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How Blair broke Britain Iraq has overshadowed his litany of domestic failures

Thatcher's greatest legacy. Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Thatcher's greatest legacy. Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg via Getty Images


April 28, 2022   5 mins

Tony Blair is hated up and down the land but not in Islington, and not in Labour HQ. Speaking to the FT last summer, Keir Starmer embraced Blair’s legacy. “We have to be proud of that record in government,” he said, “not be arm’s length or distant about it.” 

To Labour’s Right wing, Blair remains the closest thing to a living saint. The former PM is their yogi, whose “rare interventions” — on Brexit, on Covid lockdowns, on higher education — are holy writ. But for normal people, who do not dream of May 1997 each night, Blair is a scoundrel.

To some extent this is to be expected. Blair governed for a decade. His mistakes were made in the public gaze — a gaze that tired of seeing his grin in the newspaper every day or his studied sandbagging on the evening news. Thus it is somewhat unfair to compare him to Alan Johnson, a Labour figure who is liked not because of any political accomplishments but because, to most, he is an affable TV raconteur. The same applies to Ed Balls and his ongoing rehabilitation via Strictly Come Dancing and Good Morning Britain.

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The hatred Blair inspires is much more reminiscent of Margaret Thatcher, a similarly divisive yet successful politician who remade both party and country. Yet a decade after her death, she sits among the most popular of all Prime Ministers. She retained admirers, even as she was savaged by her enemies, and savaged them in turn. 

Blair was much more ameliorative than Thatcher, or at least he tried to be. Here was a mainstream leader who consciously aimed for the centre of public opinion. What Blair wanted, more than anything, was to be loved. So why is he so widely reviled?

The most common answer is Iraq. Without that war, moderates often argue, Blair would be remembered as a successful national leader. But even if we remove Iraq — the gravest British military blunder since the days of General Gordon — from an assessment of Blair’s legacy, he was a failure. One could argue he is even oddly fortunate that the scale of the debacle both there and in Afghanistan overshadows his domestic record.

Yes, there was Sure Start, and the introduction of a minimum wage (though that one belongs as much to John Smith as Blair). And yes, Blair funded the NHS properly for the first time in decades — though it belies the limits of his tenure that this was wiped out in a few years of Tory austerity.

Today, Blair’s most overwhelming legacy, and the one that affects millions of ordinary people in Britain every day, is housing. In 1997, as Labour won their largest ever parliamentary majority, the average income was £15,000 a year while the average property cost £65,000. By 2007, as Blair left office, average pay had risen to £20,000 — but house prices had surged to an extraordinary £190,000. In other words, relative to wages, and under a Prime Minister who spoke relentlessly of expanding opportunity, the cost of housing had doubled.

Given this, it is unsurprising that Gen X pundits, more socially liberal than boomers but whose cultural zeitgeist was defined by unprecedented property price rises, are the Blairite vanguard across much of the media. As any Marxist will tell you, conditions (often) determine consciousness. For Britain’s Gen X, the New Labour rise in property values — with its attendant sensation of prosperity — still feels like a successful project which merits defence. Yet the flip side to that phoney progress is today’s housing crisis, with home ownership falling from 70.9% in 2003 to 63.9% in 2018, and those between their mid-30s and mid-40s three times more likely to rent today than 20 years ago. The phrase “property-owning democracy”, on which the popular conservatism of the last century rested, is withering on the vine.

For now this remains primarily a problem for younger adults — although the ONS recently warned that the majority of older people will be living in rented accommodation in the future. Those same people burdened with thousands in student debt, another New Labour bequest, are increasingly likely to give up to half their post-tax earnings to a landlord. The Blairs, meanwhile, own a property portfolio worth approximately £35 million. Cherie Blair now oversees not one but two property management companies, including dozens of one-bedroom flats.

The surge in house prices after 1997 was no accident. Buy-to-let mortgages increased 30-fold under Blair while his government built fewer council homes than Margaret Thatcher. And while Blair certainly isn’t the prima causa of today’s housing crisis — the policy of right-to-buy in the Eighties was the catalyst, while supply issues are a major variable — it is remarkable that something as elementary as home ownership was permitted to become a luxury under a Labour government. 

Alongside this abysmal record on housing, New Labour oversaw a historic collapse in British industry. Between 1997 and 2007, output from all manufacturing, value adjusted for inflation, fell by 3% — while a million workers lost their jobs. Despite the post-industrial paeans of New Labour this was not inevitable: over broadly the same period, between 2000 and 2006, manufacturing output rose in the US, Germany and France. Most striking of all, manufacturing as a share of the overall economy fell more under Blair than Thatcher and Major combined.

All this was presented as a cause for celebration. For New Labour, deindustrialisation was a necessity. A small bump on the road to the “knowledge economy” that Britain must become. At the the turn of the century, Blair’s ambition was that Britain would become the best country in the world for “e-commerce”. The land of Newcomen, Watt and Bessemer, transmuted to a nation powered by lattes and online shopping.

Whether Blair had the faintest idea what he was talking about is unclear. This was a man, after all, who didn’t use a mobile phone until 2007 and whose first text message to his fixer Alastair Campbell read: “This is amazing, you can send words on a phone.” So Blair’s evangelism for the digital age wasn’t the result of any acquaintance with the possibilities of the internet. Rather he had found a compelling story to distract from the continued, and indeed intensifying, disintegration of national industry. Conveniently, this same story allowed Blair to present himself as modern and the blue-collar base of his party as backward.

