Former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher Dies

April 8, 2013

1BushThatcher[Updated] Former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher — dubbed “The Iron Lady” by the Soviet Union for her ferocious opposition to communism in the 1970s and ’80s — has died at the age of 87, the BBC reports this morning [Apr. 8].

She paid two well-publicised visits to the island — the first as Prime Minister for a Good Friday summit meeting with US President George H.W. Bush in 1990, the second in 2001 as a private citizen to address a meeting organised by her friend, former Bermuda Premier Sir John Swan.

Baroness Thatcher was Conservative Prime Minister from 1979 to 1990. She was the first woman to hold the post.

Baroness Thatcher, born Margaret Roberts, became the Conservative MP for Finchley, north London in 1959, retiring from the House of Commons in 1992 — two years after she stepped down as Prime Minister.

Having been education secretary, she successfully challenged former Prime Minister Edward Heath for her party’s leadership in 1975.

She won general elections in 1979, 1983 and 1987.

Baroness Thatcher’s government privatised several state-owned British industries. She was also in power when the UK went to war with Argentina over the Falkland Islands in 1982.

The former Prime Minister — who resigned following an attempted palace coup involving Conservative MPs in 1990 — died in London this morning after suffering a stroke.

Margaret Thatcher and US President George H.W. Bush met in Bermuda on April 13, 1990 to discuss geopolitical affairs — as well as to engage in a Bermudian Good Friday tradition, flying kites on the grounds of Government House.

The one-day Bermuda summit focussed on the collapse of the Soviet Union — then in its death throes following a series of popular uprisings in Moscow’s Eastern European satellite states in 1989.

Nuclear arms reduction talks with the crumbling Soviet empire, the pending reunification of East and West Germany and efforts by the three Baltic states — Lithuanian, Estonia and Latvia — to break away from Moscow dominated the Bush-Thatcher Bermuda discussions.

But the Government House “Big Two” summit also touched on Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein’s efforts to build a so-called “supergun”, a large-calibre cannon capable of hurling nuclear or conventional shells almost 600 miles into Israel, Jordan or the Gulf States.

And ongoing Western economic sanctions against South Africa’s apartheid regime, the future of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation [NATO] and the 1988 downing of a Pan Am jetliner over Lockerbie, Scotland by suspected Libyan saboteurs were also touched on in Bermuda.

The talks were briefly broken off at lunchtime so the two world leaders could participate in a kite-flying contest with Bermuda schoolchildren.

Prime Minister Thatcher and President George H.W. Bush flying kites with Bermuda school children 

kites

Organiser Vincent Tuzo, one of Bermuda’s premier kite builder, presided at the event.

The American President cheerfully told a group of reporters: “I’m one of the better kite flyers. I have a large inventory of kites.”

But Mr. Tuzo didn’t think the US President’s skill matched his obvious enthusiasm.

When he was asked whether Mr. Bush struck him as an experienced kite flyer, Mr. Tuzo replied: “I wouldn’t say he was. The Prime Minister did better than him.’‘

Known as the “Kite King”, in 1996 Mr. Tuzo was one of ten Bermudians on the Queen’s New Year Honours List, and in 2008 he won the Bermuda Arts Council’s Lifetime Achievement Award.

At a joint press conference held in the Government House gardens following the talks, the Prime Minister and President reaffirmed the existence of a special relationship between the UK and US and fielded questions about their discussions.

The Prime Minister said: “Mr. President, ladies and gentlemen. I’m very grateful to the President for coming to Bermuda for these talks, and we’ve had a very full and useful discussion, lasting about four hours. We’ve discussed just about everything, and I think we agree on just about everything.

British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher inspects a Bermuda Regiment Honour Guard

Thatcher_reviews_troops-620x695

“We both attach the greatest possible importance to preserving NATO as the heart of the West’s defense and to keeping American forces and their nuclear weapons in Europe. We’re both clear that united Germany should be part of NATO. We’ll be happy to see NATO play a bigger political role within the Atlantic community. At the same time, we want to see the CSCE developed as a forum not for defense but for wider East-West political consultation and as a framework for drawing the East European countries into the mainstream of Europe.”

“On defense, we both believe NATO will continue to need a mix of conventional and nuclear weapons, and they must be kept up to date. Whether we can make further reductions in the overall number of NATO nuclear warheads in Europe is something which will need to be considered in NATO as a whole. With so much happening, we shall need to consult particularly closely in NATO this year, and the President and I agreed to keep in very close touch on that.

