment White Paper, a massive house-building programme, most of the
proposals for National Insurance benefits made by the great Liberal social
reformer Lord Beveridge and a comprehensive National Health Service. Moreover,
we were not able effectively to take the credit (so far as this was in any case
appropriate to the Conservative Party) for victory, let alone to castigate
Labour for its irresponsibility and extremism, because Attlee and his
colleagues had worked cheek by jowl with the Conservatives in government since
1940. In any event, the war effort had involved the whole population.
I
vividly remember sitting in the student common room in Somerville listening to
Churchill's famous (or notorious) election
broadcast
to the effect that socialism would require 'some sort of Gestapo' to enforce
it, and thinking, 'He's gone too far.' However logically unassailable the
connection between socialism and coercion was, in our present circumstances the
line would not be credible. I knew from political argument on similar lines at
an election meeting in Oxford what the riposte would be: 'Who's run the country
when Mr Churchill's been away? Mr Attlee.' And such, I found, was the reaction
now.
(2)
Margaret Thatcher, speech during the 1950 General Election.
We
are going into one of the biggest battles this country has ever known - a
battle between two ways of life, one which leads inevitably to slavery and the
other to freedom. Our opponents like to try and make you believe that
Conservatism is a privilege of the few. But Conservatism conserves all that is
great and best in our national heritage. What is one of the first tenets of
Conservatism? It is that of national unity. We say one nation, not one class
against another. You cannot build a great nation or a brotherhood of man by
spreading envy or hatred.
Our
policy is not built on envy or hatred, but on liberty for the individual man or
woman. It is not our policy to suppress success: our policy is to encourage it
and encourage energy and initiative. In 1940 it was not the cry of
nationalization that made this country rise up and fight totalitarianism. It
was the cry for freedom and liberty.
(3)
Margaret Thatcher, The Path to Power (1995)
Reggie
Maudling was thought to have the better chance. Although his performance as
Chancellor of the Exchequer had incurred serious and in some ways justified
criticism, there was no doubting Reggie's experience, brilliant intellect and
command of the House. His main weakness, which grew more evident in later
years, was a certain laziness - something which is a frequent temptation to
those who know that they are naturally and effortlessly cleverer than those
around them.
Ted
had a very different character. He too had a very well organized mind. He was
methodical, forceful and, at least on the one question which mattered to him
above all others - Europe - a man of unyielding determination. As Shadow
Chancellor he had the opportunity to demonstrate his capabilities in attacking
the 1965 Finance Bill, which in those days was taken on the floor of the House.
Ted was regarded as being somewhat to the right of Reggie (Maudling), but they
were both essentially centrists in Party terms. Something could be made of the
different approaches they took to Europe, with Reggie regarding EFTA more
favourably and Ted convinced that membership of the EEC was essential. But
their attitudes to specific policies hardly affected the question of which to
support.
(4)
Margaret Thatcher, The Path to Power (1995)
I
was hailed in a modest way as the saviour of the Open University. In Opposition
both lain Macleod and Edward Boyle, who thought that there were educational
priorities more deserving of Government help, had committed themselves in
public against it. And although its abolition was not in the manifesto, many
people expected it to perish. But I was genuinely attracted to the concept of a
'University of the Airwaves', as it was often called, because I thought that it
was an inexpensive way of giving wider access to higher education, because I
thought that trainee teachers in particular would benefit from it, because I
was alert to the opportunities offered by technology to bring the best teaching
to schoolchildren and students, and above all because it gave people a second
chance in life. In any case, the university was due to take its first students
that autumn, and cancellation would have been both expensive and a blow to many
hopes. On condition that I agreed to reduce the immediate intake of students
and find other savings, my Cabinet colleagues allowed the Open University to go
ahead.
(5)
Margaret Thatcher, The Path to Power (1995)
I
felt sorry for Ted Heath personally. He had his music and a small circle of
friends, but politics was his life. That year, moreover, he had suffered a
series of personal blows. His yacht, Morning Cloud, had sunk and his godson had
been among those lost. The election defeat was a further blow.
