EU hails Thatcher’s ‘contributions’

In a file picture taken on June 26, 1984 British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher speaks to the journalists at the Fontainebleau castle during the two days summit of the European Economic Community leaders aimed at reaching a decision on Britain's budget contribution.

In a file picture taken on June 26, 1984 British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher speaks to the journalists at the Fontainebleau castle during the two days summit of the European Economic Community leaders aimed at reaching a decision on Britain's budget contribution.

Published Apr 8, 2013

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Brussels - European Commission head Jose Manuel Barroso paid tribute on Monday to former British premier Margaret Thatcher's “contributions” to the growth of the EU, despite her reservations about the bloc's merits.

Expressing his “deepest regrets” to the UK government after Thatcher died aged 87 following a stroke, Barroso said she had been “a circumspect yet engaged player in the European Union” who “will be remembered for both her contributions to and her reservations about our common project.”

“I was deeply saddened to hear the news of the death of Baroness Thatcher ... without doubt a great stateswoman,” former Socialist Portuguese prime minister Barroso said in a statement.

“She signed the Single European Act and helped bring about the Single Market. She was a leading player in bringing into the European family the Central and Eastern European countries which were formerly behind the Iron Curtain.

“As you remember, Britain under Mrs Thatcher's leadership was very supportive of the enlargement of the European Union.”

But he also made clear reference to present difficulties between EU partners and Thatcher's heir in today's Conservative Prime Minister David Cameron Ä who wants to stage a referendum on membership terms he aims to renegotiate in the hope of reducing Brussels' powers.

“Her legacy has done much to shape the United Kingdom as we know it today, including the special role of the United Kingdom in the European Union that endures to this day,” Barroso said.

Thatcher famously secured a landmark budget rebate from the EU in 1984 that rankles French and German counterparts to this day, especially with Cameron leading so far successful efforts to cut back Barroso's one-trillion-euro 2014-20 plan.

The German Socialist head of the European Parliament, Martin Schulz, also hailed “a figure of historic significance” while alluding to “clear political differences.”

He said Thatcher “at the beginning of her tenure was a committed European, signing and pushing for the single European act which transformed the EU single market.

“No matter whether one agrees with her policies or not, Margaret Thatcher showed that politics still has the capacity to be a force for change,” he added.

“My thoughts are with her family and friends.”

EU President Herman Van Rompuy added that Thatcher was “a remarkable personality” who would go down in history as “a transformative force in the United Kingdom and equally important in shaping the European agenda.”

Thatcher was eventually forced out from within her own Conservative party, which could be traced back to an infamous “No, No, No” speech in which she accused Berlin and Paris of building a “fortress Europe” and refused to surrender sterling for a nascent euro. - Sapa-AFP

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