A protestor at the Leveson Enquire
accused Tony Blair of war crimes, he may well have a point, I was one of the
million or so people who marched in protest against going to war in Iraq. But
despite what I think about that one decision I do not vilify Blair as much as
some Labour supporters do. His priorities were in order: Education
reform made a noticeable difference.
Investment in health was also welcomed even if the way the money was raised
has since been called into question. Blair was also electable, which is
important; A Labour government will always better for people from normal
backgrounds than a Tory one. Even a Labour government with what many on the Left
of politics would see as far too neo-liberal will offer more protection to the vulnerable
than this ideologically driven Coalition.
What is more interesting than
either the protest, or the reaction to Blair being back in the spotlight is what the former PM actually said: His strategy was never to take on the
press, Camerons strategy was the same. In stark contrast Ed Miliband and a few labour MPs namely
Tom Watson and Chris Bryant started the rage against the Murdoch Machine. This
is a massive shift. All parties have previously courted the media, now they line up to
criticise the media.
How people vote in a general
election depends on a variety of factors, the media do play a role and the
most popular newspapers remain highly influential. Ed said at the Labour party
Conference ‘I am not Tony Blair’ and was applauded for it. He has shown by his
actions in openly criticising News International that he is not like Tony
Blair, but he must be at least a little like Blair in one vital aspect: By 2015
and in spite of any revenge that is taken by the Sun or other papers in the run
up to the General Election, Ed must be a leader of the Labour Party who has
enough popular support to eject an inept, shambolic Tory led Government from
office, just as Tony did in 1997.
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