Tony Blair on the Labour Party crisis - UNCUT INTERVIEW - BBC Newsnight

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  • čas přidán 18. 12. 2019
  • Labour's last prime minister Tony Blair warns the party's future is in jeopardy if the current leadership style endures. Subscribe to our channel here: goo.gl/31Q53F
    In this extended uncut interview, former Prime Minister Tony Blair speaks to Newsnight about Labour's worst election result since 1935 , why he still opposes a second Scottish independence referendum and how he feels more politically motivated than ever.
    Newsnight is the BBC's flagship news and current affairs TV programme - with analysis, debate, exclusives, and robust interviews.
    Website: www.bbc.co.uk/newsnight
    Twitter: / bbcnewsnight
    Facebook: / bbcnewsnight

Komentáře • 5K

  • @Memovich47
    @Memovich47 Před 4 lety +406

    STOP INTERRUPTING!!! I'm sick of the modern way of interviewing, it's more of an interrogation. Let. The. Interviewee. Speak.

    • @allenmontrasio8962
      @allenmontrasio8962 Před 4 lety +4

      That's how journalism works: the interviewer has an agenda to push and manoeuvres you into saying what she/he wants you to say. It's up to interviewee to recognize this and outmanoeuvre the journalist.

    • @tommortimer9222
      @tommortimer9222 Před 4 lety +2

      @@allenmontrasio8962 what do you think her agenda is here?

    • @allenmontrasio8962
      @allenmontrasio8962 Před 4 lety +9

      Doesn't really matter, I was speaking generally, but - to the point: defend Corbyn's catastrofic defeat and make Blair look like a dick.

    • @davidmason9529
      @davidmason9529 Před 4 lety +2

      That’s called scrutiny. 👍

    • @tommortimer9222
      @tommortimer9222 Před 4 lety +1

      @@allenmontrasio8962 but why? Being critical isn't the same as being cynical. Not everything is subversion.

  • @DavidSmith-hv8kc
    @DavidSmith-hv8kc Před 4 lety +389

    "It's my right to speak and it's your right to refuse to listen, but dont tell me I cant speak and I wont tell you, you've got to listen"
    Truth

    • @haswright4933
      @haswright4933 Před 4 lety +58

      Lol no. He's a war criminal. He should be in jail not on prime time tv

    • @dreamer2260
      @dreamer2260 Před 4 lety +82

      Yep. His logic is hard to argue against, which is why the vast majority of criticism refuses to engage with anything he says and resorts to personal attacks.

    • @James-co2nb
      @James-co2nb Před 4 lety +21

      @@dreamer2260 While you are right, he should also still be in jail.

    • @greeny_119
      @greeny_119 Před 4 lety +3

      Has Wright Ignorant moron

    • @biocapsule7311
      @biocapsule7311 Před 4 lety +2

      lol... truth, without evidence? lol

  • @MrTonycoughlan
    @MrTonycoughlan Před 4 lety +78

    Kirsty is really pissing me off taking her glasses off and putting them back on!!!!

  • @tranquilitybase8100
    @tranquilitybase8100 Před 4 lety +398

    Say what you want about Blair, he understands political strategy. Far more than most in current Labour at the moment. The interviewer seems a little slow though.

    • @Pincer88
      @Pincer88 Před 4 lety +47

      Finally someone in the commentary who looks beyond the obvious. You are of a rare and admirable breed. Most others just love to nourish their grudge against him and stopped listening the moment he opened his mouth, even when wisdom was coming out.

