Jump to content

Tony Blair

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 82.44.101.73 (talk) at 09:25, 9 September 2006. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Dis Hon. Tony Blair
File:BlairL.jpg
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Assumed office
2 May 1997
DeputyJohn Prescott
Preceded byJohn Major
ConstituencySedgefield
Personal details
Born6 May 1953[1]
Edinburgh
Political partyLabour
SpouseCherie Blair
SignatureFile:Tony Blair signature.gif

Anthony Charles Lynton Blair (born 6 May 1953)[1] is the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, First Lord of the Treasury, Minister for the UK Civil Service, Leader of the UK Labour Party, and Member of the UK Parliament for the constituency of Sedgefield in North East England. As a member of the Cabinet of the United Kingdom he is also a Privy Counsellor. As First Lord of the Treasury, his official residence is 10 Downing Street in London, UK.

Blair became leader of the British Labour Party in July 1994 following the sudden death of his predecessor, John Smith. Under his leadership, the party won a landslide victory in the 1997 general election on 1 May, ending 18 years of government by the UK's centre-right Conservative Party. Blair is the Labour Party's longest-serving Prime Minister, and the only person to have led the party to three consecutive general election victories and the only Labour prime minister to serve more than one full consecutive term. He was the youngest person to attain the office of Prime Minister since Lord Liverpool in 1812.[2]

Together with Gordon Brown and Peter Mandelson, Blair is both credited with and blamed for moving the Labour Party towards the centre of British politics, using the term "New Labour" to distinguish his pro-market policies from the more collectivist policies which the party had espoused in the past. This change is comparable to the centrist reforms in the American Democratic Party associated with Bill Clinton and the New Democrats, relative to the political and cultural differences between British and American society. Blair has described his political philosophy as "modern social democracy" and "the third way".

Blair has strongly supported a number of aspects of US foreign policy, notably by participating in the invasions of Afghanistan in 2001 and Iraq in 2003. He has encountered fierce criticism as a result, and the circumstances in which he took Britain to war in Iraq have caused many opponents of the war to perceive him as dishonest.

In October 2004, Blair stated that he would not serve a fourth term as Prime Minister. This has led to speculation as to how long his leadership would continue; by law the next general election must be held by 3 June 2010. On 14 May 2006, the Independent on Sunday reported that Blair had privately assured ministers that he would step down in the summer of 2007[3]. It is widely predicted that he will be succeeded as leader of the Labour Party by the Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown, with much speculation that the date will be 31 May 2007 [4]. On 7 September 2006 he confirmed he would step down as Prime Minister before the 2007 Labour Party Conference, but stopped short of stating a precise date for his departure. [5]

Family background

Blair was born at the Queen Mary Maternity Home[6] in Edinburgh, Scotland, the second son of Leo and Hazel Blair (née Corscadden). He has one elder brother, William Blair, who is a barrister and a Queen's Counsel (QC). Blair spent the first 19 months of his life at the family home in Paisley Terrace in the Willowbrae area of Edinburgh. During this period his father worked as a junior tax inspector whilst also studying for a law degree from the University of Edinburgh.[6] His family spent three and a half years in the 1950s living in Adelaide, Australia, where his father was a lecturer in law at the University of Adelaide.[7] The Blairs lived close to the university, in the suburb of Dulwich.

The family returned to Britain in the late 1950s, living for a time with Hazel Blair's parents at their home in Stepps, near Glasgow. Blair spent the remainder of his childhood in Durham, England, his father being by then a lecturer at Durham University. After attending Durham's Chorister School Blair boarded at Fettes College, a fee-paying school in Edinburgh, where he met Charlie Falconer, whom he later appointed Lord Chancellor. Blair reportedly modelled himself on Mick Jagger, and is said to have enjoyed a reputation as a conspicuously "cool" young man among his fellow pupils. His teachers, however, were less impressed by his behaviour: his biographer John Rentoul reported that "All the teachers I spoke to... said he was a complete pain in the backside, and they were very glad to see the back of him."

After Fettes, Blair spent a year in London, where he attempted to find fame as a rock music promoter, before going up to Oxford University to read law at St John's College. As a student, he played guitar and sang for a rock band called Ugly Rumours. During this time, he dated future American Psycho director Mary Harron.[8] After graduating from Oxford with a second class degree, Blair enrolled as a pupil barrister and met his future wife, Cherie Booth, at the Chambers founded by Derry Irvine, who was to be his first Lord Chancellor. His biographer Rentoul records that, according to his lawyer friends, Blair voiced much less concern regarding party affiliation than to his aim of becoming Prime Minister.

Blair married Booth, a practising Roman Catholic and future Queen's Counsel, on 29 March 1980. They have three sons (Euan, Nicky, and Leo) and one daughter (Kathryn). Leo (born 20 May 2000) was the first legitimate child born to a serving Prime Minister in over 150 years, since Francis Russell was born to Lord John Russell on 11 July 1849.

Although the Blairs stated that they had wished to shield their children from the media, Euan and Nicky's education was a cause of political controversy. They both attended the Catholic London Oratory School, which had been criticised by left-wingers for the perceived elitism of its selection procedures. The Blairs chose this school over a Catholic school in Labour-controlled Islington, where they then lived. There was further criticism from the left when it was revealed that Euan received private coaching from the staff of the fee-paying Westminster School.

Early political career

File:Blairelectionaddress83.jpg
Front of Tony Blair's election address for Sedgefield in the 1983 general election

Blair joined the Labour Party shortly after graduating from Oxford in 1975. During the early 1980s, he was involved in Labour politics in Hackney South and Shoreditch, where he aligned himself with the "soft left" of the party. He unsuccessfully attempted to secure selection as a candidate for Hackney Borough Council. Through his father-in-law, the actor Tony Booth, he contacted Labour MP Tom Pendry to ask for help in pursuing a Parliamentary career. Pendry gave him a tour of the House of Commons and advised him to stand for selection as a candidate in the forthcoming by-election in the safe Conservative seat of Beaconsfield, where Pendry knew a senior member of the local party. Blair was chosen as the candidate; he won only 10% of the vote and lost his deposit, but he impressed Labour Party leader Michael Foot and acquired a profile within the party. In contrast to his later centrism, Blair described himself in this period as a Socialist. A letter that he wrote to Foot in July 1982, eventually published in June 2006,[9] gives an indication of his outlook at this time.

In 1983 Blair found that the newly created constituency of Sedgefield, near where he had grown up in Durham, had no Labour candidate. Several sitting MPs displaced by boundary changes were interested in securing selection to fight the seat. He found a branch that had not made a nomination and arranged to visit them. With the crucial support of John Burton, he won their endorsement; at the last minute he was added to the shortlist and won the selection over displaced sitting MP Les Huckfield. Burton later became his agent and one of his most trusted and longest-standing allies.

