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Contributors
Carol Platt Liebau - Columnist
Carol
Platt Liebau is editorial director and a senior member of
the CaliforniaRepublic.org editorial
board. She is an attorney, political analyst and commentator
based in San Marino, CA, and has appeared on the Fox News
Channel,
MSNBC, CNN, Orange County News Channel, Cox Cable and a variety
of radio programs throughout the United States. A graduate
of
Princeton
University
and Harvard Law School, Carol Platt Liebau also served as the
first female managing editor of the Harvard Law Review.
[go to Liebau index]
A
True Feminist Icon
The Incredible Legacy of Margaret Thatcher
[Carol
Platt Liebau] 5/10/04
The controversy
surrounding the mistreatment of Iraqi prisoners in Abu Ghraib
prison has
drowned out almost every other news
story for the past week and a half. And so it was easy for the
American press to overlook a milestone worth marking – May
4, the twenty-fifth anniversary of Margaret Thatcher’s
rise to power in Britain.
Feminists
who generally rush to celebrate women’s achievements
have been strangely silent about Mrs. Thatcher, the only woman
ever to lead a major Western democracy. But their hesitancy to “claim” Mrs.
Thatcher is understandable, because she is the antithesis of
the kinds of female “role models” that are, too often,
foisted upon all of us. Unlike Hillary Clinton, she assumed political
prominence without trading upon her husband’s influence;
unlike Geraldine Ferraro, she never blamed society, or her status
as a woman, for any political setbacks she experienced. Rather,
she gained her place in history the old-fashioned way – she
earned it.
Many in the
United States now have a difficult time remembering the low
morale
and sense of, yes, malaise that infected much
of our national life in the late ‘70’s, before the
election of Ronald Reagan in 1980 – the pervasive sense
that something in America was deeply wrong, and the rising sense
of unease about the country’s long-term future. England
was suffering from a similar crisis of confidence, having become
a country that seemed to be merely existing in the shadow of
its former imperial grandeur. When Margaret Thatcher became Prime
Minister in 1979, England had been crippled by labor strikes,
and was reeling from a close brush with national bankruptcy three
years earlier.
Mrs. Thatcher’s early years as Prime Minister were far
from easy. The economy was entering a recession when she took
power, and interest rates were raised to stem inflation. The
resulting unemployment, coupled with the direct tax cuts instituted
to stimulate England’s economy, subjected Mrs. Thatcher
to unfair, vicious and prolonged criticism. But her determination
to reduce the size of government – demonstrated by her
willingness to privatize state-owned industries, reduce burdensome
regulations, and allow inefficient industries to close altogether – was
unwavering, and her policies ultimately successful.
In the realm
of foreign affairs, Mrs. Thatcher’s partnership
with Ronald Reagan was legendary. Like our President, she was
a visionary who believed that communism could be defeated, rather
than simply accommodated. And in 1982, after diplomatic efforts
had failed, she had the resolve to send British troops to retake
the Falkland Islands, which had been invaded by an Argentinian
Junta. She likewise earned the special enmity of the Irish Republican
Army for her steadfast refusal to accede to terrorist demands,
and, at least once, narrowly escaped assassination as a result – but
nonetheless negotiated the Anglo-Irish Agreement of 1985. Overall,
in her dealings with the world, she stood firm for her country
and her principles. Typical was her admonition to President George
H.W. Bush in the days before Gulf War I, when she stated flatly, “This
is no time to go wobbly.”
Dubbed the “Iron Lady” by the Soviets, Mrs. Thatcher
entered the world of British politics – more male-dominated,
hierarchical and hidebound than any American institution – and
prevailed, winning three successive general elections and serving
for Prime Minister for eleven years, longer than anyone else
in the twentieth century. She survived the invective of the British
press, which writes with a poison pen significantly sharper than
that of its American counterparts. And until the very end of
her political career, she bested all male competitors –by
being twice as good, and having twice as much moxie.
Nor was Mrs.
Thatcher’s
success limited to the political sphere alone. She shared a
long and loving marriage with her
husband, Sir Denis, until his death almost a year ago, and raised
twins Mark and Carol, who were born in 1953.
In the years
since she left office in 1990, Margaret Thatcher’s
stature has only grown. In the recent British movie “Love
Actually,” Hugh Grant, playing Britain’s prime minister,
looks at a picture of Baroness Thatcher and affectionately calls
her a “saucy minx.” She was that, indeed, but so
much more. As with her friend Ronald Reagan, the perspective
that comes with time is only now beginning to give Margaret Thatcher
her due – not only as a conviction politician who privatized,
deregulated, and revitalized the British economy while maintaining
its stature and defenses in the world – but as an icon
in her own right.
She is the
greatest female political leader of all time. And every woman
who cares
about political ideas, aspires to political
leadership – or just believes in true equality between
the sexes – had reason to cheer her anniversary last week.
She is an inspiration.
Congratulations, Baroness Thatcher. And thank you. CRO
Columnist
Carol Platt Liebau is a political analyst, commentator and
CaliforniaRepublic.org editorial director based in San Marino,
CA.
copyright
2004
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