Conservatives must come to grips with the noble failure of the Iron Lady
By Peter
Hitchens
“The Iron
Lady,” the cruel motion picture about Margaret Thatcher, makes much of her
decline into bemused old age. It arouses sympathy for her among the undecided,
and passionate sympathy among those who already revere her. No wonder. I cannot
think of any other living person who could have been treated in this fashion.
In a way it is a compliment to her that, even in the lonely, desolate weakness
of her final years, her enemies—the unintelligent, intolerant left—continue to
hate her.
With such
people attacking her, it is hard not to rally to her side. But what about those
of us who have an uncomfortable and growing suspicion that she was not as good
as she is made out to have been? I am one of them. I still cannot resist the
feeling that her reputation is not just inflated but damaging to the
conservative cause.
I last saw her
some years ago at a London publisher’s party, terribly diminished, surrounded
by fawning persons who did not seem to see that she was unhappy, lonely, and
puzzled. I felt almost ashamed to be there.
For I had been a minor witness of her great days, as we then thought they were. I was sometimes among the traveling press crouched in the back of her majestic but obsolete Royal Air Force plane as she zipped frugally across the world, to be admired and to tell other people what to do.
It was not
intimate contact, but we saw more of her than most people ever could. Sometimes
we would be summoned to her cabin for interminable briefings which never
yielded anything worth writing—for to us she was just the same in private as
she was in public. What journalists want from close contact is indiscretion and
mischief. She, being a real leader, who sought power to do what she thought was
good, was simply not interested in that. She was not really a politician, but a
real human being who had entered politics to do what she wanted.
Once, wrongly
thinking she had finished a foreign-policy harangue, I rose awkwardly to my feet
to leave the presence, and she gave me such a stare that my cheap suit almost
caught fire. I think she gave us another half-hour of her opinions on Korea
just to punish me.
I did not
pause in those days to question the great myths by which she was surrounded.
She possessed that unmistakable magic of authority and majesty that settles on
some people and bypasses thought. The fact that she was a woman, and a very
feminine woman, made that magic even more potent. You might admire her, as I
mostly did, or hate her as the embodiment of all that was evil, as many British
people also did. But you would never have missed the chance to be close by in
the years of her greatness. Power crackled and flickered around her presence.
Much later it
came to me that I, and plenty of other people, had been bewitched. I lived
abroad, in Moscow and then in Washington D.C., and saw my country as others saw
it. Quite often I found that foreigners had a completely misplaced admiration
for Britain, which—to their puzzlement—made me sad. I knew the melancholy
truth.
They thought
we were still polite. They thought our schools were still good. They thought we
were law-abiding and hard-working and patriotic. Educated Russians were
particularly deluded about this. They longed for there to be a country
completely unlike the USSR. The poor longed to be American. The intellectuals
longed to be English.
And with this
went an absurd, uncritical worship of Margaret Thatcher, which I came to call
Thatcherolatry. The more of it I came across, the more I questioned my own more
cautious enthusiasms. It was very much alive in the U.S. too, as I found one
evening at the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C., when Lady Thatcher, by then
out of office for nearly five years, performed to a paying audience. There was
a tootling rendition of “God Save the Queen,” an embarrassingly sycophantic
introduction, and a wretched fake-Churchillian speech about nothing very much.
Then there was exaggerated applause, of the sort you get when people do not
understand but want to worship. For me, it wouldn’t have been much worse if she
had taken the stage alongside Bozo the Clown, or appeared in Union Jack tights
on a high wire, singing “There’ll Always be an England.” But it was plain that
the customers liked it.
Their
adulation meant precisely nothing. Around that time, Britain was being
thoroughly humiliated by the Clinton White House. I came to think that almost
anything would have done for this purpose, but the chosen field of action was
Ireland. President Clinton had decided to pay off some heavy debts to Irish
Americans by boosting Gerry Adams and the IRA, a policy that would soon afterwards
lead to a complete British surrender to Irish terrorism.
Now, if the
United Kingdom was as important an ally and friend as it was supposed to be,
this simply would not have happened. The repeated slighting and snubbing of the
British Embassy in Washington, and the brusque and dismissive treatment of Mrs.
Thatcher’s successor, John Major, were enormously educational to this
Englishman, previously soothed and deceived by the supposed closeness of the
Thatcher-Reagan relationship.
If the famous
moment where Maggie and Ronnie danced together at a British Embassy ball had
been a fake, what if we had been fooled about more than this? History can be a
good guide to the present. But it works the other way too. I began to look
again at the supposedly heroic era of the Iron Lady.
Her mighty
triumph in the recapture of the Falkland Islands, which had thrilled me at the
time, was the greatest disappointment. It was her government that had given
Argentina the impression we no longer cared much for these remote territories.
