Iron Lady

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Margaret Thatcher was given the nickname "Iron Lady" by a Soviet journalist.

Iron Lady is the nickname of British politician and former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Margaret Thatcher.[1] It was invented by Captain Yuri Gavrilov in a 24 January 1976 article in the Soviet newspaper Red Star about Thatcher's "Britain Awake" speech where she expressed her staunch opposition to the Soviet Union and to socialism.[1] The nickname became popular, transforming Thatcher's image, and helping her and her Conservative Party to win three elections[2]

"Iron Lady" has since has been used, along with regional variations, to describe other female heads of government or political figures, even retrospectively.

The term describes a woman who is either stubborn and inflexible or strong.[2] It is an allusion to the "Iron Chancellor" of Prussia, Otto von Bismarck.[2]

Origin

Margaret Thatcher, the first female Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1979 to 1990[1] was the leader for whom the term was coined. On 19 January 1976, Thatcher, having recently been elected Leader of the Conservative Party, gave a speech entitled "Britain Awake" at Kensington Town Hall in Chelsea, London.[1] It included the claim that The Russians are bent on world dominance, and they are rapidly acquiring the means to become the most powerful imperial nation the world has seen.[1] On 24 January, the Soviet military newspaper Red Star published a response to Thatcher's speech by military journalist Captain Yuri Gavrilov.[3] Gavrilov supplied the headline "The 'Iron Lady' Sounds the Alarm"[3] to the piece, intending an allusion to Otto von Bismarck, known as the "Iron Chancellor" of imperial Germany.[2][4] According to Gavrilov's article, Thatcher was at the time already known as "The Iron Lady" in Britain, supposedly on account of her "extreme conservatism".[3] Gavrilov's article was noticed by the British Sunday Times newspaper the next weekend and subsequently given wide publicity.[4] The nickname stuck firmly to Thatcher. A 2011 biographical feature film about her is called The Iron Lady.

Political Usage

Leaders who have earned the unofficial title (some of them post facto) include:

Variants

Some female politicians have been given other nicknames that bear a similar connotation to that of an Iron Lady:

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 "Revealed: Red Army colonel who dubbed Maggie the Iron Lady ... and changed history" by Will Stewart, Daily Mail, 24 February 2007
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Gavrilov, Yuri, "The 'Iron Lady' Sounds the Alarm", Krasnaya zvezda, 1976-01-24, p. 3, translated at The Current Digest of the Soviet Press – Volume 28, Issues 1–13 – Page 17
  4. 4.0 4.1 Amazing & Extraordinary Facts – Prime Ministers, David & Charles, http://books.google.com/books?id=lrKJaTWhlm8C&pg=PT108&dq=%22iron+lady%22+Gavrilov&hl=en&sa=X&ei=UCBnUf6nPImdkQXpvoC4Bw&ved=0CC4Q6AEwAA
  5. http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1370&dat=20020124&id=3oMVAAAAIBAJ&sjid=mgsEAAAAIBAJ&pg=4030,2570067 Gloria Arroyo: Iron Lady of Asia 24 January 2002
  6. U.K. loses its first Iron Lady By Hasan Suroor (The Hindu) 5 May 2002
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  8. "Biljana Plavsic: Serbian iron lady". BBC News 27 February 2003
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  10. Aussie Iron Lady will die fighting. The Daily Telegraphy 27 July 2012
  11. Gillard reveals her inner iron lady, and gets her way. The Sydney Morning Herald 20 November 2011
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  13. Ukraine's Iron Lady, Time magazine (30 January 2005)
  14. Ukraine's Iron Lady provokes rift, The Guardian (3 July 2005)
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  18. Lithuania elects first female president ABC News Dalia Grybauskaite: Lithuania’s ‘Iron Lady’. Khaleej Times.
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  29. Federation of American Scientists. NATO-List: USIA – Albright Foreign Media Reaction: "Titanium Lady Shows Her Mettle in Moscow" The conservative Daily Telegraph pointed out (21 February 1997)

External links