Monday 6 February 2012

Taking A Pounding

Paul Abbott writes:

I was not old enough to vote in 1997, but - like millions of others - it would have been hard not to vote for Tony Blair.

Whatever the rights and wrongs of his premiership, in 1997 he was the candidate for law and order and for small businesses. He got aspiration, and why people wanted choice in the public sector. He was pro-America and pro-democracy abroad - as his interventions in Kosovo and Sierra Leone bore out.

His appeal, in a nutshell, was to be a Conservative with a heart. Of course, he happened to be in the wrong political party. But no one is perfect.

As his legacy is now disastrously unpicked by Ed Miliband, and Ed Balls, a number of Blairites are jumping ship.

There are a few high-profile examples (http://statementtofollow.com/), but beneath the radar there will be far more. This is unsurprising. They signed up to a principled cause, not to a party label. Ed Miliband - who pockets around £10,000 a month in salary - has declared war on “top earners” without any sense of irony. Blair is getting booed at Labour party conference. Why stay put?

The Party Co-Chairman, Lord Feldman, is running a serious membership drive at the national and local level. I believe we should help him along, and offer Blairites the chance to join the Conservative party for £1.

1 comment:

  1. I could not understand why anyone ever voted for Tony Blair. The man was so obviously a fraud and a political opportunist. He was never the candidate for anyone but himself. Just after he was first elected in 1997 I was asked my opinion of him by a Chilean friend who had studied at Oxford. I said that he was like a Christmas box that was beautifully wrapped and the recipient was delighted; only to find on opening that the box was empty. I was amazed that he was elected for a second term, and absolutely astounded that the electorate gave him a third term. it just goes to show that a cheesy grin can work wonders. In today's world of glitzy TV and media savvy political 'personalities', Clement Atlee would never have had a look in. I long for the day when the electorate chooses brains over beauty, and integrity over self-serving interests.

    One final point. Paul Abbot said: "As his legacy is now disastrously unpicked by Ed Miliband, and Ed Balls, a number of Blairites are jumping ship." Does he not mean "..his disastrous legacy is now unpicked.."?

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