Tony Blair: 'He's always been a freewheeler,' says Labour
party historian Ross McKibbin. Photograph: Blair Gable/Reuters
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Tony Blair: from New Labour hero to political embarrassment
Friend of the Murdochs,
adviser to authoritarian regimes and associate of the super-rich – the former
prime minister's reputation is on a downward spiral. And each new revelation
manages to be more jaw-dropping than the last
Andy Beckett
The Guardian, Wednesday 26 February 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2014/feb/26/tony-blair-new-labour-hero-political-embarrassment-murdoch
In Tony Blair's uneven but occasionally startling
autobiography, A Journey, published in 2010, there is a chapter that makes
particularly interesting reading now. It covers his final, slightly besieged
years as prime minister, from mid-2005 to mid-2007. "In this time,"
writes Blair, "I was trying to wear … a kind of psychological armour which
the arrows simply bounced off, and to achieve a kind of weightlessness that
allowed me, somehow, to float above the demonic rabble tearing at my limbs.
There was courage in [this behaviour] and I look back at it now with
pride," he concludes. "I was … not unafraid exactly, but near to
being reckless about my own political safety."
The chapter's title is "Toughing It Out". Last
week, during the phone-hacking trial of Rebekah Brooks, an email from the
former News of the World editor emerged, sent the day after the disgraced
rightwing tabloid was shut down in 2011 and six days before she was arrested.
To her then boss, James Murdoch, Brooks wrote: "I had an hour on the phone
to Tony Blair. He said … Keep strong … It will pass. Tough up. He is available
for you, KRM [Rupert Murdoch] and me as an unofficial adviser but needs to be
between us."
As Labour leader and prime minister, one of Blair's defining
characteristics was his readiness – canny or disgraceful, according to
political taste – to make accommodations with powerful rightwing interest
groups, not least the Murdoch press. The Brooks email, the latest in a
succession of sometimes jaw-dropping revelations about Blair's behaviour since
he abruptly left Westminster politics seven years ago, suggested that his ease
with the left's traditional enemies had in fact deepened: into an instinctive
feeling that he and they were on the same side.
Rebekah Brooks jokes with Tony Blair, 2004. Photograph:
Fiona Hanson/PA
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With his salesman's smile and large self-belief, his ex-barrister's ability to accept and argue not necessarily compatible things, Blair has always been a slippery and restless public figure. "He's kind of a freewheeler, and always was," says the historian of the Labour party Ross McKibbin. "Being a freewheeler did him well, initially." Yet since Downing Street, Blair's "journey", already often controversial, has taken him into ever more contentious territories.
In 2008, just as bankers were beginning to be seen as the
villains of the world economy, he accepted an advisory post at the American
investment bank JP Morgan. According to the Financial Times in 2012, it
"pays him about £2.5m a year". In 2011, through a consulting firm he
swiftly created after Downing Street, Tony Blair Associates, he began advising
oil-rich, authoritarian Kazakhstan. "Torture remains commonplace"
there, says Amnesty International.
Last month, visiting Egypt, Blair defended the 2013
overthrow of the elected government of Mohamed Morsi: "The fact is, the
Muslim Brotherhood tried to take the country away from its basic values … The
army have intervened, at the will of the people, but in order to take the
country to the next stage of its development, which should be democratic."
Even with those last four, slightly hedged words, Blair's argument eerily
echoed that notoriously made four decades ago by Augusto Pinochet and the
Chilean military, when they overthrew the elected government of Salvador
Allende, an event still notorious in Labour circles: "We justify our
intervention to depose a government which is illegitimate, immoral and
unrepresentative of the overwhelming sentiment of the nation."
Wendi Deng: Blair has repeatedly denied rumours of an affair
with the ex-wife of Rupert Murdoch. Photograph: Louis Lanzano/AP
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Since 2007, during straitened times for most Britons, Blair
has seemed increasingly comfortable being around – and being one of –
"those with money", as he refers to the super-rich in his book with
telling casualness. "Blair mixes with the Buffetts and the Gateses,"
says John Kampfner, author of Blair's Wars, "where it is seen as matter of
no great surprise that you arrive in a private jet. In Blairland, there is a
sense of: 'I have become part of the Davos global elite. But I haven't been
able to earn properly until now.'"
Tony Blair's £4m country home: South Pavilion at Wotton
House in Buckinghamshire. Photograph: John O'Reilly/Rex Features
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Blair hotly disputes this picture of his lifestyle.
"This notion that I want to be a billionaire with a yacht; I don't! I am
never going to be part of the super-rich. I have no interest in that at
all," he told the Financial Times in 2012. But his intricate and often
secretive set of consulting and speech-making businesses – in 2009 a Blair spokesman
declined even to explain the name of one of them, Windrush Ventures, to the Guardian
– have helped build a personal fortune "estimated at £70m", reported
the Daily Telegraph last month. This also includes a provocative amount of
property for a political figure in a crowded country currently going through
one of its periodic home-ownership panics. Since moving out of Downing Street,
Blair's London home has been a capacious cream and dark brick terrace in
Connaught Square, near Hyde Park, with a substantial mews house behind and
armed policemen perpetually guarding both. His country residence, acquired in
2008, is even grander: a Queen Anne mansion in Buckinghamshire called South
Pavilion, with swimming pool and tennis court. His tycoon's tan and leanness
suggest he enjoys both.