A mixed domestic record is leavened by a series of foreign policy disasters. Blair is synonymous with Iraq and Afghanistan, and always will be. Britain spent £37 billion in Afghanistan, and lost more than 450 military personnel. For what? Two decades later, the Taliban have returned and the country is facing widespread starvation. In Iraq, the most secular country in the Arab world at the turn of the millennium became a hothouse for sectarian militias, then ISIS. Mission accomplished.

In the long-run the New Labour project, and Blair’s stewardship of it, can only be seen as a failure. The broader economic context of the Long Nineties — a goldilocks era of cheap energy, low inflation, and high growth — could not have been more kind to New Labour’s Nero. And yet, as Chinese consumer durables flooded the West, and cheap credit fell from the skies, Blair and Brown praised themselves for abolishing boom and bust. At the very least, New Labour might have built council homes, a national network of high speed rail, and prepared for climate change. They did none of it.

When asked about her greatest achievement Margaret Thatcher replied: “Tony Blair and New Labour.” The real legacy of Blair is that he not only cemented much of the Thatcherite settlement but, worse, made many believe that doing so was somehow progressive. Until that’s recognised for the mistake it was, Britain’s broken economic model, not to mention its housing crisis, will only get worse.


Aaron Bastani is the co-founder of Novara Media, and the author of Fully Automated Luxury Communism. 

AaronBastani

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Jeffrey Chongsathien
JC
Jeffrey Chongsathien
1 year ago

So close but the shameless attempt to disregard mass immigration (East European/Islamic) is glaring, as is ignoring the debt explosion (national/private).

Last edited 1 year ago by Jeffrey Chongsathien
Phil
Phil
1 year ago

And the just as shameless ignoring of the beginnings of our national swing to the left by education policies. ‘Education, education, education’ he said, as he prepared the ground for the left takeover of all education.

Valerie Killick
Valerie Killick
1 year ago
Reply to  Phil

And the result is the creation of non-degree degrees such as Golf Course Management. More graduates but less actual useful education and students with debts they may never pay off. More graduates but less qualified people available for jobs.

Lucas D
L
Lucas D
1 year ago

Not to mention devolution. Half thought through House of Lords reformation and the I’ll conceived Supreme Court and quangos. The man laid a series of timebombs under our constitution and life, to go off in the following decades

Valerie Killick
Valerie Killick
1 year ago

They also knocked down old hospitals and built new ones with FEWER beds. How long is that NHS waiting list again?

Andrew F
Andrew F
1 year ago

Exactly.
Author is total disgrace.
Ignoring Blair wilful mass immigration policy when complaining about housing problem is dishonest.
Then, the same policy resulted in country being flooded by low IQ 3rd World savages and benefit scroungers with predictable results.
Lets not forget his destruction of UK pension system.
What about his moronic goal of university education for 50%?
What about his appeasement of Putin (i saw God in his eyes rubbish).
Then his major sin:
His refusal to have referendum on Lisbon Treaty he promised.
If he granted that we could had left this disgusting, corrupt, undemocratic EU 15 years earlier.

Ian Barton
Ian Barton
1 year ago

I would put immigration and non-assimilation policies as high as any other on the failures list.
Single-faith schools were/are an appalling error.

Last edited 1 year ago by Ian Barton
D Glover
D Glover
1 year ago
Reply to  Ian Barton

Exactly. The article says, correctly, that house prices went up relative to wages. It doesn’t say that under Blair net immigration climbed from 40,000 p.a .to a quarter million. That was the crucial factor.

Peter B
PB
Peter B
1 year ago
Reply to  D Glover

I suspect artifically suppressed interest rates (the cost of debt) were far more influential in creating the house price disaster. Prices always rise whenever costs (interests rates, stamp duty) are lowered.
However, I believe that net immigration is a key reason for the miraculous disappearance of inflation between 1997 and only a few years ago. The influx of cheap labour (not entirely a bad thing, but disastrous for many of the lower paid) is in my view a critical contributor to “solving” the historic UK inflation problem thereby allowing lower interest rates and guaranteeing asset price inflation. It also removed the pressure to increase productivity.
As someone at the centre of this policy, one might argue that Blair’s concurrent housing investments could amount to insider trading.
One day, a book detailing Blair’s time in office and “achievements” will be published. The title will be “Faking It”. Faking economic growth. Faking improvements in educaction. Faking fixing inflation.

D Glover
D Glover
1 year ago
Reply to  Peter B

The last sentence reads

Until that’s recognised for the mistake it was, Britain’s broken economic model, not to mention its housing crisis, will only get worse.

Now, why is there a perpetual housing crisis in this country? It is not that we have fertility above the replacement rate.

Peter B
PB
Peter B
1 year ago
Reply to  D Glover

I suspect the “housing crisis” is far more a “cost of housing” crisis than an actual shortage of bedrooms.
Remember here the effect of increased divorce rates creating smaller households, older parents hogging larger detached properties into retirement and the increased popularity of second homes amongst the much better off.
There are actually a lot of unused and under-used properties in the UK right now – probably at an all time high.
I’m not trying to belittle the problem. I actually view the absurd cost of housing as the biggest single problem facing this country and one we show no signs of facing up to. I’m fortunate to have a nice house. But I despair for the young in this country who face paying off student loans, saving for their own pensions, paying for public sector pensions, paying for pensions for the retired and only then – if there’s anything left – desperately trying to afford housing. It will be impossible without inherited wealth. I’m not much into “fairness”. But this really isn’t right. That’s Blair’s legacy for you – embedded, inherited privilege for families like his (regardless of talent or ability).

