I have always had it in the back of my mind that W. was really Tony's lap poodle. That thought is anathema to the Europeans of course. But I think Tony is much more clever than they think. That is not a compliment, only an observation.
Blair for President
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Like his mentor Bill Clinton, tony Blair is poised to become the comeback kid of his generation. Europe's chattering class is currently buzzing with speculation that the former British prime minister is about to emerge from semiretirement to become president of the European Union Council. The new post, created by the Lisbon Treaty, will preside over meetings of Europe's elected leaders, where all the EU's real decisions get made. Assuming the treaty gets ratified—Czech President Václav Klaus is the last holdout—Europe's 27 prime ministers, presidents, and chancellors will soon have to pick a person to speak in their name. And the odds favor Blair.
This is not a traditional contest for a big international job. Everyone knows Blair's qualities and faults. But almost everyone also recognizes that he can put Europe on the world map in a way that no Brussels Eurocrat has ever managed.
That doesn't guarantee his chances, however. Blair insists he's not formally a candidate for a post that, after all, doesn't even exist yet (it's waiting for the Lisbon Treaty to come into force). But EU leaders are planning a mid-November conclave to select someone nonetheless, and also to fill the new post of EU foreign minister (or high representative, as the job will be called in EU jargon). Plenty of horse trading will ensue. But if Europe chooses a bland, barely known former national leader for its first true president, the continent and the rest of the world will roll over in boredom and promptly ignore him or her. Thus Gordon Brown (privately) and Silvio Berlusconi (publicly) are vigorously pushing Blair forward, even as a furious anti-Blair campaign has gotten underway.
A Stop Blair Web site has already collected 38,000 signatures, and Britain's Tories are leading the charge to block him. This Conservative opposition is somewhat surprising, for when Blair's name was first floated this summer, party leader David Cameron let it be known he was comfortable with the prospect. Blair is a fierce defender of London's battered financial sector and a strong defender of the Atlantic alliance—two causes dear to the Conservatives' hearts. So Tory Tony should present no problems for a putative Prime Minister Cameron. Like-minded European leaders, such as the center-right Nicolas Sarkozy and Angela Merkel, also support him. The problem seems to be with Cameron's No. 2, William Hague, who leads the popular anti-EU faction in the Conservative Party and has spent recent weeks denouncing the prospect of a President Blair. Hague fears his selection would mean the continuation of Labourism by other means. Hague even convened a meeting of EU ambassadors in London recently to lecture them on why Blair shouldn't be supported.
Hague isn't alone in his animosity: Blair's right-wing, Europhobic opposition has found strange bedfellows on Europe's anti-American left, which cannot forgive him for being one of the architects of the Iraq War. Europe's socialists also resent him for winning three elections by explicitly rejecting Old Labour's socialist statist shibboleths—principles to which many other left-wing parties remain loyal.
Rounding out the anti-Tony coalition are old European grandees like former French president Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, who craves the post for himself, and Romano Prodi, Italy's ex–prime minister and ex-president of the EU Commission. These two have begun huffing and puffing that Blair shouldn't be allowed to be president because Britain doesn't even use the euro or participate in the Schengen zone, which allows EU citizens to drive across frontiers without passport checks.
They have a point; Britain has long stood somewhat apart. But Blair also did the EU a favor by never holding a referendum on the euro in the United Kingdom, for, as in Sweden, that vote would have resulted in a resounding no, and such outcomes have set back the cause of European integration in the past. Though it's true that Britain does perform modest checks on EU citizens at its airports, once inside the country they actually find it much easier to get jobs, rent homes, and enjoy the free National Health Service than is the case in most other EU states. So Blair's European credentials are solid. If he seemed to spurn the Union in trivial ways, it's worth pointing out that Britain under him was the second-biggest net contributor to the EU budget—no small matter.
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