Blair's election literature in the 1983 UK general election endorsed the distinctly left-wing policies that the Labour Party advocated in the early 1980s. He called for Britain to leave the EEC, though he had told his selection conference that he personally favoured continuing membership. He also, more enthusiastically, supported unilateral nuclear disarmament, being a member of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament at the time. Sedgefield was a safe Labour seat and Blair was elected as its MP, despite the party's national landslide defeat. Blair was helped on the campaign trail by soap actress Pat Phoenix, his father-in-law's girlfriend.

Blair stated in his maiden speech in the House of Commons on 6 July 1983: "I am a socialist not through reading a textbook that has caught my intellectual fancy, nor through unthinking tradition, but because I believe that, at its best, socialism corresponds most closely to an existence that is both rational and moral. It stands for cooperation, not confrontation; for fellowship, not fear. It stands for equality". [10] [11]. The Labour Party is declared in its constitution to be a democratic socialist party [12], rather than a social democratic party - Blair himself organised this declaration of Labour to be a socialist party when he dealt with the change to the party's Clause IV in their constitution.

In opposition

Once elected, Blair's ascent was rapid, and he received his first shadow-cabinet appointment in 1984 as assistant Treasury spokesman. He demanded an inquiry into the Bank of England's decision to rescue the collapsed Johnson Matthey Bank in October 1985, and embarrassed the government by finding a European Economic Community report critical of British economic policy that had been countersigned by a member of the Conservative government. By this time Blair was aligned with the reforming tendencies in the party, headed by leader Neil Kinnock, and was promoted after the 1987 election to the shadow Trade and Industry team as spokesman on the City of London. In 1987, he stood for election to the Shadow Cabinet, obtaining 77 votes - a good showing for a newcomer.

File:Blairclosedshop.jpg
As Shadow Employment Secretary, Blair announces that the Labour Party no longer supports the 'closed shop' (18 December 1989)

After the stock market crash of October 1987, Blair raised his profile further when he castigated City traders as "incompetent" and "morally dubious". He also protested against the third-class service for small investors at the London Stock Exchange. In 1988, Blair entered the Shadow Cabinet as Shadow Secretary of State for Energy, and the following year he became Shadow Employment Secretary. In this post, he realised that the Labour Party's support for the emerging European "Social Charter" policies on employment law meant dropping the party's traditional support for closed shop arrangements, whereby employers required all their employees to be members of a trade union. He announced this change in December 1989, outraging the left wing of the Labour Party. As a young and telegenic Shadow Cabinet member, Blair was given prominence by the party's Director of Communications, Peter Mandelson. His first major platform speech, at the 1990 Labour Party conference, was a major embarrassment, however: he spoke too fast and lost his place in his notes.

In the run-up to the 1992 general election, Blair worked to make Labour's image more centrist. He had responsibility for developing the minimum wage policy that was expected to be strongly attacked by the Conservatives; during the election campaign he had a notable confrontation with the owner of a children's nursery who insisted that the policy would cost jobs.

When Neil Kinnock resigned as party leader after Labour's fourth consecutive electoral defeat, Blair became Shadow Home Secretary under John Smith. The Labour Party at this time was widely perceived as weak on crime and Blair worked to change this: he accepted that the prison population might have to rise, and bemoaned the loss of a sense of community, which he was prepared to blame (at least partly) on "1960s liberalism". On the other hand, he spoke in support of equalising the age of consent for gay sex at 16, and opposed capital punishment. He defined his policy, in a phrase coined by Gordon Brown, as "Tough on crime, tough on the causes of crime".

John Smith died suddenly in 1994 of a heart attack. Blair was elected party leader on 21 July 1994, beating John Prescott and Margaret Beckett. After becoming Leader of the Opposition, Blair was, as is customary for the holder of that office, appointed a Privy Counsellor, which permitted him to be addressed with the style "The Right Honourable".

Leader of the Labour Party

Blair announced at the end of his speech at the 1994 Labour Party conference that he intended to replace Clause IV of the party's constitution with a new statement of aims and values. This involved the deletion of the party's stated commitment to 'the common ownership of the means of production and exchange', which was widely interpreted as referring to wholesale nationalisation. A special conference approved this practically insignificant but highly symbolic change in March 1995.

File:Labour manifesto 97.jpg
The cover of Labour's 1997 general election manifesto

Blair also revised party policy in a manner that enhanced the image of Labour as competent and modern -- he used the term "New Labour" to distinguish the party from its past. Although the transformation aroused much criticism (its alleged superficiality drawing fire both from political opponents and traditionalists within the "rank and file" of his own party), it was nevertheless successful in changing public perception. At the 1996 Labour Party conference, Blair stated that his three top priorities on coming to office were "education, education and education".

Aided by the unpopularity of John Major's Conservative government, which had come to be regarded as economically incompetent and corrupt, and deeply divided over the European Union, "New Labour" won a landslide victory in the 1997 general election.

First term 1997 to 2001

Blair embraces U.S. President Bill Clinton.

Independence for the Bank of England

Immediately after taking office, Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown gave the Bank of England the power to set the UK base rate of interest autonomously. This decision was popular with the British financial establishment in the City, which the Labour Party had been courting since the early 1990s. Together with the Government's decision to remain within projected Conservative spending limits for its first two years in office, it helped to reassure sceptics of the Labour Party's fiscal "prudence".

Domestic politics

Template:Infobox polstyles In the early years of his first term, Blair relied for his political advice on a close circle of his staff, among whom his press secretary and official spokesman Alastair Campbell was seen as particularly influential. Campbell was permitted to give orders to civil servants, who had previously taken instructions only from ministers. Unlike some of his predecessors, Campbell was a political appointee and had not come up through the Civil Service. Despite his overtly political role, he was paid from public funds as a civil servant. His appointment was one of a number of New Labour appointments which gave rise to fears that the traditional political neutrality of the civil service was being eroded.

A significant achievement of Blair's first term was the signing, on 10 April 1998, of the Belfast Agreement, generally known as the Good Friday Agreement. Negotiations aimed at bringing peace to Northern Ireland had begun under the previous Prime Minister, John Major, but had collapsed after the end of the first IRA ceasefire in the mid-1990s. In the Good Friday Agreement, most Northern Irish political parties, together with the British and Irish Governments, agreed upon an "exclusively peaceful and democratic" framework for the governance of Northern Ireland and a new set of political institutions for the province.

Blair's first term saw an extensive programme of constitutional change. A Human Rights Act was introduced in 1998; a Scottish Parliament and a Welsh Assembly were set up; most hereditary peers were removed from the House of Lords in 1999; the Greater London Authority and the post of Mayor of London were established in 2000; and the Freedom of Information Act was passed later in the same year, with its provisions coming into effect over the following decade. This last Act disappointed campaigners, whose hopes had been raised by a 1998 White Paper which had promised more robust legislation. No significant progress has been made in reforming the House of Lords since 1999: whether the reformed chamber should be fully elected, fully appointed, or part-elected and part-appointed remains a disputed question. An attempt to resolve the question in 2003 foundered after a series of inconclusive votes in the House of Commons, with Blair being blamed by some for bringing about the deadlock.