Andrew F
AF
Andrew F
1 year ago
Reply to  Peter B

Really?
So basic idea of supply and demand is not relevant?
I remember that all the Remeniacs tried to mobilise 3.6mln of EU citizens allegedly in UK to oppose Brexit.
Eventually we found out that they were 5.9 million of them.
Add another 4 million or more of immigrants from outside Europe.
So suddenly you need housing for 10mln extra people in a fairly small island.
Obviously, all the Remeniacs who claim that all this people coming in have no impact on housing demand, should consider obvious, follow on, question.
If EU is so marvelous, why all this people are coming to UK to get jobs?
They are not willing to ask this question because their whole world view would collapse.

Hugh Bryant
Hugh Bryant
1 year ago
Reply to  Peter B

Good post. When I came to London from university in the late seventies I shared a house with 8 others. That house is now occupied by 2 people. The same thing has happened to every other house in the street.

Andrew F
Andrew F
1 year ago
Reply to  D Glover

We do, but NOT for indigenous population.
People breading are benefit scroungers.
Mostly migrants from 3rd World countries for whom benefits in uk are beyond anything imaginable in shithole they came from.

Ethniciodo Rodenydo
Ethniciodo Rodenydo
1 year ago
Reply to  Peter B

I do not se how bring in hundreds of thousands of people to claim benefits keeps inflation down.
I suspect it had more to to with the importation of consumer goods at remarkably cheap prices and advances in technology and logistics

Peter B
Peter B
1 year ago

It suppresses wages.

patrick macaskie
patrick macaskie
1 year ago
Reply to  Peter B

I agree with Peter B in everything he says. Facilities management, agriculture, hospitality, logistics and NHS are examples of big areas where wages were heavily suppressed. London was packed full of energetic bright people (mainly young) doing much of the low paid work (often living in densely packed accommodation – 4 to a room) and they came from all over the world. they put some marginal pressure on housing but they were not benefits tourists.
They (and the cheap imports) kept the show on the road for a particularly pernicious form of (bi- partisan) economics that started in the Blair era and has probably bankrupted the west. This was our fault not theirs.
If you want talk about benefit tourists and people that pressure housing without putting much in, I would point you to all the empty property owned by foreigners (not just the super rich) who fear the lack of political legitimacy in their own countries. Perversely, it is the interest rate suppression in the West that has created the excess money in emerging markets that flows back into London and destabilises our own polity.
We have created our own version of hell. Vergil and Dante both describe how hard it is to get out again. Money creation (debt) leads to corruption and ever more powerful vested interests. the inflation happens when the social stresses can no longer be resolved by normal political means. in this instance the inflation spent 20 years wreaking havoc in the financial system before it showed its face to the man on the street; mainly because we were able to draw on a vast untapped pool of cheap labour and we lulled ourself into the idea that a world without any slack or strategic contingency was ok. this is the legacy that Blair, Cameron and Clegg will never be able to escape when the history is written. it is no good blaming Mrs T.
There is only one thing that worries me more than the Napoleonic levels of total debt/GDP (>3x) and that is the fact that we, in the West, have been “over- trading” for 20 years, which makes it ever harder to sustain the GDP that is supposed to support all this debt.  Usually it only strong economies that recover from this kind of thing, without terrible political damage and pain. This is not capitalism and yet, the Left and the Right in the political bubble continue to pretend that it is. Getting out with our shirts will require proper diagnosis and unity of purpose.
Sustained monetisation destroys society. When the inflation is concealed, it is like dark matter, only visible in the way it impinges on other things; high house prices and social phenomena like cancel culture and Q-Anon being good examples of this effect.

John
J
John
1 year ago
Reply to  Peter B

Certainly lower interest rates were a boon to price rises – but it was the deregulation of the banks that led to people able to borrow more than the 4 times single salary (or 2.5 times joint salary) and 105% mortgages. Had the regulation stayed it would have helped keep the brakes on.

Valerie Killick
Valerie Killick
1 year ago
Reply to  John

Meanwhile those who saved got nothing in return, so encouraging people to spend rather than save.

Valerie Killick
Valerie Killick
1 year ago
Reply to  D Glover

with no attempt to increase services to handle this massive influx of extra people.

Andrew F
Andrew F
1 year ago
Reply to  Ian Barton

Lets remember hypocrisy of his children going to Oratory School because rubbish schools in Labour run Islington were not good enough for his spawn.

GA Woolley
GA
GA Woolley
1 year ago

Blair did not ‘fund the NHS fairly’, he threw money in its general direction to sweeten the ‘public service’ Unions. He did nothing to reduce demand by promoting personal responsibility for health, and preventive medicine. But the overall effect of his legacy was to store up massive costs in PFI projects, and in pension liabilities, enabling medical staff to retire, very comfortably, very early.

Lindsay S
Lindsay S
1 year ago
Reply to  GA Woolley

Also introduced pointless managers to soak up that extra funding.

Not just within the NHS too, I remember the EU provided money to my local (home town)council to replace the ironworks that had been ripped from peoples garden walls and their gates during the Second World War to be turned into munitions. By the time the committee to oversee the spending had been set up and their wages and offices had been paid for from the money, the only funding left covered gates. Which were pretty pointless as you could still step over the wall!

I never liked Blair, I always found him shifty and my gut said not to trust his face.

Last edited 1 year ago by Lindsay S
Valerie Killick
Valerie Killick
1 year ago
Reply to  Lindsay S

Yes, they created jobs such as the eco rating you need to get when you sell a property. A guy comes round with a clipboard and gives you a piece of paper. No one is interested in what it says and no one didn’t buy a house because of the rating. A useless piece of bureaucracy.

Valerie Killick
Valerie Killick
1 year ago
Reply to  GA Woolley

I seem to remember he gave doctors a much better deal – they couldn’t believe their luck. Shorter hours, no weekends or nights to work and increased pay.