“We also, of course, discussed developments over Lithuania and are very much agreed that this is a problem which must be worked out by dialog and discussion. We also covered a very large number of regional issues, as well as matters such as the Uruguay round, the EBRD [European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, Eastern Europe], and relations between the European Community and the United States. We would like to see Europe and the United States together, trading and cooperating ever more closely in an Atlantic community.

The Prime Minister concluded: “So, very good talks, conducted in a very friendly atmosphere, with a very wide measure of agreement. Just as you would expect. Thank you.”

In August, 2001 she returned to Bermuda — staying at the Tucker’s Town home of two-time US Presidential candidate Ross Perot — to speak to a luncheon of business and political leaders organised by Sir John Swan.

The full text of Margaret Thatcher’s 2001 speech in Bermuda is below :

Sir John, ladies and gentlemen.

Denis and I always love visiting Bermuda — but it is rare moment when I can claim that we have come here from Britain to cool off!

It never ceases to fascinate me how misfortunes often have a happy outcome. Who could have thought that Admiral Sir George Somers’ shipwreck on this coast in 1609 would mark the beginning of so fruitful a relationship between these islands and Britain.

Tradition has it that Shakespeare based his play “The Tempest” on Somers’ experience. Perhaps Bermuda with its golden beaches and azure sea bears little resemblance to Prospero’s dark island. Yet the two clearly share one common advantage for as the poet wrote:

“How many goodly creatures are there here! How beauteous mankind is! O brave new world That has such people in’t!”

In speaking today I am conscious of the advice which one of my predecessors as Prime Minister, Benjamin Disraeli, gave to a newly elected Member of Parliament who was contemplating his maiden speech in the House of Commons.

“For the first six months,” said Disraeli, “you should listen and not become involved in debate”.

“But” the eager young MP asked, “ will my colleagues not wonder why I do not speak?”

“Better they should wonder why you do not speak” explained Disraeli, “than why you do.”

In daring to defy Disraeli’s warning, perhaps I might begin by reflecting briefly on the past century.

Back in 1900 much of the world could look forward to the years ahead with growing hope. The advance of science, technology and medicine was transforming peoples lives.

New discoveries were being made at an ever more rapid rate. Industrial productivity and trade were reaching undreamed of levels. Over the following 100 years people came to expect longer, healthier and wealthier lives.

And just by listing some of the advances we can see how much our lives have been transformed. At the beginning of the century the motor car was still a rarity and powered flight three years away. There were no washing machines, no refrigerators – and no air-conditioning! Antibiotics and plastics were yet to be developed. The atom remained undivided.

Our understanding of genetics was rudimentary. There were no radios, no televisions, no computers – the Web was still for spiders and the Net for fishermen!

Politicians have not always been quick to recognise the potential benefits of these advances. I am reminded of the story of William Gladstone, who as Prime Minister went to visit the laboratory of the distinguished scientist Michael Faraday.

Faraday received the Prime Minister and demonstrated his remarkable new invention, the electric generator.

Afterwards he waited for the Prime Minister’s response, expecting him to be suitably impressed but there was silence.

Eventually Gladstone did speak,

“Tell me Mr Faraday” he said,” will this new discovery of electricity be of any practical use?”. To which the indignant but quick-witted Faraday replied “Oh yes Prime Minister. One day you will tax it!”

But amidst all this progress the last century also saw the two worst tyrannies the world has ever known.

The first, Nazism and its cousin fascism, was defeated in war.

The second, communism, had a far more lingering legacy.

For over seventy years it was as if the world was locked into a great experiment.

On the one hand there was our way – the way of freedom. On the other was communism – the way of coercion.

Communism held its people in a grip of terror. It brought neither dignity nor prosperity and in the end it collapsed under the weight of its own failure.

The results of communist oppression were tragic. But sometimes they had their comic side. The Russians who are lucky to have such a marvelous sense of humour, if only because they’ve had so little to laugh about, recount a story about Leonid Brezhnev’s arrival at the pearly gates. St Peter tells him that he has not exactly led the sort of life that would qualify him for heaven but that he can choose between a capitalist and a socialist hell.

To St Peter’s surprise the former Soviet leader replies that he would prefer a socialist hell. St Peter tells him to think carefully: this is no time for propaganda! But Brezhnev repeats that he chooses the socialist hell. St Peter grants his wish but, greatly puzzled, asks for an explanation. “Ah,” replies Brezhnev. “ It is because I know that in a socialist hell they will always be short of fuel!”

Though we have won the great ideological battle, it does not mean that our fight is over.

When I became Prime Minister in 1979, there were fewer than 50 free countries in the world. Today, because of our efforts, there are 86 Free countries. But there are still a further 59 only Partly Free countries, and alas, 47 countries Not Free at all. And those figures are Freedom House’s not mine. So there is more to be done to strengthen liberty in the world.

