Question Author
"In all the publicity surrounding the thoroughly merited unveiling of a statue of Margaret Thatcher in the Members' Lobby of the Commons, it is easy to overlook the 17 years of her systematic demonisation by the Sniggering Classes.
The point is that you have to be of a certain maturity to recall the sheer awfulness of the last years of the seventies. Not just the Winter of Discontent, 1978/79, but the whole tottering edifice of our country reduced to the Sick Man of Europe. We were heading, literally, for national ruin.
Every politician, civil servant, banker, industrialist and merchant was convinced the rot could not even be stopped, let alone turned around. But Mrs Thatcher did it and with not much help from the defeatists around her. Most of them believed Britain was finished.
But she took them all on and beat almost all of them. Galtieri in the south, Scargill in the north, the union tyrants at the strike polls, the wimps wherever she met them. They, reduced to their natural pygmy status, hated her for it - and still do.
But whatever they say, she did what had to be done. In her own words 'there was simply no alternative'.
What has always riled me is that the self-serving coterie that destroyed her were not even up to her kneecaps. Such a pity that David Cameron has restored half a dozen of them to his innermost circle of advisers.
Twenty years from now she will still be staring, in bronze, across the Members' Lobby. But you will have to scour the archives to find out who those who brought her down ever were."