Andrew F
Andrew F
1 year ago

Great post.
But it was about GPs deal.
I remember being on skiing holiday when it happened.
I worked in IT and I was talking to couple of hospital consultants.
We both agreed that people who are 2nd line in both IT and medicine don’t deserve the same money as 3rd line.
That what GPs are.
In my particular area of London these parasites locked down their practices and stopped answering calls during, so called “covid pandemic”.
While still claiming 100% money from taxpayers for services they didn’t provide.

N Forster
N Forster
1 year ago

Please tell us more Aaron. Please tell us about the Labour open door immigration policy. How did that work out for Labour and the British public? Did that have an effect on the housing market? Wages? Social cohesion?
And could you explain supply and demand whilst you’re on?
Interesting to see Unherd letting Aaron write a piece for the site. It’s nice to be reminded of why so many of us who used to be on the left have come to be so appalled by it.

Andrew F
Andrew F
1 year ago
Reply to  N Forster

To be fair, allowing dishonest stuff like this on this website is the reason I am subscribing.
The same for pro Russia stooges.
It is always helpful to know what enemy is thinking.

Last edited 1 year ago by Andrew F
Deborah B
Deborah B
1 year ago

It’s almost impossible to document the failures of Tony Blair and his government because his foolish and self-aggrandizing ideas have permeated every part of society. We are still paying the price now.
Think doctors contracts and pay. When you earn so much you don’t have to work full time or can easily retire early it’s no wonder there is a GP shortage. Think university fees and targets for % of young people attending university. The idea you need a degree and must pauperize yourself to do it is now part of the belief system of education. Think raiding pension funds. Dereliction of duty on energy supply because power stations should have been planned when he was in power. I recall going to Hinckley Point public enquiry when I was recently married, some thirty two years ago (husband was in the industry so it was a highlight of my honeymoon).
Think stuffing every part of public life with his cronies. No wonder our institutions are still embracing bonkers leftieism.
I’m running out of enthusiasm here, but a little known act of Gordon Brown as Chancellor was to trim an assisted housing allowance paid with benefits to help fund wardens. He did this to save a bit of cash. The effect was that many housing associations that ran excellent housing for older people or disadvantaged groups (including youngsters with many problems who would otherwise be homeless) could no longer pay full time wardens and support staff. The allowance was designed to fund these staff. The net result was housing associations withdrew the service but many left this sector altogether. Successful housing projects were closed down. All to save a few quid.
So my final criticism is that Blair, Brown et al. were miserable failures because they didn’t think through the consequences of their actions. Stupid people that couldn’t think further ahead than their next press release (mostly lies anyway).
So I’m keeping my Blair- loathing fires well stoked in case the duplicitous old **** ever gets his comeuppance.

Valerie Killick
Valerie Killick
1 year ago
Reply to  Deborah B

Brilliant! I think all their efforts were aimed at staying in power forever by any means available, rather than what was beneficial for the country.

Peter Scott
Peter Scott
1 year ago

This is but one-tenth of it. Blair was a total Vandal.
He wrecked our constitution. He got rid of a revising House of Lords which behaved rather maturely and leaned on true experts for advice in individual instances; and stuffed it with cronies and party hacks. With his creation of a Supreme Court, he effectually ensured that henceforth – in the last analysis – government activity is not adjudicated by the public via democracy, but by 12 judges. They can decide that any government act or legislation is valid or not as they wish. No black swan rare eventuality: already those judges junked the Queen’s right to prorogue Parliament (autumn 2019). It only meant, after months and months of deliberation, the House of Commons being shorn of two or three more days’ debate; but the precedent has been set.
He destroyed our culture, by opening the doors to mass immigration: 12 million foreigners in a mere 25 years to date: an influx, proportionally to the previous census tally, which no country can assimilate.
He destroyed our economy, by turning the Credit Taps full on. We have yet to pay the bill – chronic poverty for almost everyone – when the frail bridge of straw finally collapses under our various national debts (government, banks, private persons’ debt).
And he wrecked the Middle East, as this author rightly states, because we know – from the example of Syria in 2011 – that had Blair refused to sign up to the dodgy dossier and the plans for Allied invasion of Iraq, the US would not have been willing (or perhaps able) to sell it to other allies as a policy.
Cameron wanted to go into Syria; this time the House of Commons jibbed; and that was the end of the US, as well as British, attempt to get involved there.
As with Barack Obama or Joe Biden, one asks oneself, ‘If this man had been hired to ruin his country, or was secretly a thorough-going Satanist, what would he have done differently?’

Susan Lundie
Susan Lundie
1 year ago
Reply to  Peter Scott

Thank you, I have no need to expand my post. I think you’ve covered the necessary points.
I will just add that I distinctly recall comforting myself on the morning after his first election with the thought that a man who so resembled a slick Brylcreemed used car salesman would be unlikely to cause the nation much grief in the space of four years. I’m not usually quite so wide of the mark.

Andrew F
Andrew F
1 year ago
Reply to  Peter Scott

Great post.
My only quibble is about Iraq war.
USA got involved in Vietnam with Wilson refusing to support it.
Why would it had been any different with Iraq?

Prashant Kotak
Prashant Kotak
1 year ago

I am a free speech absolutist, so I for one, welcome our new socialistical contributor to the pages of UnHerd, where he may have a proper platform to voice whatever nonsense he chooses and it be judged according to the merits of his arguments, because after all no one can claim anyone ever treats anything ever said on Novara with anything other than derisive laughter.

But there is a way for UnHerd to top AB contributing a piece to this series on the legacy of Tony Blair – how about getting the big guy himself to contribute a concluding article, where he assesses his own legacy and judges how vital it was to the well being of humanity? I’m sure he would welcome the fee, assuming it won’t bankrupt UnHerd.

