Prime Minister David Cameron on Wednesday paid tribute to Baroness Thatcher as an extraordinary leader and an extraordinary woman. Cameron told the British parliament at the start of a specially convened session the former prime minister defined and overcame the great challenges of her age.
He praised her achievements in breaking through the glass ceiling and said she had made Britain great again.
Opposition leader Ed Miliband said she had been a unique and towering figure but said he had disagreed with much of what she did.
Mr Cameron opened the six-hour tribute debate in the Commons, saying: As Winston Churchill put it there are some politicians who make the weather and Margaret Thatcher was undoubtedly one of them.
He added: They say 'cometh the hour, cometh the man', well in 1979 came the hour and came the lady. She made the political weather; she made history and let this be her epitaph - that she made this country great again.
He described her remarkable achievements in becoming both leader of the Conservative Party and prime minister at a time when it was almost inconceivable a woman could hold these roles.
Those of us who grew up before Margaret Thatcher was even in Downing Street can sometimes fail to appreciate the thickness of the glass ceiling she broke through - from a grocer's shop in Grantham to the highest office in the land, he said.
The Labour leader acknowledged the ways in which Margaret Thatcher had shaped the country, highlighting the Falkland Islands and parts of the privatisation program as successes.
But he also said it was important to reflect where she had been wrong - picking out mining and Baroness Thatcher's position on Nelson Mandela and South Africa.
Labour party leader Miliband told the Commons: Whatever your view of her, Margaret Thatcher was a unique and towering figure.
I disagreed with much of what she did but I respect what her death means for many, many people who admired her and I honour her personal achievements.
Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg said although it was fair to shun the tenets of Thatcherism it was possible to still respect Lady Thatcher's personal achievements.
Her memory will no doubt continue to divide opinion and stir deep emotion, he said. But as we as a nation say farewell to a figure that looms so large, one thing's for sure, the memory of her will continue undimmed, strong and clear for years to come, in keeping with the unusual and unique character of Margaret Thatcher herself.
Conservative MPs queued up to pay their respects to their former leader.
John Redwood called her a great lady, and a great stateswoman. Peter Lilley, who served as a minister under Lady Thatcher, praised her for her ability to convert her opponents and Conor Burns, a close friend of the former prime minister, described her as an inspiration.
Some Labour MPs stayed away in protest at the debate, labelling it a waste of money and a misuse of Parliament. However, some used it as an opportunity to express critical views about Baroness Thatcher's time in Downing Street.
Former Labour minister Michael Meacher said she had embarked on a scorched earth policy and left industrial communities desolated. Veteran Labour MP David Winnick said Thatcher's policies caused huge pain and suffering among ordinary people, while Glenda Jackson described life under Thatcherism for her north London constituents as grim and Hogarthian. She added that ‘Thatcherism meant greed’.
The SNP's Angus Robertson said that while it was right to acknowledge Lady Thatcher as a formidable politician, Scotland would never forget and never forgive the introduction of the community charge, known as the poll tax, a year earlier than the rest of the UK.
There was also criticism from DUP MP Nigel Dodds for the Anglo Irish Agreement, which Lady Thatcher signed in 1985, but he said in later life she had regretted it as a mistake.
After the last death of a former prime minister, Sir Edward Heath, in 2005, the Commons staged an hour-long debate to pay tribute. Up to seven-and-a-half hours has been set aside for Lady Thatcher.
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Disclaimer & comment rulesMargaret Thatcher's death greeted with street parties in Brixton and Glasgow
Apr 11th, 2013 - 04:18 am 0Crowds shout 'Maggie Maggie Maggie, dead dead dead' during impromptu events
http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2013/apr/08/margaret-thatcher-death-party-brixton-glasgow
Britain is the cradle of democracy and people are free to express their opinions as they choose. Many of us are disgusted at these demonstrations by these people most of whom were not even alive when Baroness Thatcher lead Britain but no one will be prevented from making these uninformed and petty political gestures.
Apr 11th, 2013 - 05:15 am 0Marcos, we all know it you f'in idiot?? please Marcos go away, your posts are always pointless! You simply copy and paste links (usually old ones) and clearly find it hard using the one braincell you have. give up!!! You lack wit, intelligence, hope!!!
Apr 11th, 2013 - 05:32 am 0Commenting for this story is now closed.
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