Margaret Thatcher - The Iron Lady

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Some of the key takeaways are that Margaret Thatcher was the first female Prime Minister of Britain and implemented policies known as Thatcherism that focused on reducing the power of trade unions, privatization, and free market policies.

When Thatcher became Prime Minister in 1979, Britain was facing issues such as high unemployment, recession, and increased racial tensions. Many in her own Conservative party also did not agree with her plans to reduce state spending and power of trade unions.

Thatcherism led to massive privatization of state-owned industries, selling of public housing, and policies to promote free markets and deregulation. It rolled back collectivism and welfare policies of previous governments.

TRANSILVANIA UNIVERSITY OF BRASOV

FACULTY OF FOREIGN LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES


DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH-FRENCH






Margaret Thatcher- The Iron Lady





Supervisor: Senior Lecturer Ph.d Student:
Oana-Andreea PRNU Flavius-Alexandru COLTEA



BRASOV
2013

Sentence Outline
I. Introduction
-a general look over Mrs Thatchers work
Content:
II. The beginning of an era: Election 1979
-the road to Mrs Thatchers election
III. Domestic affairs:1979-1990
-Thatchers terms
- ups and downs in domestic affairs
IV. Foreign affairs
- increasing Britains international standing
- international crisis for Mrs Thatcher
V. The Lords and Mrs. Thatcher
- relation between the Lords and Mrs Thatcher
VI. Thatcherism
- Thatcherism: political doctrine
- continuity of Thatcherism
VII. Conclusion
Abstract
In a time of increased racial tension, recession and high unemployment, Britain needed a strong figure to
guide the country thru this crisis. They needed someone different, and what they got was one of the most important
and influential figures of the 20th

century :The Baroness Margaret Hilda Thatcher, the longest-serving British
Prime Minister of the 20th century and the only woman to have held the office.
She leaded the government, having constantly in mind the interests of her country. Thats why we'll find out (by
reading this work), that her political beliefs- less state spending and personal taxation, support for the free market
and reducing the power and influence of trade unions- were not shared by many in the Conservative leadership.
Nevertheless, well find out that she reached her goal: she rebooted the economical system and brought Britain
back in the lead in Europe.
Keywords: Mrs Thatcher, reforms, Thatcherism, government, foreign affairs, power.

I. Introduction
On the doorstep of 10 Downing Street, surrounded by a throng of reporters, Margaret
Thatcher said: Where there is discord, may we bring harmony. Where there is error, may we
bring truth. Where there is doubt, may we bring faith. And where there is despair, may we bring
hope. (Harris, 1998: 15). She was paraphrasing Prayer of Saint Francis on 4 May 1979, the
day in which she became the first woman to take the reins of power in Britain.
This quote is representative for all her years in the lead of the Government. She tried to
implement a system of low inflation, small state and free markets through tight control of the
money supply, privatization and constraints on the labour movement. This policies have come to
be known as Thatcherism. Looking abroad, she handled foreign affairs, being active in solving
crisis like the Soviet invasion in Afghanistan, the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, or the
Falklands War.
Although criticized by some for her actions ,Margaret Thatchers results cannot be
challenged, all her hard work turning her into an Iron Lady.


II. The beginning of an era: Election 1979
On 28 March 1979, the government of James Callaghan made history in a way it did not
want. It was defeated on a confidence vote in the Commons by 311 to 310. The lack of
confidence in this Labour government was due to its income policy which had created apathy,
anger and disappointment among its own supporters and public sector voters. The government
failed to check unemployment, which had peaked at 1.6 million in August 1977 and the country
was drifting to anarchy, with trade union activists being allowed to undermine personal freedom
and gradually cripple the economy.Thus,a government able to fix all those problems was needed.
On 3 May followed the inevitable election. The leader of the Conservatives was Margaret
Thatcher, after defeating Edward Heath in the Conservative Party leadership election, thus
becoming leader of the opposition and the first woman to lead a major political party in the
United Kingdom.. Having a better strategy and deciding to sell council houses to sitting tenants
the Conservatives were more likely to improve peoples lives, as one working-class voter put it
to the writer People like Callaghan, Wilson and Benn want us all to be the same,and stay as we
are, but they, and the favoured few, live very differently with their farms and London town
houses and country cottages. (Childs, 1992: 290).
Thus on 3 May history was changed again, because Margaret Thatcher became Britains first
woman Prime Minister, after being elected with 339 seats, compared with Labours 269 seats.
Britain was now in a new era, the era under the Iron Lady.

