50 Years Since Thatcher's Rise: A Legacy of Revolution and Division

Politics News

50 Years Since Thatcher's Rise: A Legacy of Revolution and Division
Margaret ThatcherConservative PartyBritish Politics
  • 📰 SkyNews
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 216 sec. here
  • 15 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 125%
  • Publisher: 67%

This article commemorates the 50th anniversary of Margaret Thatcher's ascension to the leadership of the Conservative Party. It explores her remarkable journey from becoming the first female Prime Minister of the UK to her enduring impact on British politics and the world stage. Comparing her legacy with the current political landscape, it highlights both the similarities and stark differences between Thatcher's era and today.

Even after half a century, she's still adored and revered by Tories, grudgingly respected by present and former Labour prime minister s and yet despised and reviled on the left and in many working class communities. It was 50 years ago this week that Margaret Thatcher became Conservative Party leader and began to change the course of political history, winning three general elections in the UK and becoming a major figure on the world stage.

She became leader aged 49, after defeating former prime minister Edward Heath in a shock result in the first ballot, on 4 February, by 130 votes to 119 and then beating William Whitelaw by 146 to 79 in the second ballot a week later. In those days, Conservative MPs chose the leader and Mrs Thatcher's biographer, Charles Moore, has revealed that when she told husband Denis she was standing, he muttered: 'Heath will murder you.' She had also declared in a TV interview in 1973, when she was Mr Heath's education secretary and denounced as 'Milk Snatcher' for scrapping free school milk: 'I don't think there will be a woman prime minister in my lifetime.' But ironically, given that nickname, she was backed by a powerful group of Tory MPs known as the 'Milk Street mafia', led by the controversial businessman and 1922 Committee chairman Edward du Cann, who Private Eye called 'du Cann of Worms'. After her victory, Mrs Thatcher appointed Mr Whitelaw, a Scottish toff and veteran Tory fixer, as deputy leader. He served her loyally until 1988, after he suffered a stroke. But her famous quote, 'Every prime minister needs a Willie,' has become part of political folklore. Labour's prime minister when Mrs Thatcher became opposition leader on 11 February 1975 was Harold Wilson, who by then had won four general elections, but was to step down a year later, when he was succeeded by James Callaghan. Mrs Thatcher won decisive general election victories over Callaghan, Michael Foot and Neil Kinnock, but was eventually ousted from 10 Downing Street in 1990 not by the Labour Party but by her own mutinous cabinet ministers and Tory backbenchers. Now, 50 years after she became leader, the Conservatives once again have a new female leader and Labour is led by a prime minister who won a spectacular general election victory but leads a government rapidly becoming unpopular. But parallels between 1975 and 2025 end there. On the evidence so far, critics would say Kemi Badenoch is no Margaret Thatcher and Sir Keir Starmer is no Harold Wilson. On becoming leader, Mrs Thatcher revolutionised Tory thinking, so that when she became PM in 1979 she brought in radical policies never seen before: council house sales, privatisation and a tough crackdown on trade unions. Along with spending curbs and tax cuts, her policies became known as 'Thatcherism'. She called her ideology 'rolling back the frontiers of the state'. And when the going got tough, as it did in 1980 when unemployment was rising sharply and she was urged to make a U-turn, she told her critics at the Tory conference: 'You turn if you want to. The lady's not for turning.' But two even bigger episodes defined her premiership: victory in the Falklands War in 1982 and her handling of the bruising miners' strike of 1984-85, which even to this day provokes fury and loathing in former mining communities. Abroad, she found a soulmate in US president Ronald Reagan, making the so-called special relationship extra special as they fought communism. The Russians had already dubbed her the 'Iron Lady'. It was a nickname that stuck and she revelled in it. And her toughness suggests that Donald Trump would have had a healthy respect for her and bonded with her had she been PM today. She was a workaholic who claimed she only needed four hours sleep a night and hated taking holidays. At an event to mark the 50th anniversary last week, her former secretary Alison Wakeham said: 'She would long for a telephone call saying there was a world crisis.' In 2020, Kemi Badenoch described Margaret Thatcher as 'inspirational', for taking a country in decline and transforming it through what she called 'the politics of conviction'. She had met her 'political heroine' briefly when she was photographed with Lady Thatcher when she was Conservative candidate against Labour's Tessa Jowell in Dulwich and West Norwood in 2010. Despite criticism that in her first 100 days she has made a slow start, some Tories have speculated whether Ms Badenoch could be the new Margaret Thatcher. Her robust views, anti-woke values and no-nonsense style have, after all, made her a darling of the Tory right and party activists. But as Charles Moore points out, a major difference between the pair is that Mrs Thatcher faced no serious challenge from the right

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

SkyNews /  🏆 35. in UK

Margaret Thatcher Conservative Party British Politics Thatcherism Iron Lady Kemi Badenoch Labour Party Prime Minister 1975 2025

United Kingdom Latest News, United Kingdom Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Kwasi Kwarteng: I learnt the hard way, Thatcher's politics don't belong in 2025Kwasi Kwarteng: I learnt the hard way, Thatcher's politics don't belong in 2025The circumstances that gave rise to Thatcher couldn’t have been more different to today
Read more »

UK Temperatures to Rise After Coldest Nights in 15 YearsUK Temperatures to Rise After Coldest Nights in 15 YearsThe UK is experiencing a period of unusually cold weather, with temperatures dropping to record lows. However, the Met Office predicts a warming trend in the coming days.
Read more »

Ghost Broking Scams Rise 30% in 5 Years, Leaving Drivers VulnerableGhost Broking Scams Rise 30% in 5 Years, Leaving Drivers VulnerableSky News reveals a shocking 30% increase in 'ghost broking' scams over the past five years, exposing drivers to the dangers of fake car insurance.
Read more »

Ards North Down sets new district rate rise for coming yearArds North Down sets new district rate rise for coming yearIt is the lowest rate rise in the borough for several years
Read more »

Swinney Attacks Thatcher as He Vows to End Child PovertySwinney Attacks Thatcher as He Vows to End Child PovertyScottish First Minister John Swinney criticized Margaret Thatcher's famous statement 'There is no such thing as society' while outlining his plan to eliminate child poverty. Swinney promised that funds allocated to mitigate the two-child benefit cap will be directed towards combating child poverty, even if the UK government removes the cap. He emphasized the interconnectedness of society and the importance of supporting vulnerable children.
Read more »

Swinney Attacks Thatcher as He Vows to End Child Poverty in ScotlandSwinney Attacks Thatcher as He Vows to End Child Poverty in ScotlandScotland's First Minister John Swinney criticizes Margaret Thatcher's 'there is no such thing as society' stance while outlining his plan to tackle child poverty. Swinney pledges to use resources aimed at mitigating the UK government's two-child benefit cap for child poverty measures, even if the cap is abolished. He asserts that a strong society necessitates collective action and that helping vulnerable children is a moral, social, and economic imperative.
Read more »



Render Time: 2025-02-12 04:12:56