Quiz: Thatcherism and the Neoliberal Revolution — 12 Fragen

Detaillierte Fragen und Antworten

1. Which statement best describes Margaret Thatcher’s early political rise?

She led the Conservative Party only after leaving office in 1990
She became Prime Minister directly after graduating from Oxford
She entered Parliament as a Labour MP and became Prime Minister in 1974
She was elected as a Conservative MP in 1959 and became party leader in 1975

She was elected as a Conservative MP in 1959 and became party leader in 1975

Erklärung

Thatcher entered Parliament as a Conservative MP in 1959, became party leader in 1975, and then became Prime Minister in 1979. The other options misstate her party, timing, or career path.

2. What does the nickname “Iron Lady” most directly convey about Thatcher’s public image?

A tough and uncompromising style of leadership
A commitment to soft consensus politics
A reputation for avoiding conflict with opponents
A preference for ceremonial and symbolic politics

A tough and uncompromising style of leadership

Erklärung

The nickname was used to portray Thatcher as firm, determined, and uncompromising. It is closely tied to the image of strong leadership rather than compromise.

3. What was the main significance of the Beveridge Report in post-war Britain?

It called for the abolition of Parliament
It provided the blueprint for the post-war welfare state
It introduced the poll tax as a national reform
It proposed complete state control of the economy

It provided the blueprint for the post-war welfare state

Erklärung

The Beveridge Report became the basis for the post-war welfare state and the wider consensus on social protection. It identified the “Five Giants” that welfare policy was meant to defeat.

4. In Thatcher’s 1977 argument, how did a “free society” differ from a Soviet-style state model?

It relied on central planning to guarantee equality and security
It rejected individual choice in favor of collective political direction
It aimed to expand state ownership of all major industries
It emphasized individual freedom rather than state control of economics, politics, media, and ideas

It emphasized individual freedom rather than state control of economics, politics, media, and ideas

Erklärung

Thatcher contrasted a free society with a system of broad state control over economic life, politics, media, and ideas. The Soviet-style model represented the opposite of the individualist vision she defended.

5. Why did the Winter of Discontent matter politically in the late 1970s?

It strengthened support for nationalization and wage controls
It ended all industrial unrest in Britain
It shifted public opinion against Labour and the trade unions
It led voters to embrace full employment policies more strongly

It shifted public opinion against Labour and the trade unions

Erklärung

The Winter of Discontent helped turn public opinion away from Labour and the unions. It became a major backdrop to the rejection of Labour in 1979.

6. Which policy goal did Thatcher reject when she challenged the post-war settlement?

The use of private enterprise
The idea of market competition
The commitment to full employment
The reduction of state ownership

The commitment to full employment

Erklärung

Thatcher rejected the idea that the state should guarantee full employment. She argued that employment responsibility should lie more with employers and employees than with government.

7. Which pair of economists is most closely linked to the neoliberal influence on Thatcherism?

Hayek and Friedman
Marx and Engels
Attlee and Bevan
Beveridge and Keynes

Hayek and Friedman

Erklärung

Hayek and Friedman are the key intellectual influences associated with neoliberalism in this material. Their ideas supported limiting state intervention and trusting market mechanisms.

8. What combination of measures best captures Thatcher’s economic reforms?

More state ownership, expanded union consultation, and higher spending
Deregulation, privatization, and limits on trade union power
Universal public ownership, guaranteed wages, and tighter licensing rules
Price controls, import bans, and stronger planning boards

Deregulation, privatization, and limits on trade union power

Erklärung

Thatcher’s program emphasized reducing regulation, selling off state assets, and weakening union power. These measures were central to the neoliberal shift described.

9. What was the key aim of the government’s stance during the 1984 miners’ strike?

To nationalize more coal mines after the strike
To break union resistance and refuse the miners’ demands
To restore the post-war consensus on full employment
To expand union bargaining rights through compromise

To break union resistance and refuse the miners’ demands

Erklärung

The strike became a major confrontation, and the government refused to meet union demands while seeking to weaken trade union power. The conflict is presented as a test of state authority.

10. What was the consequence of coal mine closures for many mining towns?

They shifted without disruption into large-scale tourism
They suffered job losses and widespread community devastation
They became more dependent on new coal subsidies
They quickly recovered through mass new public investment

They suffered job losses and widespread community devastation

Erklärung

Closing unprofitable pits destroyed jobs and deeply damaged the social and economic life of mining communities. The material stresses devastation rather than smooth economic transition.

11. What best describes Thatcher’s political fate after 1990?

She left office because she won a new landslide election
She retired after completing a successful reform of the welfare state
She abandoned the Conservatives and joined Labour
She fell after growing opposition linked to the poll tax and her legacy became highly contested

She fell after growing opposition linked to the poll tax and her legacy became highly contested

Erklärung

Thatcher’s decline was tied to growing backlash, especially over the poll tax, and her legacy remained strongly disputed after her fall. She did not leave office on the back of a fresh electoral triumph.

12. Why did the poll tax provoke such strong opposition?

It taxed only luxury homes and exempted poorer households completely
It was collected only from businesses, not from households
It charged people a fixed amount per person rather than based on property value
It depended on local wages rather than on residence

It charged people a fixed amount per person rather than based on property value

Erklärung

The poll tax was a fixed-rate per-person charge, so it ignored property value and was seen as unfair to poorer households. That design helped fuel riots and political backlash.

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Margaret Thatcher — birth year?

1925

Thatcher — political party?

Conservative Party

Iron Lady — origin?

Soviet journalist nickname for Thatcher

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