Divisive, Decisive: Thatcher Was Extraordinary

Divisive, Decisive: Thatcher Was Extraordinary
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SEVERAL prime ministers have occupied 10 Downing Street for as long as, or even longer than, Margaret Thatcher. Some have won as many elections—Tony Blair, for one. But Mrs Thatcher (later Lady Thatcher), Britain's only woman prime minister, was the first occupant of Number 10 to become an “-ism” in her lifetime. She left behind a brand of politics and a set of convictions which still resonate, from Warsaw to Santiago to Washington.

What were those convictions? In Mrs Thatcher's case, the quickest way to her political make-up was usually through her handbag. As she prepared to make her first leader's speech to the Conservative Party conference in 1975, a speechwriter tried to gee her up by quoting Abraham Lincoln:

"You cannot strengthen the weak by weakening the strong.

You cannot bring about prosperity by discouraging thrift.
You cannot help the wage-earner by pulling down the wage-payer."

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