Last edited 1 year ago by Prashant Kotak
Victoria Cooper
VC
Victoria Cooper
1 year ago

Blair’s overwhelming legacy was not housing. It was immigration. But that of course led to a housing crisis.

Valerie Killick
VK
Valerie Killick
1 year ago

Not to mention other services such as education, the NHS, prisons and social care. All failing under pressure from over population.

Will James
Will James
1 year ago

Some fair points in both the article and comments, however neither mention the calamitous “sofa government” style, and the elevation of style over substance. Cool Britannia was a presentational triumph over an almost complete absence of substance.
Also, the increased NHS funding referred to did not significantly improve patient outcomes – I was working in the NHS at the time and remember the disasters that were the National Programme to IT that wasted over £12billion delivering nothing constructive, the 2006 new GP contract giving them a 20% pay rise for abandoning out-of-hours coverage (a GP commented to me at the time that he could not understand how incompetent the Blair administration negotiators were), the explosion in back office pen pushers on ridiculous salaries whose sole reason for existence was to feed the DoH target machine. Blair and his henchman Brown were also responsible for a dramatic expansion in staff numbers across the public sector, creating a whole raft of future problems of woeful productivity, insane levels of future pension liabilities when private sector pensions were being destroyed (remember Brown’s raid on pension funds in the early years of the Blair reign?).
Not to mention his disastrous Lords reforms – prior to his intervention the Lord’s did usually provide a reasonable pretence of a relatively impartial revision chamber.
Overall, in 60 years of following politics – from the first Wilson government in the 1960s onwards, through the disaster that was Heath – I can honestly say that Blair was my least liked PM. He will be closely challenged though by the venal and incompetent idiots that we are now saddled with in Parliament.

Tom Watson
Tom Watson
1 year ago

Hadn’t expected to agree with Aaron Bastani when I woke up this morning, bloody hell.

Prashant Kotak
PK
Prashant Kotak
1 year ago
Reply to  Tom Watson

My condolences on your condition. UnHerd have set up a helpline for just such a contingency, and therapies are available on request

Peter B
Peter B
1 year ago
Reply to  Tom Watson

And that is the wonderful unpredictability of UnHerd and why it’s worth subscribing. And why I struggle to watch the BBC or read The Times – what really is the point if you know in advance eactly what they will say.

Jean Nutley
Jean Nutley
1 year ago

I am quite sure the following will get down voted, but please can anyone explain this borderline obsession with Blair now?
I disliked him thoroughly when in office, I considered him false, self serving, and smug. Nothing has happened since to change my mind. Obsequious little creep.
I pray it isn’t the Blairs testing the waters for a comeback, but I could quite understand why Blair feels the time may be right to do so. If it ain’t that, then why all the fuss about yesterday’s man and wife?

Valerie Killick
VK
Valerie Killick
1 year ago
Reply to  Jean Nutley

He may be yesterday’s man but we are still suffering from his destructive period in power.

William Shaw
William Shaw
1 year ago

He’s a war criminal who all but wrecked the UK through devolution and opened Britain to uncontrolled immigration.

Last edited 1 year ago by William Shaw
ARNAUD ALMARIC
AA
ARNAUD ALMARIC
1 year ago

As Virgil put it so wonderfully “ Facilis descensus Averno” -‘ the descent to Hell is simple’.*
So Mr Blair has proved, has he not?

(*Aeneid.)

Last edited 1 year ago by ARNAUD ALMARIC
opn
opn
1 year ago
Reply to  ARNAUD ALMARIC

Sed revocare pedes, superasque evadere ad auras Hic labor, hoc opus est

John
John
1 year ago

Whilst he did ensure the NHS received more money, most of it went on an increasing number of middle management jobs rather than improving outcomes. Partly because the money was given without any requirement of targets.
So sadly, it didn’t improve it so much as improve the income of middle class managers.

frank teague
frank teague
1 year ago
Reply to  John

As a nurse ) during that period and currently) funding DID go on targeted projects .It was not just to middle management .It helped set up a team I still work for and was based on research and need.Labour improved many aspects of NHS albeit reversed or reduced almost immediately when Conservatives got back into power.

Andrew F
Andrew F
1 year ago
Reply to  frank teague

So, since you claim to work in disfunctional NHS, can you tell me why in Polish provincial city (population 200k) there are 5 medical centers (maybe more) where you can get various tests (liver function, cholesterol, etc, etc) going to about 4 pages of results for about 30 quid?
Then I have to embarrass my London NHS practice to do any NHS tests based on that?
NHS is a disgrace for one of the biggest economies in the West.
I know quite a few people from France, Germany and Scandinavia who experienced NHS.
Their view of?
It is total sh**e.

Andrew F
Andrew F
1 year ago
Reply to  Andrew F

I forgot to add:
Keep Corbyn red banner flying.

Tony Taylor
TT
Tony Taylor
1 year ago

There was an article on Unherd recently which mentioned Australia, under Hawke & Keating from the early 80s, was the first country to embrace third way policies. The length and nature of Hawke’s government was reasonably similar to Blair’s – about 10 years, deregulation, decrease in manufacturing, privatisation, Labor’s Right capturing the middle ground, following the Yanks into Kuwait, etc. – and yet Hawke was still broadly popular up until his death in 2019, which is in stark contrast to Blair, who is almost completely on the nose in the UK. I’m not actually sure why Hawke’s Labor Right government is largely celebrated, whereas Blair’s New Labour is hated. There’s got to be more to it than the missing “u” in Labor.