Blair has supported gay rights more than any previous British Prime Minister. During his first term, the age of consent was equalized at 16 and the ban on gays in the armed forces was lifted. Subsequently, in 2005, a Civil Partnership Act came into effect, allowing gay couples to form legally recognised partnerships.

Foreign policy

In 1999, Blair planned and presided over the declaration of the Kosovo War. While in opposition, the Labour Party had criticised the Conservatives for their perceived weakness during the Bosnian war, and Blair was among those urging a strong line by NATO against Slobodan Milošević. Blair was criticised both by those on the Left who opposed the war in principle and by some others who believed that the Serbs were fighting a legitimate war of self-defence. One month into the war, on 22 April 1999, Blair made a speech in Chicago setting out his "Doctrine of the International Community".[13].

Also in 1999, Blair was awarded the Charlemagne Award by the German city of Aachen for his contributions to the European ideal and to peace in Europe.

Second term 2001 to 2005

Blair welcomes US President George W. Bush to Chequers, the Prime Minister's countryside retreat.

In the 2001 general election campaign, Blair emphasised the theme of improving public services, notably the National Health Service and the State education system. The Conservatives concentrated on opposing British membership of the Euro, which did little to win over floating voters. The Labour Party largely preserved its majority, and Blair became the first Labour Prime Minister to win a full second term. However, the election was notable for a large fall in voter turnout.

Following the 11 September 2001 attacks on New York and Washington, Blair was very quick to align the UK with the United States, engaging in a round of shuttle diplomacy to help form and maintain an international coalition prior to the 2001 war against Afghanistan. He maintains his diplomatic activity to this day, showing a willingness to visit countries that other world leaders might consider too dangerous to visit. In 2003, he became the first Briton since Winston Churchill to be awarded a Congressional Gold Medal by the United States Congress for being "a staunch and steadfast ally of the United States of America",[14] although media attention has been drawn to the fact that Blair has yet to attend the ceremony to receive his medal; some commentators point to the unpopularity in Britain of his support for the U.S. as the explanation for the delay. In 2003, Blair was also awarded an Ellis Island Medal of Honor for his support of the United States after 9/11 - the first non-American to receive the honour.[15]

Iraq war

Blair gave strong support to US President George W. Bush's invasion of Iraq in 2003. He soon became the face of international support for the war, often clashing with French President Jacques Chirac, who became the face of international opposition. Regarded by many as a more persuasive speaker than Bush, Blair gave many speeches arguing for the overthrow of Saddam Hussein in the days leading up to the invasion.

Blair's case for war was based on Iraq's alleged possession of weapons of mass destruction and consequent violation of UN resolutions. He was wary of making direct appeals for regime change, since international law does not recognize this as a ground for war. A memorandum from a July 2002 meeting that was leaked in April 2005 showed that Blair believed that the British public would support regime change in the right political context; the document, however, stated that legal grounds for such action were weak. On 24 September 2002 the Government published a dossier based on the intelligence agencies' assessments of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction. Among the items in the dossier was a recently received intelligence report that "the Iraqi military are able to deploy chemical or biological weapons within 45 minutes of an order to do so". A further briefing paper on Iraq's alleged WMDs was issued to journalists in February 2003. This document was discovered to have taken a large part of its text without attribution from a PhD thesis available on the internet. Where the thesis hypothesized about possible WMDs, the Downing Street version presented the ideas as fact. The document subsequently became known as the "Dodgy Dossier".

Forty-six thousand British troops, one-third of the total strength of the British Army (land forces), were deployed to assist with the invasion of Iraq. When, after the war, it was established that Iraq had not possessed any WMDs, the two dossiers, together with Blair's other pre-war statements, became an issue of considerable controversy. Many Labour Party members, including a number who had supported the war, were among the critics. Successive independent inquiries (including those by the Foreign Affairs Select Committee of the House of Commons, the senior judge Lord Hutton, and the former senior civil servant Lord Butler of Brockwell) have found that Blair honestly stated what he believed to be true at the time, though Lord Butler's report did imply that the Government's presentation of the intelligence evidence had been subject to some degree of exaggeration. These findings have not prevented frequent accusations that Blair was deliberately deceitful, and, during the 2005 election campaign, Conservative leader Michael Howard made political capital out of the issue.

Blair shakes hands with President Bush on 28 June 2004, on the day Iyad Allawi became Interim Prime Minister of Iraq

Several anti-war pressure groups want to try Blair for war crimes in Iraq at the International Criminal Court. The Secretary General of the United Nations, Kofi Annan, stated in September 2004 that the invasion was "illegal", but did not state the legal basis for this assertion. Prior to the war, the UK Attorney General Lord Goldsmith, who acts as the Government's legal adviser, had advised Blair that the war was legal.

British armed forces were active in southern Iraq to stabilise the country in the run-up to the Iraqi elections of January 2005. In October 2004, the UK government agreed to a request from US forces to send a battalion of the Black Watch regiment to the American sector in order to free up US troops for an assault on Fallujah. The subsequent deployment of the Black Watch was criticised by some in Britain on the grounds that its alleged ultimate purpose was to assist George Bush's re-election in the 2004 US presidential election. At present, British forces remain in Iraq. After the presidential election, Blair tried to use his relationship with President Bush to persuade the US to devote efforts to resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Domestic politics

After fighting the 2001 election on the theme of improving public services, Blair's government continued to raise taxes in 2002 (described by the Conservatives as "stealth taxes") in order to increase spending on education and health. Blair insisted that the increased funding must be matched by internal reforms. The government introduced the Foundation Hospitals scheme to allow NHS hospitals financial autonomy, although the eventual shape of the proposals, after an internal struggle with Gordon Brown, allowed for somewhat less freedom than Blair had wished. Many healthcare trusts established under the foundation hospitals scheme are now in severe financial difficulties, having spent large proportions of their funding increases on pay rises for staff and on expensive drugs. As a result, with supply increasing less quickly than demand, benefits from the NHS have not increased to the same degree, and the NHS is in deficit for 2005-6 to the tune of around £800 million.

The peace process in Northern Ireland hit a series of problems. In October 2002, the Northern Ireland Assembly established under the Good Friday Agreement was suspended. Attempts to persuade the IRA to decommission its weapons were unsuccessful, and, in the second set of elections to the Assembly in November 2003, the staunchly unionist Democratic Unionist Party replaced the more moderate Ulster Unionist Party as Northern Ireland's largest unionist party, making a return to devolved government more difficult. At the same time, Sinn Féin replaced the more moderate SDLP as the province's largest nationalist party.

