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But nor can it offer a politica
2019-12-16
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Remember, when Blair won with that gargantuan
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majority in 2005 he was at the height of his unpopularity - or the nadir of his likeability (whichever way you want to put it). The controversial Iraq War had been two years earlier and there was a strong feeling that Britain had gone to war on a false prospectus. No weapons of mass destruction had been found, and - hugely uncomfortably for Blair - the father
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of a British soldier who had died in conflict there stood against the prime minister as an anti-war candidate.
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Blair, by now, was no longer seen as the great hope, but as smarmy, President George W Bush's poodle, in the pocket of big business - and a war criminal. It was ugly. And yet he romped home on his "third way", left of centre, progressive ticket. And he was returned as prime minister with a comfortable majority: a third successive election victory, a feat that no other Labour politician in history had achieved.
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Posters at Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn's final rally in Hoxton, London But the policies of Labour in the 2019 election are very different from what they were in 2005 when Tony Blair and the so-called "modernisers"
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held sway. Labour last Thursday went into the election with an unashamedly socialist set of policies, promising a massive increase in government spending, and big tax increases for the well-off. Nationalisation of some industries was back on the agenda. There would be massive increase in spending for the National Health Service - and an offer of free broadband for everyone. Why no offer of free puppies for all, one wag asked derisively.
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majority in 2005 he was at the height of his unpopularity - or the nadir of his likeability (whichever way you want to put it). The controversial Iraq War had been two years earlier and there was a strong feeling that Britain had gone to war on a false prospectus. No weapons of mass destruction had been found, and - hugely uncomfortably for Blair - the father °ºÏ¿ë´ÞÀÌ»ç
of a British soldier who had died in conflict there stood against the prime minister as an anti-war candidate. °í¾çÆ÷ÀåÀÌ»ç
Blair, by now, was no longer seen as the great hope, but as smarmy, President George W Bush's poodle, in the pocket of big business - and a war criminal. It was ugly. And yet he romped home on his "third way", left of centre, progressive ticket. And he was returned as prime minister with a comfortable majority: a third successive election victory, a feat that no other Labour politician in history had achieved. ¸íÇ°·¹Çø®Ä«½Å¹ß=¸íÇ°·¹Çø®Ä«½Å¹ß
Posters at Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn's final rally in Hoxton, London But the policies of Labour in the 2019 election are very different from what they were in 2005 when Tony Blair and the so-called "modernisers" ·¹Çø®Ä«Áö°© ·¹Çø®Ä«¹Ì·¯±Þ ·¹Çø®Ä«sa±Þ ·¹Çø®Ä«¼îÇÎ=·¹Çø®Ä«Áö°© ·¹Çø®Ä«¹Ì·¯±Þ ·¹Çø®Ä«sa±Þ ·¹Çø®Ä«¼îÇÎ
held sway. Labour last Thursday went into the election with an unashamedly socialist set of policies, promising a massive increase in government spending, and big tax increases for the well-off. Nationalisation of some industries was back on the agenda. There would be massive increase in spending for the National Health Service - and an offer of free broadband for everyone. Why no offer of free puppies for all, one wag asked derisively.