But my friends, we know what works – democracy, coupled to free enterprise, under a rule of law.

Political freedom and economic freedom go hand in hand. One will not long outlast the other.

It is free enterprise, which creates wealth, not meddling governments. Enterprise satisfies markets at home and abroad, generating profits and jobs, and producing higher living standards.

Moreover, the market is not some new-fangled academic invention. The freedom to buy and sell, to trade and barter, is the oldest system of exchange known to man.

Free enterprise works because, like democracy, it gives power to the people. Indeed, we could describe it as economic democracy, for it limits the power of government by maximising the power of individuals.

The proper role of government is to provide a clear economic framework and a rule of law, which together encourage the natural talents of the people to flourish. Opportunity, prosperity and progress will all follow.

In every age, there’s a tendency for government to take more power; to take more money; and to make its citizens more and more dependent – and all the while to tell them soothingly it’s for their own good.

Ronald Reagan saw through this, as he did much else, when he described the nine most dangerous words in the English language as: “I’m from the Government, and I’m here to help…..”

Just as we must adhere firmly to our principles in our own countries, so too must we apply them to the international challenges we face.

Iraq, Iran, Libya, Syria and North Korea all form part of that dysfunctional family of nations we refer to as the “rogue states”. All these countries have promoted or practised violence. The proliferation of weapons of mass destruction affords them new opportunities to threaten us.

Such states know that simply by possessing these weapons they could sharply change the balance of advantage in their dealings with the West. In a crisis, they could threaten to take out a major Western city.

But even the possibility of such action, they hope, would be enough to prevent Western interventions in support of our interests and our allies.

Nevertheless, the danger is already with us.

This is why the creation of a system of global missile defence is a matter of urgent necessity. We live in a world of multiple threats. Some 37 states possess around 13,000 ballistic missiles, and there is an increased risk of unauthorised or accidental missile attack.

So, I applaud the vision of President Bush and Secretary Rumsfeld in seeking to create a missile shield which would protect the American homeland, as well as America’s allies and our deployed forces. My friends, we need global missile defence – and we need it now!

To me it’s strange that so many European states have enthusiastically lined up with Russia and China in opposing America’s plans. After all, in their different ways, both Russia and China still pose a potential threat.

In 1962, the former US Secretary of State, Dean Acheson, memorably said that “Great Britain has lost an empire and has not yet found a role”. Today that reflection could be applied to Russia. A decade on from the collapse of the Soviet empire are we any clearer about the direction Russia will take in the future?
Well, perhaps we are.

First, we have seen democracy of a sort take root. Vladimir Putin is now Russia’s second freely elected President, following Boris Yeltsin. The Russian Duma is directly elected by the people – even if they do have the discomforting habit of voting in too many communists! And similar democratic changes have occurred at local level.

But there are some worrying signs that the desire of ordinary Russians for law and order could be used as an excuse by the authorities for a return to internal repression. The Government’s clamp-down on its media critics reveal that there is still some way to go towards a real understanding of all that freedom entails. For the moment the jury is still out.

Second, Russia’s economy, after a first decade littered with disasters, seems to be stabilising and reform is moving forward – even if at a slow pace. President Putin’s programme calling for lower taxes, less government interference and more competition sounds promising. And I believe that he understands that only a free enterprise economy will deliver the wealth which Russia so badly needs and its people deserve.

But third, and less encouraging, Russia’s foreign policy still seems to be based heavily on its Soviet past.

There are attempts to split Europe from the United States as over ballistic missile defence. There is deep hostility to the use of Western power as in Kosovo. And there is brutal disregard for the rights of non-Russians, who by misfortune live within the Russian empire as with Chechnya.

Russia is also intent on trying to forge a strategic partnership with China aimed at the West.

At their recent meetings, Presidents Bush and Putin seem to have established good personal relations. But we will have to see what effect this has on Russian actions.

Let me now consider China.

Everyone agrees that China is a rising power. Its already vast population (1.2 billion people) is growing, so is its economy, and so are its ambitions. Moreover, China’s past history and present ideology mean that for the foreseeable future it will probably remain hostile to the West.

For the moment, China’s military lags far behind that of the United States, but we should be on our guard. With its known proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and its ambitions towards Taiwan, China needs to be watched. Moreover, Chinese behaviour over the downing of the American reconnaissance plane demonstrates that this is one country where communist habits still hold sway.

I don’t believe the argument that economic progress in China will automatically remove any threat. True pressures for democracy will increase as living standards rise. But the ruling communist elite in China is not going to go quickly or quietly.