    • @bradbarrass860
      @bradbarrass860 Před 4 lety +10

      Agreed and agreed

    • @Pincer88
      @Pincer88 Před 4 lety +11

      @Wilbur Wafer I know, the mess in the Middle East is partly (!) because Blair trusted US 'intel' and Colin Powell, who - let's agree on that - was a man of standing before the shit came down in Iraq in 2003. Let's just say I'm either just a naive turd or just an idiot, but somehow I think Blair acted in good faith. After all, what was there for Britain or Blair personally to be gained? Besides that, apart from the casus belli - the fictionalized WMD - there were plenty of good reasons to get rid of Saddam Hussein at the time as he was a very ennoying thorn in the side of all countries involved in the ME. One can blame Blair for being overly naive though about US intentions (to get their greedy fingers on Iriaqi oil), the lack of a strategy (other than Rumsfeld's 'schock and awe') and the lack of any interest in possible worst case scenarios after Hussein was disposed of. But we're talking 2003 here, just 2 years after 9/11 and clear signs that Al Qaeda was spreadig its wings in Mesopotamia as well (which proved to be a correct assessment by intelligence). I find the term "mass murderer" a stretch too far, but I agree that with the luxury of hindsight, this wasn't Blair's finest moment.

    • @lewisner
      @lewisner Před 4 lety +8

      He understands political strategy and how to get power , but he has no political beliefs. He did nothing to reverse Thatcherite policies and he introduced PFIs to the NHS leaving it saddled with a gigantic £80 Billion debt.

    • @Pincer88
      @Pincer88 Před 4 lety +12

      @@lewisner Not certain about that. I think Blair knows all too well, that one cannot have a sustainable Labour government if that reverses every single Thatcherite measure. Don't forget: ultimately the swing vote (pretty conservative middle class voters mainly) determines the outcome of elections, not the steadfast supporters. Look at how Corbyn faired: a man of principle to the very last but with very little popular support. That's the problem in all of politics in a democracy, one has to be able to make a lot of compromises if one is to realize only a fraction of his beliefs. That is sad enough in itself, but I can't remember any politician winning an election on persuasive arguments and facts. It's all about (broad) appeal I'm afraid. Something Blair had (and rightfully lost) and now Johnson seems to have.
      I agree, his policies were far from ideal and he might have done a better job. But keeping all frogs in one basket is easier said than done, unfortunately. One has to be quite the pragmatic manager beside being an idealist to make things work. That is the honest truth and one few are willing to hear about or acknowledge.
      I'm not a Blairite, but sometimes I feel the need to put some perspective between the justifid outrage. I know, I'm a bit of a wanker ;)

  • @troop73oo
    @troop73oo Před 4 lety +146

    I do wish political interviews would interview, instead of just searching for the headline.

    • @cwam1701e
      @cwam1701e Před 4 lety +1

      This. Soooo this!

    • @louiev5346
      @louiev5346 Před 3 lety

      Never thought about it that way... so true

    • @SelfImprovement1111
      @SelfImprovement1111 Před 3 lety

      Feed up with up the feminist

    • @wobblybobengland
      @wobblybobengland Před 3 lety

      Did this cretin ever have anything to add to the world? I see deaths that it created, certainly never saw any depth to the meglomaniac gibberish that came out of it's mouth.

  • @StripyViper
    @StripyViper Před 4 lety +282

    Love him or loathe him, but he’s spot on about the crisis facing the Labour Party.

    • @darthpepe2994
      @darthpepe2994 Před 3 lety +7

      Correct. But Labour do have a way back; they just have to promise to deliver on what the Tories have failed to do that they said they'd do; end mass immigration in favour of a points based system, be tougher on illegal drug/migrant crossings of the channel, deport foreign criminals and reject globalist policies in favour of focusing on building up our strained infrastructure

    • @darthpepe2994
      @darthpepe2994 Před 3 lety +8

      @@johnpaton6869 Well seeing as the Tories aren't even right wing in the slightest that's not exactly difficult. But partly yes; if you speak to most of the working class heartlands that Labour have lost, you'll find that that they are a socially conservative bunch but economically left leaning. What the Working Class of the North crave is; immigration reduced because it's gone too far for something we haven't voted on, it's putting a severe strain on our infrastructure that needs time to catch up with the population increase and it's also increasing our crime rates and national security as we're not properly checking who's coming in. They want the law applied fairly regardless of race/religion/gender/the lefts temper tantrums etc unless it's an illegal migrant who shouldn't be here, a little more equality in the economy, opportunity in education and investment on infrastructure that doesn't favour the South and instead of focusing on issues abroad with a globalist view of the world how about we solve our problems here at home first?
      Whether you like it or not that's what the working class in the North wants and (minus the part about the investment on infrastructure favouring the South) that's what the majority of the country wants too, that's what will win you elections if you promise to deliver on it.