In its first term, the government had introduced an annual fixed tuition fee of around £1,000 for higher education students (rejecting requests from universities to be allowed to vary the fee), with reductions and exemptions for poor students. At the same time, the remaining student maintenance grant had been replaced with a low-interest loan, which was to be repaid once the student was earning over a certain threshold. In 2003, Blair controversially introduced legislation permitting universities to charge variable fees of up to £3,000 per year. At the same time, the repayment of student loans was delayed until the graduate's income was much higher, and grants were reintroduced for some students from poorer backgrounds. It was claimed that the increase in university fees violated a promise in Labour's 2001 election manifesto, though this claim is arguably unsustainable if the relevant promise is interpreted strictly and literally. At its second reading in the House of Commons in January 2004, the Higher Education Bill which contained the changes was passed with a majority of only five, due to a large-scale backbench Labour rebellion. A defeat had been averted only by a last-minute change of heart by a small number of Gordon Brown's backbench allies.

The term "Tony Bliar" is commonly used in anti-war demonstrations against the 2003 Iraq War

On 1 August 2003 Blair became the longest continuously serving Labour Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, surpassing Harold Wilson's 1964-1970 term. By this time, however, the Government had been overtaken by the crisis over the suicide of Dr. David Kelly, and there were no celebrations. Dr. Kelly was a Government scientist who had spoken to a BBC journalist about a published intelligence dossier which had been used to justify the Iraq War, leading to a major public conflict between the BBC and the Government. After the news of Dr Kelly's suicide broke, Lord Falconer, the Lord Chancellor, set up an inquiry into the circumstances surrounding his death, conducted by the senior Law Lord, Lord Hutton. The Hutton Inquiry reported on 2 August, and, despite widespread expectations that Lord Hutton's report would criticise Blair and his government, Hutton cleared the Government of deliberately inserting false intelligence into the September Dossier, while criticising the BBC editorial process which had allowed unfounded allegations to be broadcast. Evidence to the inquiry, however, had raised questions over the use of intelligence in the run up to the war, and the report did not satisfy opponents of Blair and of the war. Lord Hutton was criticised for strictly interpreting his remit, and, after a similar decision by President Bush, Blair set up another inquiry - the Butler Review - into the accuracy and presentation of the intelligence relating to Iraq's alleged weapons of mass destruction. Opponents of the war, especially the Liberal Democrats, refused to participate in this inquiry, since it did not meet their demands for a full public inquiry into whether the war was justified.

Even after the Butler Review, the political fallout from the Iraq War continued to dog Blair's premiership. On 25 August 2004 Plaid Cymru MP Adam Price announced that he would attempt to impeach Blair, [16] invoking a Parliamentary procedure that has lain dormant for 150 years but has never been abolished. In principle, the British House of Commons has the power to indict Tony Blair before the House of Lords, who would in turn have the power to pass whatever sentence it considered appropriate upon him, without reference to the ordinary criminal courts. This move was supported by Plaid Cymru and the SNP, as well as by RESPECT's George Galloway and Independent MP Richard Taylor. Ten Conservative MPs signed the relevant motion, as did two Liberal Democrats, making a total of 23 MPs. The campaign attracted the support of writers Iain Banks and Frederick Forsyth, and actor Corin Redgrave. The case for Blair's impeachment was outlined by Adam Price in a report entitled "A case to answer" [17].

In April 2004, Blair announced that a referendum would be held on the ratification of the EU Constitution. This represented a significant development in British politics: only one nationwide referendum had previously been held (in 1975, on whether the UK should remain in the EEC), though a referendum had been promised if the Government decided to join the Euro, and referenda had been held on devolved structures of government in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. It was a dramatic change of policy for Blair, who had previously dismissed calls for a referendum unless the constitution fundamentally altered the UK's relationship with the EU. Michael Howard seized upon this "EU-turn", reminding Blair of his declaration to the 2003 Labour Party conference that "I can only go one way. I haven't got a reverse gear". The referendum was expected to be held in early 2006; however, after the French and Dutch rejections of the constitution, the Blair government announced that it was suspending plans for a referendum for the foreseeable future.

During his second term, Blair was increasingly the target for protests. His speech to the 2004 Labour Party conference, for example, was interrupted both by a protester against the Iraq War and by a group that opposed the government's decision to allow the House of Commons to ban fox hunting.

On 15 September 2004 Blair delivered a speech on the environment and the 'urgent issue' of climate change. In unusually direct language he concluded that If what the science tells us about climate change is correct, then unabated it will result in catastrophic consequences for our world... The science, almost certainly, is correct. The action he proposed to take appeared to be based on business and investment rather than legislative or tax-based attempts to reduce CO2 emissions: ...it is possible to combine reducing emissions with economic growth... investment in science and technology and in the businesses associated with it.... [18].

Health problems

On 19 October 2003 it emerged that Blair had received treatment for an irregular heartbeat. Having felt ill the previous day, he went to hospital and was diagnosed with supraventricular tachycardia. Blair recovered well though. This was treated by cardioversion and he returned home that night. He took the following day (20 October) a little more gently than usual and returned to a full schedule on 21 October. Downing Street aides later suggested that the palpitations had been brought on by Blair drinking lots of strong coffee at an EU summit and then working out vigorously in the gym. However, former Armed Forces minister Lewis Moonie, a doctor, said that the treatment was more serious than Number 10 had admitted: "Anaesthetising somebody and giving their heart electric shocks is not something you just do in the routine run of medical practice", he claimed.

Family problems in the spring of 2004 fuelled speculation that Blair was on the brink of stepping down. In September 2004, in off-the-cuff remarks during an interview with ITV news, Lord Bragg said that Blair was "under colossal strain" over "considerations of his family" and that Blair had thought "things over very carefully." This led to a surge in speculation that Blair would resign. Although details of the family problem were known by the press, no paper would report them because to do so "breaches the bounds of privacy and media responsibility" as they did not relate to Mr Blair himself [19].

Blair underwent a catheter ablation to correct his irregular heartbeat on 1 October 2004, having announced the procedure the day before in a series of interviews in which he also declared that he would seek a third term but not a fourth.[20] The planned procedure was carried out at London's Hammersmith hospital. At the same time it was disclosed that the Blairs had purchased a house at 29 Connaught Square, London, for a reported £3.5 million.[21] Some have speculated that part of No. 29 is to be converted into offices for a future Blair Foundation. The purchase also fuelled speculation that Blair was preparing for life after government.

Third term 2005 to present

The Labour Party won the 2005 general election and a third consecutive term in office. The next day, Blair was invited to form a Government by Queen Elizabeth II. The reduction in the Labour majority (from 167 to 66) and the low share of the popular vote (35%) led to some Labour MPs calling for Blair to leave office sooner rather than later; among them Frank Dobson who had served in Blair's cabinet during his first term. However, dissenting voices quickly vanished as Blair in June 2005 took on European leaders over the future direction of the European Union.