III. Britain under Thatcher: 1979-1990
Mrs Thatchers first Cabinet had 22 members, compared with 24 in the out-going Labour
Cabinet. She re-organized some of the ministries and named most of her team from member
who had served under Edward Heath. The key appointments were : William Whitelaw (Home
Secretary); Lord Hailsham ( Lord Chancellor); Lord Carrington ( Foreign and Commonwealth
Office); Geoffrey Howe ( Chancellor of the Exchequer); Sir Keith Joseph ( Industry); Francis
Pym ( Defence); Lord Soames ( Lord President of the Council, Leader on the Lords); James
Prior ( Employment); Sir Ian Gilmour ( Lord Privy Seal with special responsibility for foreign
affairs); Peter Walker ( Agriculture, Fisheries and Food); Michael Heseltine (Environment);
Patrick Jenkin ( Social Services); Norman St John Stevas ( Leader of the Commons and Minister
for the Arts) and John Nott ( Trade). On the whole it was a team of experienced men, most of
whom knew the corridors of power better than Margaret Thatcher did. ( Childs, 1992: 291).
But within months of taking office the Conservative government was very unpopular.
Geoffrey Howes first budget in June 1979 had hit wide sections of the electorate. VAT went up
from 8 percent to a uniform 15 percent. The high interest rates hit industry hard as did the
strengthening pound and rapidly growing unemployment followed. The entire country was out of
control in July 1981 when the youth unrest exploded over Britain. Even though Thatchers
monetarist and deflationary economic policies saw a cut in the inflation rate from a high of 22
percent in May 1980 to just over 13 percent by January 1981 and to 4.9 percent by June 1983,
the unemployment rose from 1,500,000 at the time of the 1979 general election to a record
3,200,000 four years later.
However, when the Falkland Islands were seized by argentine forces in March 1982,
Thatcher declared war which was won on 14 June with the surrender of the argentines. This was
a decisive moment for the government, because the success of the campaign brought Thatcher
back in the lead in all of the major opinion polls.

Thatchers second term
When Britain went to the polls on 9 June 1983 the question was not who would win, but
merely how big would be the Conservative majority. The Falklands victory was a key factor
together with Labours incompetence and alleged extremism and the Conservatives wonwith just
1 percent fewer votes than in 1979. Having won her second term Mrs thatcher lost no time in
reshuffling her government.
But the miners strike was o powerful blow for the government. When Arthur Scargill was
elected president of the National Union of Mineworkers, using Marxist spectacles, he convinced
the miners to enter a strike. By 15 March 1984, 140 pits were idle. But the government did not
cave and the strike finally came to an end in March 1985 when the miners marched back to work
with banners held high, but without a settlement.
After a year of strike the costs were appalling. In his budget speech of 1985, the
Chancellor of the Exchequer, Nigel Lawson, estimated the strike had reduced the level of
national output by over 1.5 percent and worsened the balance of payments by 4 billion pounds.
Mrs thatcher tried to solve these new financial problems, and by doing so, she faced more
opposition from within her own party than any other Conservative Prime Minister since
Chamberlain. There was a great deal of criticism of Thatchers alleged authoritarian style of
government: the proposal to abolish the earnings-related pension, the generous pay awards for
top public servants in 1985, the privatization of the royal ordnance factories and naval dockyards
and effective cuts in student grants.
These measures proved to be effective, because 87 percent of the workforce were in
employment, the buying power was up considerably, more people possessed more consumer
goods and more people were buying their own homes. Britain had enjoyed its longest( roughly
five years) sustained upturn since 1945.
All this success was not enough, because the two by-elections which preceded the general
election of 1987 gave the opposition hope. Then, Mrs. Thatcher was well on her way back to
popularity after a visit to Moscow: I am cautiously optimistic. I like Mr. Gorbachev . We can do
business together.( Harris, 1998: 21).