That said, there are some promising signs. Chinese Prime Minister Zhu Rongji has a formidable grasp of economics and I find him very ready to engage in discussions about reform. Only time will tell whether the forces of reform or of old-style communism will prevail. In the meantime we must be on our guard.

When he was an old man, in 1899, the great German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck, was asked by a journalist what he considered would be the decisive factor in shaping the coming century. He replied

“The fact that the North Americans speak English”. How right he was.

Over the past century the English-speaking peoples of the world have fought to defend and extend freedom. Britain, with the Empire and Commonwealth, and the United States have repeatedly stood together in times of world crisis – the First World War, the Second World War, the Cold War and the Gulf War. The relationship between our nations is founded, not just on a shared language, but also on shared history, on shared values and on shared ideals. Together, we have withstood the forces of evil and tyranny in whatever form we found them.

In the words of Winston Churchill we have discharged our “common duty to the human race”. And if freedom is to flourish we must continue with our task.

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Update 11.44am: [Amended statement] The PLP said, “The Progressive Labour Party acknowledges the passing of Baroness Margaret Thatcher, former UK Prime Minister. On behalf of our members and supporters, we extend condolences to her family, The Conservative Party and to the people of the United Kingdom.”

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Comments (23)

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  1. swing voter says:

    One of the greater Icons of British politics. The first 5minutes of the movie on her life accomplishments reduced my to tears seeing that a cross section of British people had all but forgotten what she had done to save the country from ruin.

  2. Obviously says:

    “The PLP said, “The Progressive Labour Party acknowledges the passing of Baroness Margaret Thatcher, former UK Prime Minister. On behalf of the people of Bermuda, we extend condolences to her family, The Conservative Party and to the people of the United Kingdom.”
    I would’ve thought that the results of Decembers election had made it quite clear that the PLP do NOT speak for the people of Bermuda. GO AWAY!

    RIP Baroness Thatcher, whether or not you agree with her politics she was a remarkable woman.

    • cant fool me says:

      Yeah right another muppet bites the dust,

  3. Did he do it? says:

    For goodness sakes! Please don’t do anything on my behalf PLP!!!!!!!! You were looking after the economy on our behalf and look what happened!

  4. Watcher says:

    Swing voter, believe me there are huge sections of the British public that will never forget what she did, particularly the hundreds of communities in the north of england and Scotland who were systematically destroyed by her policies. She is still considered a hate figure among most of the north of England and Scotland and many people will be raising a glass now that she’s gone! Hopefully she ends up where she belongs.

    • cant fool me says:

      Amen to that

    • swing voter says:

      I recall the labor unions (coal mining and associated industries) didn’t or couldn’t understand the need for change. Big business was buckling under the weight of ‘grand-fathered in’ deals struck when the economy was booming (similar to GM Ford and Chrysler in the US) Britian was facing ecomonic ruin but the unions were only interested in ‘getting theirs’…..sounds familiar (BDA dock workers, KFC, Civil Servants) and risk sending the country in a permanent economic tail spin….ever hear of Cypress?

      I do hope you can see the forest for the trees ;-)

      • Watcher says:

        No i’ve never heard of Cyprus, do please be a little more condesending and educate me! You’re entitled to your points but those of us from working class northern backgrounds will never forgive her. I notice you neglect to mention the systematic stripping of the NHS, the poll tax, warrant sales. A needless and politically motivated military conflict with Argentina among many other sordid black marks on her report card

        • RIP Maggie says:

          She reformed the NHS which increased efficiency and eliminated waste through competition.

      • Watcher says:

        Here’s how the news of her death was met with in Scotland:
        http://local.stv.tv/glasgow/220638-council-says-stay-away-from-george-square-party-for-thatcher/

        says a lot really and i’m sure Liverpool and others will be doing similar

    • Sandgrownan says:

      Maggie Thatcher Milk Snatcher

  5. Ed says:

    She was a woman with iron balls!

  6. Victor says:

    Hope she gets reincarnated here…

  7. Joe says:

    I think people who live outside the UK view Thatcher with much more favourable opinions than those who had first hand experience of her destructive policies. The woman single handly destroyed communities throughout the UK with her desire to eradicate the Unions.
    I wont shed a tear for her passing.

    • Zombie Apocalypse says:

      I lived there at the time and was quite happy to see unions busted and Argentina defeated. The 1970′s had been a miserable decade, with strikes every 5 minutes.

      I don’t think I’m alone. She did win several elections.

  8. Orbit says:

    who really gives a $**t?!

  9. Prayerful says:

    You say that you do not want the PLP to speak for you, but as far as I can see the Government di not.