    • @darthpepe2994
      @darthpepe2994 Před 3 lety +3

      @@johnpaton6869 That's how Labour acted too. Lol.

    • @darthpepe2994
      @darthpepe2994 Před 3 lety +6

      @Abhinandan Banerjee To arrogantly smear half the country as "paranoid nativists" is snobbery to the highest degree and is exactly why you aren't winning elections anymore. The Northern working class towns/cities have legitimate concerns that are being ignored and even exacerbated by leftist policies, Labour is supposed to be the party of the working class yet they are actively working against the working class and completely ignoring them. Hence the mass exodus. "Should the left even want the votes of such people?" fine, don't have the votes, but don't complain that you're not winning elections lmao. Labour as it exists as it is at the minute belongs on the fringes anyway, "Momentum" is the opposite side of the same coin to the BNP to me, except unlike them they were clever enough to hijack and take over one of the big 2 parties with a guaranteed voter base. Had Momentum started from scratch they'd be on the fringes where the BNP are, instead they're slowly dragging the Labour Party down to it.
      And yeah but... no. All the youth you've brainwashed will eventually grow up and see you for what you are; crazy, racist, sexist, self hating Marxists who will soon belong in a history book under the chapter "the silly years". Once these kids grow up, have a family and a career (You know; things they don't want to lose) they will immediately leave Socialism behind in their youth and become adults. As Winston Churchill once said; those who aren't liberals in their youth have no heart. Those who aren't conservatives in adulthood have no brain.

    • @darthpepe2994
      @darthpepe2994 Před 3 lety +2

      @Abhinandan Banerjee "the Tory" who said I'm a Tory? I align with no party, I can't stand the Tories they're liars, I only vote if there's someone I really want to go in to Downing Street (which hasn't happened yet) or if there's someone I desperately want kept out of it. I've only ever voted in elections when I learned about Jeremy Corbyn and Momentum etc. Take that for what you will. I might not like the Tories but I think Labours radical socialist element are dangerous and I want them kept as far away from power as Nick Griffin.
      And how can you stop anyone when you're a fringe element who's stated yourself that your one big hope of a comeback is the naivety of youth? Again; they'll grow up and leave this phase in their youth when they start a family, a career and get a nice house etc, because they won't want to lose those things.

  • @robertstraw9881
    @robertstraw9881 Před rokem +115

    I’m actually reevaluating my thoughts on new labour.
    He understands the British people more than Corbyn does. Most don’t want radical left or radical right. They just want things to work, to be affordable, to have good public services and be able to put some money aside for a rainy day.

    • @Youtuber-xs9cp
      @Youtuber-xs9cp Před rokem

      Corbyn is the problem. He is like the problem child of Justin Trudeau totalitarianism and Anthony Fauci deception. Labor are comiting political suicide. On the other hand. Blair biggest problem was his foreign policy acting as Bush's lacky.

    • @robertstraw9881
      @robertstraw9881 Před rokem

      @@masnwrdl0511 no they aren’t.
      85% of the population is white.
      Gammon.

    • @robertstraw9881
      @robertstraw9881 Před rokem +7

      @@masnwrdl0511 Calm Down Mein Furher

    • @CNoone-mc8dn
      @CNoone-mc8dn Před rokem +3

      Yeh Blair really looked after this country well didn’t he?! 🤪. Evil

    • @fishjj76
      @fishjj76 Před rokem

      Time has shown you to be right. Corbynism has alienated Labour voters from their party.