G8 and EU presidencies

File:Blair EUPres 010705 Logo,0.jpg
Tony Blair accepting the presidency of the European Union on 1 July

The rejection by France and the Netherlands of the treaty to establish a constitution for the European Union presented Blair with an opportunity to postpone the doubtful UK referendum on the constitution without taking the blame for failing from the EU. Foreign Secretary Jack Straw announced that the Parliamentary Bill to enact a referendum was suspended indefinitely. It had previously been agreed that ratification would continue unless the treaty had been rejected by at least five of the 25 European Union member states who must all ratify it. In an address to the European Parliament, Blair stated: "I believe in Europe as a political project. I believe in Europe with a strong and caring social dimension." [22]

Chirac held several meetings with Schröder and the pair pressed for the UK to give up its rebate, famously won by Margaret Thatcher in 1984. After verbal conflict over several weeks, Blair, along with the leaders of all 25 member states, descended on Brussels for the EU Summit of the 18 June 2005 to attempt to finalise the EU budget for 2007-2013. Blair refused to renegotiate the rebate unless the proposals included a compensating overhaul of EU spending, particularly on the Common Agricultural Policy which composes 44% of the EU budget. After intense arguments inside closed doors, talks broke down late at night and the leaders emerged, all blaming each other. It is widely accepted that Blair came out on top, making allies in the Netherlands and Sweden and potentially (and crucially) several of the Eastern European accession countries.

It fell to Blair to broker a deal on the EU budget during the UK's Presidency of the European Union during the latter half of 2005. Early international opinion, particularly in the French press, suggested that Blair held a very strong opening position partly on account of the concurrence of British presidencies of the EU and G8. However, early in the UK's six-month term the 7 July London bombings distracted political attention from the EU despite some ambitious early statements about Blair's agenda.[23] Domestically, Blair faced further distractions from European affairs including a resurgent Conservative Party under its newly-elected leader David Cameron, and assessments of the British presidency's achievements under Blair have been [24]lukewarm in spite of some diplomatic success including a last-minute budget deal. The most controversial result was an agreement to increase British contributions to the EU development budget for new member countries, which effectively reduced the UK rebate by 20%.

2012 Summer Olympics

On 6 July 2005, during the 117th International Olympic Committee (IOC) session in Singapore, the IOC announced that the 2012 Summer Olympics, the Games of the XXX Olympiad, were awarded to London over Paris by a small (four votes) margin. The competition between Paris and London to host the Games had become increasingly heated particularly after French President Jacques Chirac commented three days before the vote that "one cannot trust people [ie: the British] whose cuisine are so bad." [25] The surprise win by London over the perceived frontrunner Paris was said to have been decided by the presence of Blair at the IOC session. Irish IOC member Patrick Hickey said, "This is down to Tony Blair. If he hadn't come here I'd say that six to eight votes would have been lost and London would not be sitting here today winners".[26]

2005 London bombings

Tony Blair reads a statement following the July 7, 2005 London bombings.

On Thursday 7 July 2005, a series of four bomb explosions struck London's public transport system during the morning rush-hour. All four incidents were suicide bombings. Fifty-six people were killed and 700 injured. The incident was the deadliest single act of terrorism in the United Kingdom since 270 died in the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, and it was the deadliest bombing in London since World War II.

Blair made a statement about the day's bombings, saying that he believed it was "reasonably clear" that it was an act of terror, and that he hoped the people of Britain could demonstrate that their will to overcome the events is greater than the terrorists' wish to cause destruction. He also said that his determination to "defend" the British way of life outweighed "extremist determination" to destroy it. On 13 July 2005, he told that international cooperation would be needed to "pull up this evil ideology by its roots".[27]

On 21 July 2005, a second series of explosions were reported in London, two weeks and some hours after the 7 July 2005 London bombings. Four controlled explosions, of devices considerably less advanced than those of the previous attacks, were carried out at Shepherd's Bush, Warren Street and Oval underground stations, and on a bus in Shoreditch. Even though the attacks on the 21st were less severe than those on the 7th, Blair was reported to have said that the bombings in London today were intended "to scare people and to frighten them, to make them anxious and worried". He went on to say how the "police have done their very best, and the security services too, in the situation, and I think we have just got to react calmly and continue with our business as much as possible normal".

Concerns about terror attacks led to 10 Downing Street requesting media organizations not to identify the location of Blair's 2005 summer holiday. After Blair attended a public function it was acknowledged that the holiday was in Barbados, as a guest of the singer Cliff Richard with whom Blair has stayed before.

A Guardian/ICM poll conducted after the first wave of attacks found that 64% of the British population believed that Blair's decision to wage war in Iraq had led indirectly to the terrorist attacks on London. [28] The public did however indicate approval of Blair's handling of the attacks, with his approval rating moving into positive territory for the first time in five years. [29]. In December 2005, the Prime Minister was presented with the "Statesman of the Decade" award by the EastWest Institute, a trans-Atlantic think tank that organizes an annual Security Conference in Brussels[30].

Proposed laws to cope with the threat of terrorism proved extremely controversial; an amendment to require that glorifying terrorism be deliberate in order to be an offence was rejected in the House of Commons by just three votes (a result initially announced as a one-vote margin, due to a miscount). The proposal to allow terrorist suspects to be held for questioning for up to 90 days was defeated on 9 November by a margin of 31 [31] with 49 Labour MPs voting against the government. Instead, MPs supported an amendment to allow questioning for 28 days proposed by veteran backbencher David Winnick. This was Blair's first defeat on the floor of the House of Commons since he became Prime Minister in 1997, and most commentators saw this as seriously undermining his authority [32].

Education reforms 2006

The introduction of further reforms to the education system, which restricted the involvement of local education authorities in opening new schools, proved controversial. Labour backbenchers opposed to the proposals produced a rival manifesto, and the Bill to introduce the changes was delayed while the government negotiated with them. The Conservative Party declared its support for the reforms, making it certain that they would be passed but increasing the likelihood that Labour MPs would vote against. On 15 March 2006 the Education and Inspections Bill passed its second reading with 52 Labour MPs voting against; had the Conservative Party voted against instead of in favour, it would have been defeated.

Local elections on 4 May 2006 and cabinet reshuffle

The local elections in England on 4 May 2006 dealt a blow to Blair, with the loss of 317 seats and 18 councils. This result was thought to be partly continued fallout from public disatisfaction over the decision to invade Iraq, and partly due to a scandal concerning the Home Office's mishandling of foreign criminals' deportation. At the same time, an affair of the Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott with his diary secretary had been made public. Further, some Primary Care and Hospital Trust sustained significant deficits and had to release staff, which called into question the position of Health Secretary Patricia Hewitt. On 5 May, Blair reshuffled his Cabinet. Most significantly, Charles Clarke and Foreign Secretary Jack Straw were relieved of their duties and many other positions were reassigned. Many commentators saw this as a panic reaction designed to ward off calls for Blair to step down.