John Leigh
John Leigh
1 year ago
Reply to  Tony Taylor

Lying to the British public about WMD in Iraq and taking the country to war on the basis of that lie……that’s the quintessential difference.

Tony Taylor
Tony Taylor
1 year ago
Reply to  John Leigh

Surely there’s more to it than that. We expect politicians to lie, and even a whopper is often countered by the hip pocket nerve.

Russell Hamilton
Russell Hamilton
1 year ago
Reply to  Tony Taylor

Blair did indeed learn a lot from the Hawke government in Australia. Hawke remained popular for a number of reasons – the previous conservative government had come to power via dubious means and then presided over a miserable time when we had ‘stagflation’ and bitter enmity between the government and the unions. Hawke stitched up an “Accord” with the unions which involved the government providing decent benefits in exchange for wage increases – industrial peace, compared to pre- and post- Hawke. For example he reinstated the national health scheme that the previous conservative government had taken the axe to. So, although he moved Labor to being a neoliberal party he was better at providing services to the working class than Reagan or Thatcher – we knew we were getting a milder version of neoliberalism than the UK and USA were suffering! Even people who didn’t like Hawke could admire his intelligence, negotiating skills and competence.

Chris Bradshaw
Chris Bradshaw
1 year ago

And the fact he could scull a schooner with the best of them.

Al M
Al M
1 year ago
Reply to  Chris Bradshaw

That fact was celebrated on a board in the beer garden of The Turf Tavern in Oxford. Not sure if it’s still there, but it always cheered me up. It also used to put me in mind of that cringey photo-op where Chirac scooped down a good third of a pint of Kroney, while Blair looked like someone had p!$$€d in his mouth after gingerly sipping his bitter.

Last edited 1 year ago by Al M
Russell Hamilton
Russell Hamilton
1 year ago
Reply to  Al M

He drank an awful lot … until he went into Parliament, then he didn’t drink alcohol again until after he left Parliament. Seems kind of adult compared to today’s politicians – he took a serious job seriously.

ARNAUD ALMARIC
ARNAUD ALMARIC
1 year ago
Reply to  Tony Taylor

‘We’ never forgave Anthony Eden, despite the fact he was ‘made’ an Earl.*

(*In fact he demanded it from Macmillan.)

JR Stoker
JR Stoker
1 year ago
Reply to  Tony Taylor

And Blair was very misled by the intelligence community who were convinced such weapons were there

ARNAUD ALMARIC
AA
ARNAUD ALMARIC
1 year ago
Reply to  JR Stoker

Really? I think you will find that ‘Kosher Nostra’ had a lot to do with it.

Valerie Killick
Valerie Killick
1 year ago
Reply to  JR Stoker

Nonsense! Bliar wanted the intelligence to support his plans and would accept nothing less. The intelligence was concocted to show Sadam had ‘weapons of mass destruction’ ready to go in 40 mins – Bliar banged on about it so much at the time we knew it was a lie. Campbell brought out ‘evidence’ which turned out to be some students essay found on the internet. Bliar told Bush we would support him in his wish to bomb Iraq before any ‘evidence’ of weapons was produced.

Steve Elliott
SE
Steve Elliott
1 year ago

Yes and wasn’t that the reason behind the apparent suicide of David Kelly.

Francis MacGabhann
Francis MacGabhann
1 year ago
Reply to  Tony Taylor

I suspect it’s got a lot to do with the fact that Australians aren’t just descended from the convicts, they’re descended from the guards. The stereotype of the cheeky Australian larrikin was always a complete fiction, and the fact that Daniel Andrews was let get away with what he got away with serves to show that Australians don’t really care who’s in charge so long as that person makes it clear what’s expected of them and doesn’t try to take away their Fosters. Left or right makes no difference.

Billy Bob
Billy Bob
1 year ago

They don’t drink Fosters in Australia my friend. Your opinion of the Convicts is based on nothing at all I’m guessing?

Christopher Barclay
Christopher Barclay
1 year ago

Blair is popular in Islington because Islington is populated with people who unlike most of us benefitted from Blair and Brown: investment bankers, quangocrats, academics, the non-working class and immigrants. The link between the disregard for manufacturing and gender is also rarely mentioned. Manufacturing, especially heavy industry, is seen as a male domain and Labour’s women have not been sad to see it go to China.

frank teague
FT
frank teague
1 year ago

NHS funding, Sure start,tax credits,DLA for children over 3 etc.I think they applied outside Islington.

Campbell P
CP
Campbell P
1 year ago

Blair even managed to convince himself that his messianic liberal globalism – western-style democracy for all – was compatible with US economic imperialism – MacDonalds in every Sooq and Kasbah, which, when offered a place at the highly profitable ‘high table’ of the Western elite by GW Bush, allowed him to support the invasion of Iraq. Surely one of the most hypocritical charlatans and conmen of all time.

David Lye
David Lye
1 year ago

Hurrah! An article that highlights Blair (and Brown’s) complete indifference to industry.

ARNAUD ALMARIC
ARNAUD ALMARIC
1 year ago

Why have all the comments on THE GOOD FRIDAY AGREEMENT been CENSORED?
15.45 BST.

ARNAUD ALMARIC
ARNAUD ALMARIC
1 year ago
Reply to  ARNAUD ALMARIC

Now restored, “Heaven be praised!”

16.16 BST.

Linda Hutchinson
LH
Linda Hutchinson
1 year ago

Why are my comments all disappearing? I realise that they are not the most insightful comments on here, but they are not insulting or crude and I do pay, so I feel that, if they are being taken down. I should know what “crime” I’m inadvertently commiting so that I can avoid doing it again.