  • @clumsyturtle8544
    @clumsyturtle8544 Před 4 lety +166

    You know it's real bad when Tony fucking Blair starts to talk sense.

    • @SelfImprovement1111
      @SelfImprovement1111 Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah I know

    • @solargold9213
      @solargold9213 Před 3 lety +15

      to be fair, he is a very good speaker.

    • @user-pk4sd9dd2w
      @user-pk4sd9dd2w Před 3 lety +4

      He's a liar. RIP Dr David Kelly.

    • @dreamer2260
      @dreamer2260 Před 3 lety +12

      @@solargold9213 He's extremely intelligent and perceptive. I'm much further left than him, but imo he's well worth listening to.

    • @baders087
      @baders087 Před 3 lety +12

      Also, he is the last Labour leader to win. And the only one to win in my lifetime (5 conservative leaders have won in my life). So he has some idea at how to make Labour electable

  • @kironkav
    @kironkav Před 4 lety +193

    The reason that Labour got such a kicking was because they’re went against Brexit and ignored the wishes of hard core labour voters

    • @Greninjia
      @Greninjia Před 4 lety +15

      Corbyn also played a significant role

    • @allenbeever7934
      @allenbeever7934 Před 4 lety +3

      Correct

    • @allenbeever7934
      @allenbeever7934 Před 4 lety +4

      @@samcad-ho3ze incorrect

    • @Elusive9T2RETRO
      @Elusive9T2RETRO Před 4 lety +9

      Plus people rejected Corbyn & communism, until that stops, they will be in the wilderness
      As much as I hate Blair, he is right here

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Před 4 lety +1

      Tru Say Mi Bredrin...

  • @deanbevin5630
    @deanbevin5630 Před 4 lety +235

    He sounds more stressed now than he ever did as PM.

    • @robin231176
      @robin231176 Před 4 lety +62

      He is suffering the torment for what happened in Iraq and it will haunt him for the rest of his days.

    • @todayonmtt
      @todayonmtt Před 4 lety +30

      The man who built the New Labour is also the one who destroyed it.

    • @forza223bowe5
      @forza223bowe5 Před 4 lety +12

      Robin Jackson He won’t be sorry. He is stressed because of Brexit more like

    • @HuxleyWasRight
      @HuxleyWasRight Před 4 lety +28

      he's stressed because he's power hungry and a megalomaniac but he has no way of influencing events. He should enjoy the massive wealth he has accumulated since leaving office and go quietly, he's no longer relevant or respected.

    • @brazilianbhoy
      @brazilianbhoy Před 4 lety +15

      Perhaps because the country is in a far worse state now than it was during his premiership.

  • @joshkusiak7613
    @joshkusiak7613 Před 4 lety +151

    “Labour last pm” Gordon brown would like a word

  • @markholle3450
    @markholle3450 Před 4 lety +53

    This is a reasoned response to what happened to his party. The sad thing for him is that many in his own party believe that they weren’t extreme enough.

    • @slipperywinston4076
      @slipperywinston4076 Před 2 lety +3

      You mean like left wing values the party was founded on ?

    • @muttley8818
      @muttley8818 Před rokem +1

      @@slipperywinston4076 There's left wing values, and then there's Corbynism which is FAR FAR LEFT.

  • @Clavinovaman
    @Clavinovaman Před 4 lety +66

    Of all the UK political parties, Labour is, I am convinced, the most difficult to lead.

    • @shanginadildo
      @shanginadildo Před 4 lety +10

      Ironically so. tories should be the hardest yet any bumbling idiot can lead them to a majority election

    • @chrispeacock1257
      @chrispeacock1257 Před 4 lety +17

      Leading the long march of progress will always be harder than the defence of the status quo. Look at any progressive movement in history and it has been lead by progressives and resisted by conservatives. Anti-slavery, woman’s suffrage, the NHS, gay rights, workers rights, anti-war movements. In every single case, before they’re enacted and accepted on the back of a progressive movement, they’re revisited and attacked by a conservative establishment.

