Here’s what they’re saying about the death of Margaret Thatcher in one English pub:
I enjoy a good swim but if someone asked me what my favorite stroke was I’d say Maggie Thatcher’s.
You’ll find lots of other zingers (of equally questionable taste, perhaps) in a report by the Guardian about a group of South Yorkshire coal miners who got together the day Mrs Thatcher died and held “what they described as a party.” One working class tippler, still bitter over the Thatcher government’s drive to deregulate the economy and destroy the power of organized labor, suggested that the group print t-shirts saying “Thatcher’s in hell—she’s only been there a few hours and already she’s closed down the furnaces.” Elsewhere, a former labor leader said that it was “a great day for all the miners.”
There’s no question that Britain’s controversial prime minister remains more popular among certain circles in the United States than she does with many of her own countrymen. While veterans of Thatcher’s campaign against the coal miners—a struggle she herself described as a war against “the enemy within“—raise a glass to the demise of their old antagonist, conservatives in the United States seem unwilling to spare her any accolade.
She was a “rock star,” says former Vice President Dick Cheney. She left a “beautiful legacy,” according to Texas Rep. Louie Gohmert. Virginia’s House Majority Leader Republican Eric Cantor praised Thatcher for inspiring “the world to empower people and families over government.”