Kieran Saxon
KS
Kieran Saxon
1 year ago

Is it ‘get the Blairs’ season at Unherd? Cluster of articles out of nowhere. Have I missed something, is he thinking of making a comeback.

ARNAUD ALMARIC
ARNAUD ALMARIC
1 year ago
Reply to  Kieran Saxon

He was recently made a Knight of the Garter! Next stop beatification/sainthood.

Matthew Hibbert
Matthew Hibbert
1 year ago
Reply to  Kieran Saxon

25th anniversary of his election on May 3rd

Hugh Bryant
HB
Hugh Bryant
1 year ago

Blair’s great genius was in realising that he could make the Labour Party fashionable among the professional middle classes so long as the rhetoric did not in any way reflect the reality – so even modest property owners became millionaires while wages were squeezed and rents inflated and the health and education services destroyed by the greed and fecklessness of their Labour voting professionals and the Ponzi economics of money printing and mass immigration.

Blair did more to damage this country than the Luftwaffe – at least flattened cities can be rebuilt.

Hugh Bryant
Hugh Bryant
1 year ago

Blair’s great genius was in realising that he could make the Labour Party fashionable among the professional middle classes so long as the rhetoric did not in any way reflect the reality – so even modest property owners became millionaires while wages were squeezed and rents inflated and the health and education services destroyed by the greed and fecklessness of their Labour voting professionals and the Ponzi economics of money printing and mass immigration.

Blair did more to damage this country than the Luftwaffe – at least flattened cities can be rebuilt.

ARNAUD ALMARIC
AA
ARNAUD ALMARIC
1 year ago

What happened to my comment from Diogenes of Sinope may I ask?

George Sheerin
GS
George Sheerin
1 year ago

All very fine and erudite, but who can forget his skills and dominance at the Despatch Box, notably when he refused to be distracted by Anne Widdecombe’s” Basic Instinct ” leg maneuvers in her exceedingly short skirts! A man always ahead of the game!

Michael James
Michael James
1 year ago

Blair at least aspired to reform the NHS and the welfare state, but was frustrated by Brown and the public-sector unions. Since then neither the Conservatives nor anyone else have revisited that reform agenda or have even heard of it.

Last edited 1 year ago by Michael James
Chris Whybrow
Chris Whybrow
1 year ago

I don’t want to defend Blair or his foreign policies but Iraq is now relatively stable and ISIS has been decisively defeated for several years now. A lot of analysts talk about the country like it is still stuck in the 2000’s and 2010’s and that isn’t the case.

Last edited 1 year ago by Chris Whybrow
ARNAUD ALMARIC
AA
ARNAUD ALMARIC
1 year ago
Reply to  Chris Whybrow

And “cheap at the price”, only 5000,OOO dead apparently.

Martin Hadek
Martin Hadek
1 year ago

Who in their right mind could question New Labour’s record in healthcare, education and access to housing is beyond me. Yes Blair, absolutely and knowingly bungled Iraq because he was unlucky to have Bush and 9/11 happen during his tenure and because he knew that the ‘special relationship’ was worth more than his own career and legacy. He knew full well that it was going to be his end. But Labour voters never had it as good as under him. After a decade of Tory rule the author would just lazily extrapolate yesteryear Blairite period to use it as a basis to pin the current income stagnation v house prices crisis on Blair? Is this for real? Where was he all this time – under a rock? What a piece of superficial shooting-your-own-foot misguided narrowmindedness this article is. Good on Starmer to keep the ghost alive.

ARNAUD ALMARIC
AA
ARNAUD ALMARIC
1 year ago
Reply to  Martin Hadek

In all fairness Blair only got the ‘War’ vote through Parliament thanks to the overwhelming support on the Gung-Ho Tory Party.
To their eternal shame, every Tory MP bar two voted for the War!*

(* A further six skived off with excuses like “had to attend the Verruca Clinic etc.)

Chris Bredge
Chris Bredge
1 year ago
Reply to  ARNAUD ALMARIC

Yes, but they were not privy to the knowledge that the 45 minute claim re WMD was sexed up.

Will James
Will James
1 year ago
Reply to  Martin Hadek

Actually, there are very good reasons to question Blair’s record on the NHS. Yes he increased funding, but that was swallowed up by swelling the ranks of the back office pen pushers on grossly inflated pay. Actual front line services were not improved by that extra funding and in the case of GP services significantly harmed.

Valerie Killick
Valerie Killick
1 year ago
Reply to  Will James

GPs under Bliar got much better pay for working far fewer hours, They couldn’t believe their luck!

Andrew F
Andrew F
1 year ago
Reply to  Martin Hadek

Yes his great achievement is access to housing.
For ever increasing number of benefit scroungers immigrants but not native population.

Adam Bartlett
AB
Adam Bartlett
1 year ago

Terrific to see Aaron Bastani joining unherd! Look forward to agreeing with future articles as I think we share similar economic views. At least in the eyes of someone with a good grasp of the overall domestic outcomes for 97-2010 , this article near totally fails to dim Blair’s legacy. But in fairness, AB did set themselves a near impossible task.
 
For a wider & more objective look at Blairs domestic achievements, the best source is the 2013 study from LSE’s Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion. Labour’s achievements under Blair were breath-taking across a wide range of socio-economic measures. Substantial decreases in child poverty, old age poverty, great reductions in various types of inequality, all sorts of localised regeneration in terms of improvements to social housing, neighbourhood management and policing, nurseries, health centres, parks, playgrounds, schools etc etc. And contrary to Tory nonsense, the national debt position (until the crisis) was lower than it had been when we took over in 97. (In fairness, conservatives are correct that Major & Clarke had left the economy in good shape.)
 