    • @aanallein5922
      @aanallein5922 Před 2 lety +3

      @@chrispeacock1257 gay rights? you mean gay marriage? Progressives have also destroyed the meaning of biological sex, nuclear family and undermined the nation-state by embracing global migration.

    • @ohwellwhateverr
      @ohwellwhateverr Před 2 lety

      @@chrispeacock1257 “Progressives” are so headstrong about “‘moving forward”, they don’t bother to look beneath their feet. They’d step off a cliff and claim it was progressive.
      Society needs conservatives. Left to its own devices, the left would have society implode.

    • @evilzzzability
      @evilzzzability Před 2 lety

      difficult leading a bunch of morons

  • @smallpicture
    @smallpicture Před 4 lety +149

    Going into Iraq was a terrible mistake.

    • @martydav9475
      @martydav9475 Před 4 lety +14

      On the other hand it gave Iraqis a chance to rid themselves of Saddam's terrible, disgusting, obscene regime. A regime that carried out torture, rape, murder and gassing of its own people. We didn't have to live under that obscene regime - they did.

    • @Treckorz
      @Treckorz Před 4 lety +44

      Marty, I'm an iraqi born man. You are right the regime was not good. But what came after is 100+ Saddam's ruling our government. You have no idea what the war did to my country and people. It destroyed its social fabric and took it back 100 years. It created a vaccume for ISIS, and Iran control over a sovereign country. This is WORST than any dictatorship. The true terrorists were all those involved in the Iraq war. I love the UK and the people and 9 voted conservative but I will never forgive what the governments did to my home country.

    • @sed8me69
      @sed8me69 Před 4 lety +3

      @@martydav9475, might I ask if your views are similar on Gaddafi ?

    • @sed8me69
      @sed8me69 Před 4 lety +4

      Treckorz,
      I've met some very interesting and chilled people from your place of birth, in U.K. & Aus.
      You mention the u.k. and the vote.
      By now you've seen the lies that took the allied nations over there, who told the lies and just what the
      "western nations" people's and service people's know & feel..?
      Anyways, thanks for sharing your words and perspective.
      People need to know 😉

    • @Falconer710
      @Falconer710 Před 4 lety +1

      smallpicture a lie

  • @philbrainy2399
    @philbrainy2399 Před rokem +12

    BEST PM EVER!! LOVE U TONY!!

    • @johnwilson5637
      @johnwilson5637 Před rokem

      Is that why so many people hate him and would like to see him executed?

  • @dreamer2260
    @dreamer2260 Před 3 lety +71

    I can't help but respect his intelligence, history of electoral success and his political instincts. Labour could do far worse than listen to some of his strategy advice.

    • @muglypunt968
      @muglypunt968 Před 3 lety +2

      No they shouldn't. This man single handedly ruin Britain. Destroyed our international perception. Help with the rise of China. Destabilised a whole region and with millions of deaths by his hands. All the while making him self rich and becoming an ambassador to the area he helped destroy. Feckless shape of a man. Inform your self

    • @dreamer2260
      @dreamer2260 Před 3 lety +9

      @@muglypunt968 Haha singlehandedly ruined Britain? If anyone did, it was Thatcher; we’re still living in her blasted, ruined political and social wasteland of a legacy. Helper with the rise of China? Oh my, you are sadly deluded if you think anything anyone in the UK did had any effect of note on China’s growth. Their economy grew by around 10% a year for thirty years, and still going at around 5/6%. And that started well before Blair’s tenure. Blair made a terrible error in following Bush into Iraq, but also bear in mind that the Americans were there too. It wasn’t just us; in fact our force barely scratched what the Americans sent.
      But in any case this is about whether Blair ruined Britain. Blair’s domestic agenda wasn’t perfect, but it was good. It resulted in significant improvements in the performance and service of the NHS, investments in education and public services, significant reductions in poverty. Was forward looking about climate change and the opportunities in new industries and technologies around that. The Tory hegemony since has simply been an effort to reverse all those gains and re-cement the power and wealth of those at the top, whilst retaining a fucking stupid, blinkered, short termism that’s seen us lag behind on climate change and the shift to new technologies when we could (and would have been under Labour) have been leading the world. Really as simple as that.

