Margaret Thatcher: 2,000 Invited To Funeral

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 11 April 2013 | 18.25

Former Labour leader Neil Kinnock, who clashed with Baroness Thatcher in the Commons, cannot attend her funeral.

Sky News has confirmed that the peer will miss the ceremony next Wednesday because he is at another funeral in Wales.

Highlights of the guest list for the service are due to be released later today.

Argentinian president Cristina Kirchner, who has repeatedly called for the Falkland Islands to be handed to Argentina, is unsurprisingly not invited.

It has been reported that Lady Thatcher's children Mark and Carol also vetoed the presence of any Argentine officials at the service.

Neil Kinnock at the Labour party conference Former Labour leader Neil Kinnock is at another funeral in Wales

The Queen and Duke of Edinburgh, Tony Blair and Gordon Brown are all confirmed guests, with dignitaries from around the world also expected.

FW de Klerk, the last president of apartheid South Africa, will also be attending as a guest of the Thatcher family.

But both former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and Ronald Reagan's wife Nancy, 91, are not going because of their health.

Mrs Reagan's spokesman said: "Mrs Reagan is heartbroken over Baroness Thatcher's death and would really like to be there in person to pay her respects.

"Unfortunately, she is no longer able to make that kind of a trip, so will not be attending the funeral."

Margaret Thatcher and Mikhail Gorbachev in 1987 Mikhail Gorbachev, here with Lady Thatcher in 1987, can't make the service

The service, held at St Paul's Cathedral, will involve more than 700 members of the armed forces in recognition of Lady Thatcher's success in the Falklands.

She is not being given a state funeral but the Queen's presence effectively elevates the event to that level, and the former leader is being given full military honours.

Preparations for the ceremony and huge security operation have been dubbed Operation True Blue and ministers and organisers are meeting daily to finalise the arrangements.

It has also emerged that Lady Thatcher's ashes will be buried next to her husband Denis' in the cemetery of the Royal Hospital in Chelsea.

The former prime minister was a long-term supporter of the hospital, where the Chelsea Pensioners live, and an infirmary on the site is named after her.

Royal Hospital in Chelsea Lady Thatcher's ashes will be buried at the Royal Hospital in Chelsea

Politics however will start to get back to business as usual now that a special session of Parliament where MPs and peers were able to pay tribute is over.

David Cameron is visiting the Midlands as he resumes his regional tours, where he will speak to Sky's Adam Boulton this lunchtime.

Claims have emerged that Speaker John Bercow and Mr Cameron's own chief whip Sir George Young were against recalling Parliament from the Easter break.

A further row appears to be brewing over arrangements for the funeral, with Mr Cameron pushing for PMQs to be cancelled and the Commons to sit later. 

Mr Bercow is said to have insisted the Government tables a motion to change the timetable, which will now be put to the vote when Parliament returns on Monday.

The Prime Minister led the tributes in the Commons on Wednesday, calling Lady Thatcher an "extraordinary leader and an extraordinary woman".

Choking up with emotion, he said: "She made the political weather, she made history, and - let this be her epitaph - she made our country great again."

David Cameron promo

Labour leader Ed Miliband hailed her as a "unique and towering figure" who had "defined the politics of a generation", while making clear his opposition to some of her work.

Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg appeared the most uncomfortable of the three men as he insisted it was possible to reject the tenets of Thatcherism and still respect her achievements.

The Labour benches were sparsely populated for the session, despite the party urging members to attend as a mark of respect, and there were some bitter contributions.

Former minister Michael Meacher said her "scorched earth" tactics had "polarised" the nation, while veteran David Winnick referred to the "immense pain and suffering" she caused to ordinary people.

Labour backbencher Glenda Jackson sparked howls of protest from Conservatives as she launched a full frontal assault on the "heinous" Thatcher record.

"The first Prime Minister of female gender, OK. But a woman? Not on my terms," she said.

In the Lords, speakers included Lord Tebbit who expressed sadness that he had not been able to stop her being ejected from Downing Street in 1990.


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