Baroness Margaret Thatcher

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Baroness Margaret Thatcher

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Name: Margaret Hilda Thatcher. Date of Birth: 13 October 1925. Place of Birth: Grantham, England ... Born Margaret Hilda Robert in the town of Grantham in 1925. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Baroness Margaret Thatcher


1
Baroness Margaret Thatcher
1983
2005
2
Background- The Rt. Honourable Mrs. Thatcher
  • Name Margaret Hilda Thatcher
  • Date of Birth 13 October 1925
  • Place of Birth Grantham, England
  • Period in Office 4 May 1979- 28
    November 1990
  • PM Predecessor James Callaghan
  • PM Successor John Major
  • Political Party Conservative (Tory)
  • Retirement Honour Order of The Garter
  • Life Barony
  • Order of Merit

3
Life until leadership
  • Born Margaret Hilda Robert in the town of
    Grantham in 1925.
  • Father, Alfred Roberts, a Grocer and alderman,
    was a Tory.
  • Labour ousted her father and this affected her
    deeply.
  • Her Mother was called Beatrice, and her sister is
    called Muriel.
  • She went to Grammar school and then onto
    Somerville College, Oxford in 1944, to study
    chemistry.
  • At Oxford, she became head of the Oxford
    University Conservative Association, only the
    third woman to do so, in 1946.
  • She became the youngest ever Tory candidate and
    was eventually elected in 1958.
  • She became a member of the cabinet under Heath.
  • She eventually became PM in 1979.

4
The Second Term
  • In the June 1983 elections, the conservative
    party won a landslide victory over labour, giving
    Margaret Thatcher her second term as Prime
    Minister.
  • She had some serious problems in 1984-5, due to
    the miners strike, which went on for a full year.
  • She also faced problems from across the seas. On
    October 12, 1984 Thatcher narrowly escaped death
    when the Provisional IRA bombed Brighton's grand
    hotel during a Tory Party conference killing
    five people.
  • During her time as PM she tried to create strong
    links between the USA and the UK supporting
    unpopular bombing raids on Libya, in a fashion
    similar to Tony Blair.
  • In 1985, Oxford University refused to give her an
    honorary degree, in protest to her cutbacks on
    education spending. Her policies included many
    such cutbacks in many sectors.

5
Record Third Term
  • By winning the 1987 General Election, Thatcher
    became the longest serving prime minister since
    Lord Liverpool (1812-1827), and the first to
    serve three successive terms since Lord
    Palmerston in 1865.
  • By this point she was starting to become
    unpopular in some peoples eyes. Although she was
    supported by most newspapers (except the guardian
    and daily mirror),her extreme unpopularity on the
    left was obvious looking at some pop songs( e.g.
    stand down Margaret ( the beat)).
  • She tried to improve unemployment in the north
    caused by closure of industry during her earlier
    terms, by introducing employment schemes.
  • She lost popularity again in 1989 when the
    economy was suffering from high interest rates
    imposed to slow down an unsustainable boom.
  • In November 1989 Thatcher was challenged for
    leadership of the Tory party by Sir Anthony
    Meyer, a virtually unknown back-bencher. He was
    seen as a stalking horse candidate for more
    prominent members of the party, and Thatcher won
    easily but 60 ballots were either cast for Meyer
    or abstaining, which is a large number for a
    sitting PM.

6
Fall from favour
  • Thatcher had been becoming more and more
    unpopular throughout her third term as PM.
  • In 1990 she introduced Community Charge (poll
    tax), as a system to replace local government
    rates. This tax cost the same for each person,
    with only a limited discount for low earners.
    This became the most universally unpopular policy
    of her premiership. She introduced it a year
    early in Scotland to test it. This led to
    accusations of her using Scotland as a testing
    ground.
  • Problems emerged when councils then started
    charging more than previously predicted.
  • A large London demonstration took place on March
    31, 1990, the day before the tax was introduced
    in England, and turned into a riot. Millions
    resisted the tax. People banded together against
    bailiffs and court hearings of debtors. Thatcher
    refused to change the tax!!
  • She tried to persuade George. H. W. Bush to
    deploy troops in the Middle East

7
Fall From Power
  • By 1990, the Tories seemed particularly
    vulnerable due to high interest rates (15) and
    Thatchers Euroscepticism.
  • Sir Geoffrey Howe resigned from the Tory party
    and in his resignation speech he condemned
    Thatchers Policy on the European community as
    devastating to British interests
  • This led to Michael Heseltine challenging for
    party leadership. In the first ballot Maggie was
    2 votes short of winning automatic re-election, a
    small but critical margin.
  • Her cabinet colleagues suggested to her that the
    first round not being a clear win, the second
    would be unlikely.
  • On November 22, 1990, just after 930am, Mrs.
    Thatcher announced that she would not take part
    in the second ballot.
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