Margaret Thatcher 'didn't get Monty Python's dead parrot gag'
'It is not merely stunned, it has ceased to be, expired and gone to meet its maker'
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Your support makes all the difference.Margaret Thatcher did not "entirely grasp" why mocking the Liberal Democrats' logo using Monty Python's dead parrot sketch was funny, the Culture Secretary has said.
John Whittingdale, former political secretary to Mrs Thatcher, recalled how in 1990 he worked on the then Conservative prime minister's conference speech and persuaded her to joke about the Lib Dems' bird of liberty symbol.
But the Tory frontbencher said he has never been convinced Mrs Thatcher understood the joke, although he added the comparison of his party's former coalition partners seems "even more fitting" now following their general election wipeout in May.
Speaking in 1990, Mrs Thatcher told Tory delegates: "I gather that during the last few days there have been some ill-natured jokes about their new symbol, a bird of some kind, adopted by the Liberal Democrats at Blackpool.
"Politics is a serious business and one should not lower the tone unduly.
"So I will say only this of the Liberal Democrat symbol and of the party it symbolises - this is an ex-parrot.
"It is not merely stunned, it has ceased to be, expired and gone to meet its maker.
"It is a parrot no more. It has run down the curtain and joined the choir invisible. This is a late parrot. And now for something completely different."
Mr Whittingdale, speaking in Manchester during his first conference speech since gaining his ministerial role, said of events in 1990: "I was trying to persuade Margaret Thatcher to include a passage comparing the symbol of the Liberal Democrats to Monty Python's dead parrot.
"As many of you know, I succeeded, although I was never sure that she entirely grasped why it was funny.
"But it seems an even more fitting comparison today."
Mr Whittingdale, before speaking about broadband, also joked about his previous work on mobile phones.
He said: "The pace of technological change is growing ever faster.
"In 1983, when I accompanied Margaret Thatcher on her election tour, I was put in charge of the mobile phone.
"There was nothing very mobile about it. It was the size of a brick with a handle - and we soon discovered that journalists in a car behind the battle bus could tune their radio to listen in."
PA
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