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 Blair shows off the rugged good looks that made him the people's PM After having to live with conservative prime ministers for
nearly 30 years, British liberals are hoping Tony Blair's retirement
will give their nation its first left-wing government in decades and a
return to the glory days of Harold Wilson. "We're all holding our
breath," said Labour voter Eric Cudlipp.
"Maybe now we'll see some power returned to trade unions, welfare
reform and a government that isn't in lockstep with Republican
warmongers."
Other voters on the progressive side of politics are more cautious, remembering the brief
resurgence of hope they experienced in 1997, when the Conservative Party was
voted out of office. "At first, Blair looked like one of us, with introducing the minimum wage and providing extra benefits to pensioners," one unionist said. "But then he started privatising and slashing everything and slashing welfare, and we realised that 'New Labour' was basically the same as 'Old Tory'."
"I am very proud of the legacy I will leave behind," said
Blair. "Future generations will remember me not only as the man who coined the
phrase ‘people's princess' and introduced unprecedented levels of civilian
surveillance, but also as the only British prime minister to appear on The
Simpsons."
Blair's term continued the policy trends of political peers Thatcher
and Major, as well as maintaining a steady stream of government-rocking bedroom
scandals. From the erosion of civil liberties and welfare cuts to affairs with
secretaries and sexed-up reports on Saddam Hussein's ownership of WMDs, his New
Labour has been a bastion of efficient, rational right-wing government.
Former opposition leader Iain Duncan Smith has paid tribute
to the outgoing leader: "We couldn't touch him. Every time we brought out a
policy, he'd go one better. We said we'd restore Britain
to her days of empire-building glory, he invaded Iraq."
Blair's anointed successor Gordon Brown is looking forward
to taking office, and also to leaving it shortly afterwards.
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