Thatcherism$529889$ - Übersetzung nach spanisch
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Thatcherism$529889$ - Übersetzung nach spanisch

POLITICS OF MARGARET THATCHER
Thatcherite; Thatcherites; Right-wing Neoliberalism; Thatcherist; Thatcher doctrine; Thatcherianism; Criticism of Thatcherism; Political positions of Margaret Thatcher; Thatcherite legacy; Politics of Margaret Thatcher; Thatchernomics; Thatcherian morality; Thatcherite morality; Right-wing neoliberalism; Politics of Thatcher; Neo-Thatcherism; Thatcherite beliefs; Thatcherism (ideology); Thatcherite activism; Thatcherism (political ideology); Thatcherite ideology
  • Leaders [[Margaret Thatcher]] and [[Ronald Reagan]] publicly appear together on the [[South Lawn]] in February 1981.
  • Prime Minister Tony Blair, shown speaking in 1998 while visiting [[Armagh]], has publicly proclaimed his support for various aspects of Thatcherism despite leading an opposing political party years after Thatcher left office.
  • Trends in UK income inequality, 1979–2006

Thatcherism      
n. política de Margaret Thatcher (primer ministra británica)

Definition

Thatcherism
¦ noun the political and economic policies advocated by the former UK Conservative Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher (Baroness Thatcher of Kesteven, b. 1925).
Derivatives
Thatcherite noun & adjective

Wikipedia

Thatcherism

Thatcherism is a form of British conservative ideology named after Conservative Party leader Margaret Thatcher that relates to not just her political platform and particular policies but also her personal character and general style of management while in office. Proponents of Thatcherism are referred to as Thatcherites. The term has been used to describe the principles of the British government under Thatcher from the 1979 general election to her resignation in 1990, but it also receives use in describing administrative efforts continuing into the Conservative governments under John Major and David Cameron throughout the 1990s and 2010s. In international terms, Thatcherites have been described as a part of the general socio-economic movement known as neoliberalism, with different countries besides the United Kingdom (such as the United States) sharing similar policies around expansionary capitalism.

Thatcherism represents a systematic, decisive rejection and reversal of the post-war consensus inside Great Britain in terms of governance, whereby the major political parties largely agreed on the central themes of Keynesianism, the welfare state, nationalised industry, and close regulation of the British economy before Thatcher's rise to prominence. Under her administration, there was one major exception to Thatcherite changes: the National Health Service (NHS), which was widely popular with the British public. In 1982, Thatcher promised that the NHS was "safe in our hands".

The exact terms of what makes up Thatcherism and its specific legacy in British history over the past decades are controversial. Ideologically, Thatcherism has been described by Nigel Lawson, Thatcher's Chancellor of the Exchequer from 1983 to 1989, as a political platform emphasising free markets with restrained government spending and tax cuts that gets coupled with British nationalism both at home and abroad. Thatcher herself rarely used the word "Thatcherism". However, she gave a speech in Solihull during her campaign for the 1987 general election and included in a discussion of the economic successes there the remark: "that's what I call Thatcherism".

The Daily Telegraph stated in April 2008 that the programme of the next non-Conservative government, with Tony Blair's "New Labour" organisation governing the nation throughout the 1990s and 2000s, basically accepted the central reform measures of Thatcherism such as deregulation, privatisation of key national industries, maintaining a flexible labour market, marginalising the trade unions and centralising power from local authorities to central government. While Blair distanced himself from certain aspects of Thatcherism earlier in his career, in his 2010 autobiography A Journey, he argued both that "Britain needed the industrial and economic reforms of the Thatcher period" and as well that "much of what she wanted to do in the 1980s was inevitable, a consequence not of ideology but of social and economic change."