Departure

After Labour's 2004 conference, Blair announced in a BBC interview [33] that he would serve a "full third term" but would not fight a fourth general election. No term limits exist in British politics, and such an announcement was historically unprecedented.

In the months following the 2005 election, there was frequent speculation over the date of Blair's departure. He was widely expected at Westminster to retire after the proposed UK referendum on the European Union Constitution, but the constitution's demise eliminated this possibility. The July 2005 terror attacks also lessened the likelihood of an early departure. Speculation as to the likely time of Blair's departure increased in May 2006 following Labour's poor results in English local elections. Such speculation is recurrent in the press and in political circles when any mishap befalls the government. Blair has said he will give "ample time" for his successor to establish himself before the next general election, which is likely to be held in 2009 or 2010. His successor is widely expected to be Gordon Brown, the current Chancellor of the Exchequer. However, the only politician to declare himself a contender for Labour leadership following Blair's departure is left-wing Labour MP John McDonnell, who launched his campaign on 14 July 2006. [34] It is suspected that Tony Blair will be served notice to quit Downing Street at a meeting of the Cabinet in the week of 11 September 2006 due to his refusal to commit to a departure timetable. [35]

File:The Sun (6-Sep-2006).jpg
The Sun cover from 6 September 2006.

If he remained in office until 27 November 2008, Blair would break Margaret Thatcher's record for longest continuous service as Prime Minister since Lord Liverpool, 1812-27.

Blair has said that after stepping down as Prime Minister, he plans to leave front-line politics and does not intend to take a seat in the House of Lords, commenting that it is, "...not my scene". [36] There have been rumours in the British press that Blair will stand for the position of United Nations Secretary-General when Kofi Annan steps down on 31 December 2006. [37] Former US President Bill Clinton, in an interview, said that he believes Blair would be a good secretary-general.[38]

It was reported on 30 July2006 that Blair has shaken hands on a £4m deal for his diaries with a publishing firm owned by Rupert Murdoch.[39]

On 5 September 2006 a letter signed by 17 normally loyal Labour MPs called for Tony Blair to resign. On the same day 49 other Labour MPs signed a statement supporting Blair's departure timetable [40]. The next day The Sun reported that Blair would step down as Labour leader on May 31 2007, and as Prime Minister when a new leader is elected. That same day seven of the MPs who signed the letter resigned as Parliamentary Private Secretaries, unpaid jobs assisting Government ministers.

Tony Blair made a statement, regarding his departure, on 7 September 2006, in which he stated that the next Labour Party conference would be his last as leader. While he did not announce a specific timetable for either his departure or the election of a new leader, he did state that such a timetable would be published, contradicting those who thought he would simply leave unannounced at some point. [41]

Blair and Parliament

File:Tony Blair at PMQs.jpg
British Prime Minister Tony Blair standing his ground in the House of Commons during Prime Minister's Questions. To the right is Chancellor Gordon Brown.

Blair has encouraged reforms to Parliamentary procedures. One of his first acts as Prime Minister was to replace the two weekly 15-minute sessions of Prime Minister's Questions, held on a Tuesday and Thursday, with a single 30-minute session on a Wednesday. This reform was said to have led to greater efficiency, but critics have noted that it is easier to prepare for one long set of questions than for two shorter sessions. In addition to PMQs, Blair has held monthly press conferences, at which he fields questions in a less formal or confrontational manner than in the Commons.[42] [43]

Other procedural reforms supported by Blair include changes to the rules concerning the times when Parliament sits. These latter changes are said to allow Parliament to operate in a more business-like manner, but they have also arguably reduced MPs' ability to scrutinise legislation effectively.

Blair consistently ignores the role of parliament - trying instead to govern without it.

Blair in the media

While evaluations of Blair's skills as a parliamentarian differ, he is acknowledged to be a highly skillful media performer in other contexts, appearing modern, charismatic, informal and articulate. His best known television appearance was perhaps his tribute to Diana, Princess of Wales on the morning of her death in August 1997, in which he famously described the late princess as "the people's princess".

After taking office in 1997, Blair gave particular prominence to his press secretary, who became known as the Prime Minister's Official Spokesman (the two roles have since been separated). Blair's first PMOS was Alastair Campbell, who served in that role from May 1997 to 8 June 2001, after which he served as the Prime Minister's Director of Communications and Strategy until his resignation on 29 August 2003, in the aftermath of the Hutton Inquiry. Campbell acquired a reputation as a sinister and machiavellian figure, and both Blair and Campbell have frequently been criticised for their allegedly excessive use of "spin" and news management techniques: see below under Criticism.

Blair and Brown

After the death of John Smith in 1994, both Blair and his fellow modernizer Gordon Brown were viewed as possible candidates for the leadership of the Labour Party. They had always agreed that they would not stand against each other, and Brown had previously been considered to be the more senior of the two men; he understood this to mean that Blair would give way to him. It soon became apparent, however, that Blair had greater public support.[44] At the Granita restaurant in Islington on 31 May, Brown agreed with Blair that he would not contest the leadership election. He understood Blair to have undertaken in return to step down as party leader after a specified period (after 8 years, according to some reports), but Blair has always denied striking any such deal with him. It may be that both men placed honestly differing interpretations on the same conversation.

It is know that Blair, while in office as Prime Minister, gave Brown further indications and even promises that he would step down in Brown's favour at specified times. Whatever the truth of these reports (which may perhaps again be based on misinterpretations of ambiguous words), Blair's consistent refusal to leave office (so far) has led to relations between the two men becoming irretrievably embittered. At certain times, Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott has reportedly acted as their "marriage guidance counsellor".

Another aspect of the political relationship between Blair and Brown is the exceptional freedom given by Blair from the start of his time in office to his Chancellor in the area of economic policy. Downing Street insiders have subsequently reported that Blair grew to regret granting Brown this freedom, since he has been excluded from important fiscal decisions as a result.

Blair's religious faith

Blair has rarely discussed his religious faith in public, but he is often identified as an Anglo-Catholic — that is, a member of the high church wing of the Church of England, sympathetic to many Roman Catholic beliefs and practices. His wife, Cherie Booth, is a practising Roman Catholic, and he has attended Catholic Masses at Westminster Cathedral, while on holiday in Italy, and with his family at his current home in Number 10 Downing Street. At one point, he was reprimanded by Cardinal Basil Hume for receiving Holy Communion at Mass despite not being a Roman Catholic, a contravention of Catholic doctrine.

In an interview with Michael Parkinson broadcast on ITV1 on 4 March 2006, Blair referred to the role of his Christian faith in his decision to go to war in Iraq, stating that he had prayed about the issue, and saying that God would judge him for his decision [45]: "I think if you have faith about these things, you realise that judgement is made by other people … and if you believe in God, it's made by God as well." His comments were later interpreted by some of his critics as indicating that he believed that God had endorsed his decision to participate in the invasion.