Even internationally, Blair’s legacy is much brighter than AB seems to assume. While it obviously would have been better to leave Iraq alone, that wasn’t in TB’s gift to control. Bush was set on invading regardless of what RoW did. At least by partnering up, TB has a chance to exert some moderating influence, and not risk GWB going berserk. And TB was involved in much more international action than Iraq. To pick out one out of his dozen or so major international achievements, there’s laying the groundwork for a global wealth tax, including international rules for the tracking of beneficial ownership. Something fundamental to most sorts of transformational socialism. Even your man Richard Murphy doesnt deny we owe TB for that.
 
While AB’s not wrong on housing & deindustrialisation, there was considerable momentum behind those trends thanks to the Tories, as he seems to admit. A more hard hitting criticism of TB would have been the partial erosion of value led public service ethos in favour of micro management type control driven by metrics & KPIs, as that could have been easily avoided. Still, even the very best leaders are going to make a few mistakes. Tony Blair may be the sort of talent the world only sees once every few generations, but he’s still human.

Peter B
PB
Peter B
1 year ago
Reply to  Adam Bartlett

Unfortunately, Blair is “the sort of talent” that’s far too common.
He also seems to think himself rather more than human.
Let’s just remember that Blair’s last few months in office were about his last, desparate attempts to establish “his legacy”. That tells you everything you need to know about how much good he really achieved. If that much PR spin and polish is needed, there isn’t that much real beneath the wrapping.

ARNAUD ALMARIC
ARNAUD ALMARIC
1 year ago
Reply to  Peter B

As Diogenes of Sinope said long ago: “You can’t polish a t**d”.

Andrew F
Andrew F
1 year ago
Reply to  ARNAUD ALMARIC

My former IT manager said the same about badly written software.
Being good Essex boy, he probably never herd of Diogenes

Jimmy Snuka
JS
Jimmy Snuka
1 year ago

Blair was far from perfect, but lord, I’d take his Labour government over the current shower of s**t any day of the week.

Ray Hall
Ray Hall
1 year ago
Reply to  Jimmy Snuka

I take the opposite view . The most inaccurate words in the article were the ones at the start of the third paragraph from the end ” A mixed domestic record……” I see his domestic record as poor . Factors which a less kind author could have mentioned include turning the good state of public finances from the Major government into our present permanent deficit ;- the immigration policy has already been commented on-, devolution for another ,but the worst thing for me is the way that he devalued political discourse at home and abroad by misleading the country over Iraq and Afghanistan .
What did Blair do that was of any lasting good ?

Russell Hamilton
Russell Hamilton
1 year ago
Reply to  Ray Hall

Good Friday Agreement?

ARNAUD ALMARIC
AA
ARNAUD ALMARIC
1 year ago

And subsequently the recent vexatious prosecution of 80 year old, former Regimental Corporal Major Derek Hutchins, (Life Guards.) for an incident that occurred in Northern Ireland in 1974. On two previous occasions it had been judged that ‘ there was no case to answer’.

However thanks to Blair & Good Friday, the wretched Lord Chief Justice of NI and the NI Crown Prosecution Service, wanted yet another ‘throw of the dice’.

Thus was an octogenarian old soldier, dragged from Devon to Belfast, against all medical advice.
The result? Surprise surprise, he contracted and died of COVID-19 in the Mater Hospital, Belfast.

Oh what joy and rejoicing there must have been in the office of the Lord Chief Justice, the Crown Prosecution Service, and every Irish Pub and Bar across the Globe!

Even Kipling would not have believed that a thing such as this could actually happen.

Russell Hamilton
Russell Hamilton
1 year ago
Reply to  ARNAUD ALMARIC

So it would have been better if there had been no agreement? Do you remember what it was like before the agreement? I commented earlier that I was visiting London in 1973 – I also went to Ireland, but not where my family came from in Northern Ireland because it was just too dangerous to go there.

ARNAUD ALMARIC
ARNAUD ALMARIC
1 year ago

Yes I well remember “what is was like”, and spent many happy months there.

However the GFA* should have been backdated to 1971, when the killing started in earnest, and not, repeat not 1976.
Just to refresh your memory, Security Force Deaths were as follows:-
1971: 60
1972: 149
1973: 82
1974: 72
1975: 35
1976: 62
After that the average was about 35 pa, with the exception of 1979: 76 and 1982: 59.

Finally if think the GFA has brought peace you are sadly mistaken. It is merely an Armistice, that is massively subsidised by the English Taxpayer to the tune of about £9 Bn a year.
Even now the state education system is executed on religious lines.

In short the entire Province is disgrace and ought to be jettisoned from the UK with the utmost possible speed.

Incidentally, and just out of curiosity, which part of NI were you unable to visit in 1973, may I ask?

(* Good Friday Agreement.)

Claire D
Claire D
1 year ago

Well he finished off what was begun by Thatcher and much work under Major. It would have been an absolute disgrace if he had’nt managed to do the end part.

Russell Hamilton
Russell Hamilton
1 year ago
Reply to  Claire D

Did Thatcher start the National Minimum Wage?

Claire D
Claire D
1 year ago

I was replying to your question, “Good Friday Agreement ?”

Will James
Will James
1 year ago

As I recall the groundwork for this was done under the Major administration, Blair just came along to get the photo opportunities.

ARNAUD ALMARIC
AA
ARNAUD ALMARIC
1 year ago
Reply to  Ray Hall

Destroyed the United Kingdom for starters.

Valerie Killick
Valerie Killick
1 year ago
Reply to  Jimmy Snuka

Bliar didn’t have Brexit, Covid and Ukraine to deal with.