Thatchers third term
The fight for power was fierce, every side used all their resources: Among other exploits
were the television commercials for the privatization of British Telecom, in effect, the most
expensive party political broadcasts ever. (Cockerell, 1988:314).
On 11 June 1987, Margaret Thatcher scored a historic victory by winning her third
successive election. No other twentieth-century Prime Minister could claim such success.
However, on a closer inspection, the Conservative victory was not as impressive as it first
seemed. The Conservatives gained 42.2 percent of the U.K vote, suffering a net loss of twenty-
one seats since the 1983 elections. However, Britain was feeling restless. Even though the
Thatcher era had coincided with the exploitation of North Sea oil and with low commodity prices
which brought in turn low inflation, on Black Monday, 19 October 1987, things started to go
wrong. Over 50 bilion pounds was wiped off the value of shares in London. Not long after that,
in April 1988, the government pushed through the legislation called the community charge but
what critics called the poll tax. On 30 March 1990 rioting broke out in London following a
peaceful demonstration against the poll tax by around 40 000 people: Londons image as a safe
and pleasant city was damaged by the riots which caught thousands of innocent tourists
unawares (Childs, 1992:344).
After prison riots, football hooliganism and continuing terrorism of the IRA, confidence in
Mrs Thatcher was no more. On 3 December 1989, Sir Anthony Meyer decided to stand against
Mrs Thatcher for the leadership of the Conservative Party. She won easily, but this was the first
time she had been challenged and it opened the road for others.
That was the case for Michael Heseltine, who announced, on 14 November 1990, that he
would challenge her for the leadership of the party. Thatcher polled 204 votes to 152 for
Heseltine in the first round. Less than twenty-four hours later, after a night of consultations with
Cabinet colleagues, she resigned.

IV.Foreign affairs
According to Bill Jones and Dennis Kavanagh, it would be foolish to generalize from Mrs
Thatchers experience. Such a style of premiership requires extraordinary energy, personal
commitment and ideological zeal. She has also been successful in many areas, e.g. reforming the
unions, lowering inflation- until 1990, curbing strikes, but especially in increasing Britains
international standing. ( Jones and Kavanagh, 1991:156).
One of her first international crisis was the Zimbabwe-Rhodesia problem. The fall of the
authoritarian regime in Portugal in 1974 was followed by the rapid decolonization of its empire
in southern Africa. This sudden change increased the pressures of the white settler regime of Ian
Smith in Rhodesia. However, the strong forces of the black rebels forced Smith to find a
solution. To enable the whites to retain decisive influence, Smith installed the Bishop Abel
Muzorewa as Prime Minister in April 1979. This attempt failed because of lack of recognition by
the outside world. As of Mrs Thatcher, she instinctively favoured recognition. Although a
passionate ( and frequently voluble) critic of South Africas apartheid system, Mrs Thatcher was
not a politician whose heart beat in time to the tunes of racial equality, nor had she much
confidence in nor sympathy towards the leaders of black Africa ( Cockerell, 1988:326).
After tough negotiations at Lancaster House ( London), Zimbabwe-Rhodesia returned, even
though just temporary, to the status of a British colony. The settlement gave a boost to Britains
image in the Third World and in international political circles in general.
However, Mrs Thatchers ease was not long. On 2 April 1982 the argentine president,
General Galtieri, decided they needed to seize the Falkland Islands to unite their nation, thus
invading the islands. The international support was in favor on Britain, even the UN Security
Council adopted a resolution calling for a withdrawal of Argentine forces. Sir Henry Leach, the
First Sea Lord, persuaded Mrs Thatcher and her Cabinet to send a task force to the South
Atlantic. On Monday 5 April bands played, flags were waved, women wept and men tried to
look cheerful at Portsmouth as the task force glided out to sea ( Childs, 1992: 312).
The task force comprised over 100 ships and 27 000 soldiers, it included the aircraft
carriers Hermes and Invincible, destroyers like the Antrim and Glamorgan and a 690-ton
seagoing tug, the Yorkshireman. Operation Sutton, as the landing on the main islands was code-
named, began on 21 May as Royal Marines and SAS troops stormed ashore. The mini-war ended
with the surrender of Port Stanley on 14 June to the British.
Mrs Thatcher took the decision to go to war because otherwise Britain would have lost its
trade and influence in Latin America and the conflict could have led to increased Soviet/Cuban
influence in the area.
In September 1982 she visited China to discuss with Deng Xiaoping the sovereignty of
Hong Kong after 1997. It was agreed that after the expiry of Britains lease in 1997 the former
colony would have a high degree of autonomy within the Peoples Republic. It would retain its
own economic, legal and social system for fifty years. Those in Hong Kong who did not wish to
register as Chinese could opt for a new form of nationality-British Nationals( Overseas)- which
would not give them the right to settle in the U.K.


