Blair has a stormy relationship with the electorate. In recent years the
weakness of the Official Opposition, the Conservative Party enabled him to
maintain a clear lead in the polls, due primarily to the misguided leadership of
William Hague between 1997 and 2001, and the recent failure by Iain Duncan
Smith to reunite a bickering, self-obsessed Tory party. With the recent
"coronation" of Michael Howard as Conservative leader, Blair's
position looks to be weakened considerably.
Blair's biggest problems lie in his inability to find a position for
Britain in the world. On the one hand he is considered to be in the pocket of
the United States, on the other he is considered to be too willing to
sacrifice sovereignty to the EU. This causes problems for him both at home and
overseas. Around 80% of the population here feels he is giving away too many
powers to the EU. Britain is traditionally slightly aloof in Europe, a
position that has done much good for both the EU and Britain, especially in
terms of being the "bridge" between Europe and America. Yet Blair
feels justified in adopting laws set by Europe that limit Britain's ability to
act independently - the proposed European Constitution would effectively
remove Britain's ability to go to war without the backing of the EU. That
being the case, we would not have been allowed to go to war with Iraq
recently, nor would we have been allowed to go to war in the Falkland Islands
in defence of British citizens without the backing of an unelected,
unaccountable EU Commissioner.
His relationship with Europe, he feels, will be the greatest legacy he
leaves when he is eventually ousted either by the electorate or an increasingly
rebellious Labour Party. However, the public feels let down by this. In order
to improve relations with Europe, he is employing such misguided tactics as
discussing Gibraltar's sovereignty with the Spanish, and adopting the
far-reaching Constitution without offering the population a referendum. He tries
to maintain support for his European policy by setting out clearly defined
"red lines," areas of national sovereignty which, he says, the EU
will not take control of. While this sounds noble, some point out that in actual
fact it indicates an acceptance that the EU will take over other areas.
On the American question, although many in the electorate feel Britain
gains more from our Special Relationship with the USA than from our stormy
relationship with Europe it is also a widely-held belief that we are sometimes
too willing to go with America without proper reference to the UN and our
European partners. The recent conflict in Iraq is a perfect example.
Blair's biggest political challenge is, therefore, to convince pro-Europeans
of the importance of our relationship with America, and to convince Euroskeptics
of the value of being very close to the EU. And at every step, Blair seems
only to alienate more and more voters.
Blair is successful in some ways, though. For a start he made the Labour
Party, almost a Parliamentary pariah in the 1980s, an apparently unbeatable,
slick and very popular political machine. He has adopted many of the tactics
that helped Bill Clinton - and even Margaret Thatcher - to power, and has
modernised his party to make it more electable. Although the older members of
his party feel annoyed and disgusted by this, most accept the fact that it was
necessary if Labour was ever to have a chance of being in Government again. The
voters feel he is a charismatic leader - if somewhat oily and given to deception
- and his image as a family-loving Christian appeals to the middle classes.
Traditionally the bastion of the Conservative party, the middle classes are
now the main source of votes keeping Labour in power, thanks largely to Blair's
reashaping of Labour's traditional ideology.
His position as his party's leader is becoming increasingly weak at the
moment. Some of his closest supporters - particularly Frank Dobson, who
resigned in 1998 and Robin Cook and Clare Short, who resigned over Iraq -
have deserted him, and even turned hostile. Cook's memoirs, published recently
under the telling title Point of Departure, are already causing a storm
by revealing Blair's own doubts about Saddam Hussein's ability to attack
British interests. By far the majority of his party feel he has acted illegally
and undemocratically by going to war with Iraq. And his biggest political
nemesis happens to be his closest colleague, Gordon Brown, the Chancellor of
the Exchequer. Brown and Blair were vying for the Labour leadership following
the death of John Smith, another modernising Labour leader, and they famously
made an agreement (strenuously denied by both) at the Granita restaurant in 1997
that Blair would lead with Brown as Chancellor. It has emerged in the past that
plans existed for Brown to take over if Labour was returned for a third term,
but it seems Blair has reneged on that deal.
I think that Labour will be returned for a third term with Blair as Prime
Minister. The party's lead over the Conservatives in Parliament is far too
strong for it to be toppled, although I feel certain it will be cut to as few as
80 seats. And Blair's days are numbered - he will probably be ousted by his own
party mid-term, and my bet is on Jack Straw, the extremely capable Foreign
Secretary to take over. And I will save a writeup on Straw until he is Prime
Minister!