Political overview

Which part of the political spectrum Tony Blair occupies is disputed. Many Britons would place him in the centre ground. Many others, including many of his left-wing critics, would place him on the right of centre. Some others again, including some old-style Conservatives, regard him as a left-winger. Blair rarely applies such labels to himself, though he promised, in advance of the 1997 election, that New Labour would govern "from the radical centre", and he is on record as describing himself as a "social democrat".

An overview of Blair's policies gives an idea of the difficulty of defining him politically. He has raised taxes; implemented redistributive policies (to a modest extent); introduced a minimum wage and some new employment rights (while leaving Margaret Thatcher's trade union legislation wholly unchanged); introduced important constitutional reforms (which remain incomplete and controversial); promoted new rights for gay people in the Civil Partnerships Act; and signed treaties integrating Britain more closely with the EU (opposed by the Conservatives). On the other hand, he has firmly supported George W. Bush's foreign policy (while reportedly attempting to act as a restraining influence on him); introduced substantial market-based reforms in the education and health sectors (though not to the extent advocated by the Conservatives); introduced student tuition fees (with safeguards for poor students); sought to reduce (certain categories of) welfare payments; and introduced tough anti-terrorism and identity card legislation (with claimed public support).

Criticism

The criticism of Tony Blair includes accusations of dishonesty and authoritarianism as well as suspicions about his alliance with U.S. President George W. Bush. While Prime Minister of the United Kingdom's inevitably receive some measure of public criticism, Tony Blair has endured particularly severe public censure since the participation of the British armed forces in the March 2003 invasion of Iraq.

A widely-levelled criticism of Blair and his subordinates is that they make use of spin to such an extent that his government has fundamentally lost credibility with the British public. It is also claimed that the Government has on occasions crossed the line between selective presentation of information and deliberate misleading.

Blair has consistently supported the police and sought to increase police powers. While this policy initially attracted widespread support, the government's legislative response to the threat of militant Islamism has been regarded by some as authoritarian.[citation needed]

File:Bushblairpress.jpg
George W. Bush and Tony Blair shake hands after their press conference in the East Room of the White House on 12 November 2004.

Along with enjoying a close relationship with Bill Clinton during the latter's time in office, Blair has formed a strong political alliance with President George W. Bush of the United States of America, particularly in the area of foreign policy: at one point, Nelson Mandela described Blair as "the US foreign minister".[46] For his part, President Bush has lauded Blair and the UK many times: in his post-September 11 speech, for example, he stated that "America has no truer friend than Great Britain".[47] The alliance between Bush and Blair has seriously damaged Blair's standing in the eyes of many British people, particularly those on the traditional Left.[citation needed]

Blair is an excessively autocratic leader: he pays insufficient attention both to the views of his own Cabinet colleagues and to those of the House of Commons as a whole. His style resembles that of a president and head of state rather than that of a prime minister in a parliamentary system of government.[48] His wife too has delusions of grandeur, believing herself to be "first lady" - a formal role that does not exist in the British Constitution. If it did it would be occupied by Her Majesty the Queen.

Blair's refusal to set a date for his departure has been criticised by the British press and members of parliment. A number of cabinet ministers believe that Blair's timely departure from office is required to be able to win a fourth election. [35] Some ministers viewed Blair's announcement of policy initiatives in September 2006 as an attempt to draw attention away from these issues. [35] Upon his return from his holiday in the West Indies he announced that all the speculation about his leaving must stop. This stirred not only his traditional critics but also traditional party loyalists, but was totally ineffective.

While the Blair government has introduced some social policies seen by the left of the Labour Party as progressive, such as the minimum wage and measures to reduce child poverty, Blair is seen, on economic and management issues, as being to the right of the bulk of the party. A possible comparison may be made with Al Gore, Joe Lieberman and other American Democrats, who have been accused by their party's "base" of selling out to conservative ideology. Some critics describe Blair as a reconstructed Conservative or Thatcherite. He is occasionally described as "Son of Thatcher", though Lady Thatcher herself rejected this identification in an interview with ITV1 on the night of the 2005 election, claiming that the resemblances were superficial.

Blair has avoided the traditional pigeonholes of British political leaders. He has often (particularly after the invasion of Iraq) been labelled as insincere ("King of Spin", "Phoney Tony"), and has been accused of cronyism due to his perceived penchant for promoting his friends to top jobs. In his early years, Blair was often criticised as an unscrupulous opportunist who was solely interested in doing anything that would get him elected, that he was a focus group politician. More recently, his unpopular support of the United States over Iraq has demonstrated a politician with more commitment to his own beliefs, despite public opposition. His name has often been mis-spelt 'Tony Bair' instead of its more accurate forms - 'B. Liar' or 'Tory Blur'. The Economist on 5 June 2003 devoted its front cover to a photograph of Blair and the headline, "Bliar?".

References

You must add a |reason= parameter to this Cleanup template – replace it with {{Cleanup|June 2006|reason=<Fill reason here>}}, or remove the Cleanup template.