The current issue of Vanity Fair magazine quotes an
already-infamous swooning note about him reportedly written by Rupert Murdoch's
ex-wife Wendi Deng: "He has such good body and he has really really good
legs [and] Butt …" Rumours that Blair and Deng had an affair have been
around ever since Murdoch suddenly filed for divorce last summer; Blair has
repeatedly denied it and Deng told Vanity Fair she would not "engage in
public allegations or respond to negative claims". But there is no denying
his personal closeness both to Deng and, until the collapse of her marriage,
Murdoch himself. In 2010, weeks before the general election at which Murdoch's
papers did their best to drive Labour from office, Blair secretly became
godfather to one of Deng and Murdoch's daughters.
"You couldn't make it up," says a former member of
the New Labour inner circle. "Just when you thought Tony's behaviour
couldn't get any more bizarre … His actions would be strange even for the most
dyed-in-the-wool capitalist ex-prime minister, but for a Labour one, I think it
looks terrible. It makes mugs of many of the people who supported him in
office. He's trashed the New Labour brand."
Other Labour ex-premiers have embarrassed the party. Harold
Wilson became a famously disastrous chatshow host; Ramsay MacDonald led a
Tory-dominated coalition and was expelled from the party – Blair has not done
anything so traitorous, so far. Yet McKibbin says that all of them "had a
different attitude to money. Wilson was pretty poor when he died. [Jim]
Callaghan had quite a nice farm, which he retired to." Even the derided
Gordon Brown's near-silence since losing office looks steadily more dignified
with each controversy about Blair's new career.
In fact, it does have some high-minded elements. His website
lists the Tony Blair Faith Foundation ("to promote respect and
understanding about the world's major religions"); the Tony Blair Sports
Foundation ("to increase participation in sport … particularly by those
who are currently socially excluded"); work on "African
governance" and "breaking the climate deadlock"; and his role as
representative of the international quartet, on behalf of the UN, EU, the US
and Russia, to try to find a peaceful settlement between Israel and the
Palestinians.
Blair is not paid for any of these roles, which generally
receive less press attention. He argues that his richly rewarded commercial
work is undertaken mainly to subsidise them. And he says he takes great care to
avoid conflicts of interest: for example, doing no business in Israel or the
Palestinian territories, to avoid damaging his credibility there as the quartet's
representative.
The problem is, his credibility as a sort of freelance
super-diplomat in the Middle East and elsewhere is damaged already. His almost
unqualified support for Israel as prime minister, his crucial backing then for
the invasion of Iraq, his fundamental agreement with the bellicose foreign
policy of George Bush – all this historical baggage follows Blair around.
"It would be hard for him to move into working for more liberal
international institutions," says a former ally, "because he's toxic."
Nor does Blair show much sign of having thought afresh about
the shape of the world since leaving office. Last summer, during the clamour
for Britain to intervene militarily in Syria, he was one of the loudest hawks.
Ed Miliband ignored him. In much of its foreign and domestic policy, Labour is
moving politely but firmly away from Blairism now. Miliband's populist leftwing
attacks on capitalist "predators" contrast with Blair's insistence in
A Journey that during the financial crisis "the 'market' did not fail".
Later in the book he adds: "The danger for Labour [after losing the 2010
election] is that we … move decisively … to the left. If we do, we will lose
even bigger next time."
We will see. But for now the opinion polls suggest that
Blair's warning may look foolish when the votes are counted in 2015. Either
way, many in Labour have stopped listening to the man who led them to three
handsome general election victories, and who was once one of the most popular
figures in British political history. "People I know in the party don't
think about him very much nowadays," McKibbin says.
Blair is only 60. One of his problems is probably that he
left Downing Street too young. Callaghan was 67 when he stopped being prime
minister in 1979. But British political leaders, like bosses in many fields,
have become steadily younger since then. Just like Blair, David Cameron and
possibly Miliband too will have decades to fill after the Downing Street
removal van comes.
Other Blair-watchers see his trajectory differently. "I
don't think what people think of him has ever worried him too much," says
McKibbin. Blair's Connaught Square house is right next to Edgware Road, one of
the centres of Arab London, and of potential outrage, at the very least, at his
Middle East stances. Meanwhile the plush London offices of all his overlapping
enterprises are right across from the US embassy in Grosvenor Square, as if to
taunt critics who claim he is America's poodle.
Last month, Blair was eating with his family and some
friends in a London restaurant when a barman working there, inspired by the
website arrestblair.org, tried to perform a citizen's arrest on him, for
"a crime against peace … namely your decision to launch an unprovoked war
against Iraq". The Daily Mail reported: "Blair attempted to engage in
a debate before one of his sons went to get security."
In private, ex-prime minister Blair may be tormented and
unfulfilled, but in public he remains a smooth performer. Will that be enough?
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