V. The Lords and Mrs. Thatcher
Since 1979 the Lords have voted down Mrs. Thatchers legislation over 150 times. In
comparison, the Labour government was defeated 355 times between 1975 and 1979.
They voted against the rescinding of transport charges for school-children in rural areas and,
most important, the reform of local government. This record could suggest that the Lords do take
their role seriously as guardians of the constitution, however the preponderance of the
Conservatives in the Lords and the severity of some of the defeats suggests that Mrs Thatchers
political beliefs- less state spending and personal taxation, support for the free market and
reducing the power and influence of trade unions- were not shared by many in the Conservative
leadership.
Ironically the Lords have become, in some ways, more important as a counter to Mrs.
Thatchers government than the opposition

VI. Thatcherism
It seems clear that Mrs Thatcher has been more than first among equals. She has been the
most dominant of post-war Prime Ministers. But this has largely been because of her agenda and
her personality, both of which are unique to her. She is associated with her own ism, a set of
values and a set of policies. Her Cabinet was bound to be divided because she wished to break
with so many of the policies of her predecessors. To get her policies through she had to fight
with the Cabinet or bypass it. ( Jones and Kavanagh, 1991: 155).
Whatever else Margaret Thatcher did during her years in office she was unique in that she
gave her name to what her friends and enemies alike elevated into a political doctrine:
Thatcherism. No one had ever talked of Wilsonisn, Attleeism or even Churchillism. However,
when she was elected leader, few had expected Thatcher to create her own values, but over the
second half of the 1970s the Thatcher vision of the New Right became fashionable in the
Conservative Party. Thatcherism was now the most important political doctrine in Britain, taking
the lead over Butskellism ( derived from the names of R.A. Butler and Hugh Gaitskell).
Thatcherism considered that only capitalism can guarantee real freedom for the
individual, that the title of collectivism must be rolled back and that deregulation, privatization,
wider property ownership, self-help and thade union reform were the weapons in this crusade.
As part of this crusade, the government embarked on a massive privatization programme, they
decided to sell the council houses to sitting tenants below the market price and, for creating a
climate for enterprise, at their recommendation, Murdoch, Laker and Sinclair ( the most
successful entrepreneurs in Britain) got knighthoods.
Even after Mrs Thatchers resignation, Thatcherism survived, her ideals and her beliefs
being continued by James Prior, her protge, and by many others.

VII. Conclusion

Concluding, Margaret Thatcher has been a remarkable Prime Minister. Having political
beliefs so far ahead of her time, she needed to fight with the opposition and sometimes even with
the Conservative leadership to get her policies through.
Her decisions and actions in difficult international situations, like the war in the Falklands,
the Zimbabwe-Rhodesia problem or Hong Kong gave a boost to Britains image in the Third
World and in international political circles in general.
Having an incredible character and being able to take split-second decisions, allowed her
to create her own political doctrine: Thatcherism, and to be considered the Iron Lady of
Europeans politics.






References:




1. Childs, David ( 1992), Britain Since 1945, London: Routledge ;
2.Cockerell, Michael (1988), Live from Number 10: The Inside Story of Prime Ministers and
Television, London: Faber & Faber ;
3. Harris, Robin ( 1998), The Collected Speeches of Margaret Thatcher, New York: Oxford
University Press ;
4. Jones, Bill and Kavanagh, Dennis ( 1991), British Politics Today, New York: Manchester
University Press ;
5. Trevelyan, George Macaulay ( 1980), A shortened History of England, New York: Longmans,
Green & Co. Inc. ;

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