When it was announced earlier this week that Margaret Thatcher, Britain's first female prime minister and the first female leader of a major western power, had died, the tweets and slideshows came fast and fulsome. Of course they did; she was a historic figure. And yet, for all the times that someone said, "She changed the world," and referred to the Falklands war, and her war on unions, and the end of the cold war, there were as many others who referred to her clothes.
"Very sad to hear of death of Baroness Thatcher. Her memory will live long after the world has forgotten the grey suits of today's politics," tweeted Boris Johnson, mayor of London. Katherine Haddon, in an obituary for AFP, wrote: "Behind the bouffant hair, trademark handbag and schoolma'am voice was an uncompromising Conservative who regularly cut her male colleagues and opponents down to size with a sharp tongue and even sharper political brain." Meanwhile, the slideshows went up almost immediately: "Margaret Thatcher's style remembered" (HuffPost); British Vogue and Grazia UK did them too.
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