Nonetheless,
I had no doubt that Ted now ought to go. He had lost three elections out of
four. He himself could not change and he was too defensive of his own past
record to see that a fundamental change of policies was needed.
I
arranged to see Ted on Monday 25 November. He was at his desk in his room at
the House. I need not have worried about hurting his feelings. I went in and
said: 'I must tell you that I have decided to stand for the leadership.' He
looked at me coldly, turned his back, shrugged his shoulders and said: "If
you must." I slipped out of the room.
(6)
Margaret Thatcher, article in the Daily Telegraph (30th January, 1975)
I
was attacked (as Education Secretary) for fighting a rear-guard action in
defence of 'middle-class interests'. The same accusation is levelled at me now,
when I am leading Conservative opposition to the socialist Capital Transfer Tax
proposals. Well, if 'middle-class values' include the encouragement of variety
and individual choice, the provision of fair incentives and rewards for skill
and hard work, the maintenance of effective barriers against the excessive power
of the state and a belief in the wide distribution of individual private
property, then they are certainly what I am trying to defend... If a Tory does
not believe that private property is one of the main bulwarks of individual
freedom, then he had better become a socialist and have done with it. Indeed
one of the reasons for our electoral failure is that people believe too many
Conserva- tives have become socialists already. Britain's progress towards
socialism has been an alternation of two steps forward with half a step back.
And why should anyone support a party that seems to have the courage of no
convictions?
(7)
Editorial in the Daily Telegraph (5th Febuary, 1975)
What
kind of leadership Mrs Thatcher will provide remains to be seen. But one thing is
clear enough at this stage. Mrs Thatcher is a bonny fighter. She believes in
the ethic of hard work and big rewards for success. She has risen from humble
origins by effort and ability and courage. She owes nothing to inherited wealth
or privilege. She ought not to suffer, therefore, from that fatal and
characteristic twentieth-century Tory defect of guilt about wealth. All too
often this has meant that the Tories have felt themselves to be at a moral
disadvantage in the defence of capitalism against socialism. This is one reason
why Britain has travelled so far down the collectivist road. What Mrs Thatcher
ought to be able to offer is the missing moral dimension to the Tory attack on
socialism. If she does so, her accession to the leadership could mark a
sea-change in the whole character of the party political debate in this
country.
(8)
Mikhail Gorbachev, Memoirs (1995)
Mrs
Thatcher is a confident and, I would say, a self-confident woman, the gentle
charm and feminine facade disguising a rather tough and pragmatic politician.
His nickname the 'Iron Lady' is very apt. I told Mrs Thatcher: "I know you
are a person of staunch beliefs, someone who adheres to certain principles and
values. This commands respect. But please consider that next to you is a person
of your own ilk. And I can assure you that I am not under instructions from the
Politburo to persuade you to join the Communist Party."
After
that statement she burst into a hearty laugh, and the stiff, polite and
somewhat acerbic conversation flowed naturally into more interesting talk,
which continued after lunch. The subject turned to disarmament problems. We
started by using our prepared notes, but eventually I put mine aside while Mrs
Thatcher stuffed hers into her handbag. I unfolded a large diagram representing
all nuclear arsenals, grouped into a thousand little squares.
"Each
of these squares," I told Mrs Thatcher, "suffices to eradicate all
life on earth. Consequently, the available nuclear arsenals have a capacity to
wipe out all life a thousand times."
Her
reaction was very eloquent and emotional. I believe she was quite sincere.
Anyway, this conversation was a turning point towards a major political
dialogue between our countries.
8 April 2013
Ucapan duka mengalir atas meninggalnya mantanperdana menteri
wanita pertama Inggris,dan telah menimpin hampir 11 tahun lamanya.
Margaret Thatcher dalam usia 87 tahun.
Banyak karangan bunga diletakkan di luar kediaman
Thatcher sementara bendera-bendera dipasang setengah tiang, termasuk di kantor
perdana menteri, Downing Street 10, London.
Thatcher dimakamkan dalam "pemakaman
seremonial" dengan penghormatan militer penuh di Katedral St Paul, London.