  1. ^ a b Tony Blair, Encyclopædia Britannica
  2. ^ Biography: The Prime Minister Tony Charles Lynton Blair, 10 Downing Street. Retrieved 15 May 2006.
  3. ^ Francis Elliott (14 May 2006). I'll step down next summer, Blair tells cabinet ministers. The Independent. Accessed on 19 May 2006.
  4. ^ Daily Mail
  5. ^ "I will quit within a year - Blair", BBC News Online, 2006-09-07
  6. ^ a b "Blair's birthplace is bulldozed in Edinburgh", Edinburgh Evening News, 9 August 2006
  7. ^ "Tony's big adventure", The Observer, 27 April 2003.
  8. ^ Mary Harron biography
  9. ^ "The full text of Tony Blair's letter to Michael Foot written in July 1982", The Daily Telegraph, 16 June 2006
  10. ^ ROLE PROFILE OF TONY BLAIR Is this reference of any merit?
  11. ^ America's Friend: Reflections on Tony Blair LOGOS 3.4, Mark Seddon, Fall 2004
  12. ^ About the Labour Party, The Labour Party, 02/06 2006
  13. ^ The Blair Doctrine PBS Online News Hour, 22 April 1999
  14. ^ Congressional Record Award of a Congressional Gold Medal to Tony Blair 14 May 2003
  15. ^ US to award Blair for leadership BBC, 16 April 2003
  16. ^ BBC Blair impeachment campaign starts 27 August 2004
  17. ^ ImpeachBlair.org Impeach Prime Minister Tony Blair for misleading Parliament and the British people
  18. ^ Guardian Full text: Blair's climate change speech 15 September 2004
  19. ^ Peter Fray Keeping Tony Blair's secret all in the family 18 September 2004
  20. ^ BBC Blair heart treatment 'successful' 1 October 2004
  21. ^ BBC The house that Tony bought 1 October 2004
  22. ^ David Rennie and Brendan Carlin Blair does a Thatcher to the EU, only ruder Telegraph 24 June 2005
  23. ^ BBC Blair urges debate on EU's future 1 July 2005
  24. ^ BBC (Paul Reynolds) UK's EU reign marked by compromise 19 December 2005
  25. ^ BBC Chirac jokes about British food 4 July 2005
  26. ^ Mihir Bose London takes gold 7 July 2005
  27. ^ "Criticism of Israel Is not 'anti-Semitism'". 2005-07-14 publisher=Arab News. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Missing pipe in: |date= (help); line feed character in |date= at position 15 (help)
  28. ^ The Guardian The Iraq connection 20 July 2005
  29. ^ Anthony King Britons will never give in to terrorists Telegraph 9 July 2005
  30. ^ EastWest Institute home page
  31. ^ BBC Blair defeated over terror laws 9 November 2005
  32. ^ BBC Q&A: Blair's terror bill defeat 9 November 2005
  33. ^ BBC Interview (RAM file)
  34. ^ John4Leader [1]
  35. ^ a b c "'Deluded': Extraordinary attack on Blair by Cabinet". 2006-09-04 publisher=The Independent. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Missing pipe in: |date= (help); line feed character in |date= at position 15 (help)
  36. ^ Oonagh Blackman The Blair interview: I won't be Lord Blair Mirror 14 December 2005
  37. ^ BBC BBC: Clinton backs Blair as UN chief
  38. ^ BBC Clinton backs Blair as UN chief 14 January 2006
  39. ^ Francis Elliott Tony & Cherie's American Dream 30 July2006
  40. ^ [2]
  41. ^ I will quit within a year - Blair BBC News 7 September 2006
  42. ^ 10 Downing Street Saddam and his regime will be removed
  43. ^ Matthew Tempest Tony Blair's press conference Guardian
  44. ^ A MORI opinion poll published in the Sunday Times on 15 May found that among the general public, Blair had the support of 32%, John Prescott, 19%, Margaret Beckett 14%, Gordon Brown 9%, and Robin Cook 5%.
  45. ^ BBC Blair 'prayed to God' over Iraq 3 March 2006
  46. ^ BBC Mandela condemns US stance on Iraq 30 January 2003
  47. ^ President Declares "Freedom at War with Fear"
  48. ^ http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,1004735,00.html

Works

  • Blair, Tony (2003). Iraq's Weapons of Mass Destruction: The Assessment of the British Government Diane Publishing, ISBN 0-7567-3102-X
  • Blair, Tony (2002). The Courage of Our Convictions Fabian Society, ISBN 0-7163-0603-4
  • Blair, Tony (2000). Superpower: Not Superstate? (Federal Trust European Essays) Federal Trust for Education & Research, ISBN 1-903403-25-1
  • Blair, Tony (1998). The Third Way: New Politics for the New Century Fabian Society, ISBN 0-7163-0588-7
  • Blair, Tony (1998). Leading the Way: New Vision for Local Government Institute for Public Policy Research, ISBN 1-86030-075-8
  • Blair, Tony (1997). New Britain: My Vision of a Young Country Basic Books, ISBN 0-8133-3338-5
  • Blair, Tony (1995). Let Us Face the Future Fabian Society, ISBN 0-7163-0571-2
  • Blair, Tony (1994). What Price Safe Society? Fabian Society, ISBN 0-7163-0562-3
  • Blair, Tony (1994). Socialism Fabian Society, ISBN 0-7163-0565-8

Miscellany

  • Blair, T. (2004). "Blair, The Right Hon. A. C. L." from Who's Who, 156th ed., London: A & C Black.
  • Halsbury's Laws of England (2004), reference to impeachment in volume on Constitutional Law and Human Rights, paragraph 416
  • The Queen (2006 film)

Further reading

  • Abse, Leo (2001). Tony Blair: The Man Behind the Smile. Robson Books. ISBN 1-86105-364-9. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)
  • Beckett, F. & Hencke, D. (2004). The Blairs and Their Court, Aurum Press, ISBN 1-84513-024-3
  • ――― (2003). Tony Blair: The Man Who Lost His Smile. Robson Books. ISBN 1-86105-698-2. {{cite book}}: |author= has numeric name (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)
  • Blair, Tony (1998). (ed.) Iain Dale (ed.). The Blair Necessities: Tony Blair Book of Quotations. Robson Books. ISBN 1-86105-139-5. {{cite book}}: |editor= has generic name (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)
  • ――― (2004). (ed.) Paul Richards (ed.). Tony Blair: In His Own Words. Politico's Publishing. ISBN 1-84275-089-5. {{cite book}}: |author= has numeric name (help); |editor= has generic name (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)
  • Gould, Philip (1999). The Unfinished Revolution: How the Modernisers Saved the Labour Party. Abacus. ISBN 0-349-11177-4. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)
  • Naughtie, James (2001). The Rivals: The Intimate Story of a Political Marriage. Fourth Estate. ISBN 1-84115-473-3. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)
  • ――― (2004). The Accidental American: Tony Blair and the Presidency. Macmillan. ISBN 1-4050-5001-2. {{cite book}}: |author= has numeric name (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)
  • Rawnsley, Andrew (2000). Servants of the People: The Inside Story of New Labour. Hamish Hamilton. ISBN 0-241-14029-3. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)
  • ――― (2001). Servants of the People: The Inside Story of New Labour (2nd edition ed.). Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-027850-8. {{cite book}}: |author= has numeric name (help); |edition= has extra text (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)
  • Rentoul, John (2001). Tony Blair: Prime Minister. Little Brown. ISBN 0-316-85496-4. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)
  • Riddell, Peter (2004). The Unfulfilled Prime Minister: Tony Blair and the End of Optimism. Politico's Publishing. ISBN 1-84275-113-1. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)
  • Seldon, Anthony (2004). Blair. Free Press. ISBN 0-7432-3211-9. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)
  • Short, Clare (2004). An Honourable Deception? New Labour, Iraq, and the Misuse of Power. Free Press. ISBN 0-7432-6392-8. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)
  • Stephens, Philip (2004). Tony Blair: The Making of a World Leader. Viking Books. ISBN 0-670-03300-6. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)

See also

Political offices

Template:Incumbent succession boxTemplate:Succession box two to one
Parliament of the United Kingdom

Template:Incumbent succession box

Political offices
Preceded by Shadow Home Secretary
1992–1994
Succeeded by
Preceded by Leader of the Opposition
1994–1997
Succeeded by
Leader of the British Labour Party
1994–present
Incumbent
Preceded by Chair of the G8
1998
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of the G8
2005
Succeeded by