It was her government that—if it had lasted a couple of years longer—would have
sold or scrapped several of the warships we used to recapture them.
She did not,
as her left-wing detractors insinuate, go to war for popularity’s sake. She
went to war to save her own bacon. To have given in, or to have been defeated
in the war to recover the islands, would have led to her being blamed for the
whole episode. Only victory, won for her by the Royal Navy she had been trying
to cut to ribbons a few weeks before, would bury her own guilt in the matter. A
very telling photograph shows her leaving Downing Street to face Parliament
just after the Argentine seizure of the Falklands. She is bowed and tense with
worry, and looks far older than she would six months later, when the war was
won.
Once you have
torn off this particular veil, the others fall away quite easily. Her economic
achievements look thin in an age where it is generally recognized that
manufacturing industry is still important after all. She closed a lot of
subsidized coal mines, steelworks, shipyards, and car factories. But at least
they provided work for male heads of families.
Britain today
still has a vast state-employment sector, but it consists of hospitals, local
government, and education establishments. There are legions of homophobia
monitors and contraceptive outreach workers—not wholly frivolous examples of
real posts, often with large salaries, sustained by public money. Just beneath
that is a gigantic welfare state that absorbs the entire annual product of the
national income tax. Currently the country is convulsed in debate as to whether
it is right or just to set an upper limit on welfare payments of roughly
$40,000 a year per household, the equivalent of rather more than $50,000 a year
in taxable earned income.
Meanwhile in
the areas where the coalminers and steelworkers once toiled, gaunt young men
who have never worked and never will work smoke marijuana or inject heroin
untroubled by an emasculated police force, and their sisters have babies
outside wedlock, adding to the enormous number of fatherless families dependent
on state handouts for their narrow lives.
British state
education, based on the principle that social equality is much more important
than knowledge, annually turns out tens of thousands of some of the most
ignorant and unemployable teenagers in the industrialized world. Uncounted
numbers of Poles, Romanians, and citizens of the Baltic Republics are granted
free access to Britain thanks to the European Union’s merging of all its
nationalities. They do the low-paid essential jobs that British teenagers
spurn—or the jobs which British employers prefer to give to foreign workers,
and not just because they are cheaper. In small country towns in agricultural
areas, Latvian Polish shops and cafes flourish, and Russian is spoken commonly
in the streets.
It is strange
to think that, having supposedly won the Cold War, we have so spectacularly
lost control of our borders to a foreign power and can no longer even decide
who is allowed to live on our national territory. What sort of victory was
this, if it was one?
Political
correctness is written into national law, in the form of an Equalities Act that
mandates its provisions throughout the public sector, and to anyone who has any
contracts with that public sector—which in practice means almost everyone. One
of its principal “equalities” is an insistence that Christianity shall have no
more status than any other religious faith. In practice, it often has a lesser
status, as a prevailing multiculturalism generally makes the authorities afraid
of upsetting Muslims.
Labor unions,
which Mrs. Thatcher is supposed to have defeated, have lost their old function
because of the rigorous, job-destroying employment rules enforced by the courts
through the European Union. Yet they still flourish as powerful lobbies for
higher state spending.
Perhaps above
all, the hideous cultural and moral revolution of the 1960s goes completely
unchallenged. Civility, beauty, tradition, the small and the particular are all
still despised and trampled on. Patriotism is still regarded as embarrassing,
and akin to National Socialism. Marriage, the family, and private life continue
to fade away, blasted by the chilly interference of the state and the roar of commerce.
The left like to blame our general coarsening entirely on what they imagine was
Mrs. Thatcher’s espousal of greed, in which they are probably wrong. She is
herself a proper patriot who loves England and is intensely proud of it. And
she formed her far-from-greedy character in a small town amid the darkness of
the wartime blackout and the privations of rationing.
But what is
certainly true is that in all her years she did little or nothing to reverse
the demoralization brought about in the 1960s, when she had the power to try.
And she did not grasp, until her final months in office, the enormous scale of
the threat to British national independence from the European Union.
I shall never
cease to admire her courage and determination. She overcame the stupid snobbery
of the English upper classes, as well as simply ignoring the supposed
disadvantages of her sex. Her whole life story is like one of the inspirational
tales in the old Children’s Encyclopaedia that I used to read by firelight on
winter evenings long ago—“The Shopkeeper’s Daughter who Rose by her own
Determination to Lead a Nation.”
But at the end
of it, she was a great and noble failure, who forgot or ignored half of what
she really needed to do, and so lived to see almost all her successes negated.
And until conservatives in Britain and America are ready to recognize that,
they too will fail, over and over again.
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