    • @muglypunt968
      @muglypunt968 Před 3 lety +4

      @@dreamer2260 he opened the door to millions of immigrants that have gutted the working class, as well as creating deep cultural divides that will only worsen. Sold us hook line and sinker to EU tied economy. He would have given away the pound but it was luckily held on to. Created a war that threw us further in to a unpayable debt and made us look like America's lap dogs on a world stage. Yeah yeah Thatcher..... The left has been killing this country for decades and normal people have woken up to that fact. Either the Labour party waked up or it gets destroyed. They have no connection to normal people and the conservatives are going to keep crushing them until they get off their suicide path of self mutilation. Which I personal find hilarious but here we go

    • @muglypunt968
      @muglypunt968 Před 3 lety +2

      @@dreamer2260 also the NHS has become untenable, education has only gotten worse since Blair and the government handouts are at an all time high. This is not sustainable and the Tory's have had to counter this with every spell in charge they have had. I'm no Tory but labour are evil. Using good intentions to cripple us financially, spirituality and socially. You can thank them when everything collapses. How can we support an ever growing social system without massive tax hikes? Why should normal people be forced to pay for others that don't care?

    • @lukasz1154
      @lukasz1154 Před 2 lety +5

      @@muglypunt968 you do realise open immigration is a right wing idea, right? Freedom of movement is a fundamentally capitalist idea, as freedom of workers to move around the globe is ideal for corporations. Also, many EU immigrants (poles) have a net surplus in how much they contribute to the economy, essentially they put more in than out.

  • @streetlegalone
    @streetlegalone Před 4 lety +75

    She doesn't give him a chance to speak, to open up. He has nothing to defend here. Why do political interviewers take this "gotcha" approach rather than wait to hear what their subject says?

    • @MSK-Trucking
      @MSK-Trucking Před 4 lety +1

      Its annoying

    • @spivvo
      @spivvo Před 4 lety +2

      streetlegalone .... balls, she lets him finish every point before asking the next question.

    • @HarryFlowerrs
      @HarryFlowerrs Před 4 lety +1

      It's what Kirsty Wark does to all Labour heads,her and Laura are timid around the Tories!

  • @jmansus6810
    @jmansus6810 Před 4 lety +106

    "Labour's last prime minister"... Gordon Brown is forgotten

    • @johnmac1960
      @johnmac1960 Před 4 lety +11

      Who???

    • @baraxor
      @baraxor Před 4 lety +15

      @@johnmac1960 Justifiably so.

    • @robertjordan355
      @robertjordan355 Před 4 lety +1

      @@johnmac1960 Gordon Brown

    • @1SpudderR
      @1SpudderR Před 4 lety +6

      Hmm.....The Scot...who lost Five Billion Of Gold Bullion in a bad, bad deal........Brown....Prime Minister But Not by Public Vote at Election Time!

    • @CristianRodriguez-ps6it
      @CristianRodriguez-ps6it Před 4 lety +8

      Gordon Brown didnt win an election. Tony Blair is last elected labour PM

  • @alongsleep
    @alongsleep Před 4 lety +66

    Blair started the whole immigration mess.

    • @hittitecharioteer
      @hittitecharioteer Před 4 lety +9

      ROBERT POLATAJKO 30 Jun 2019 7:36PM
      Labour are liars. No one should vote Labour because of it's appalling record from 1997 to 2010. Now Corbyn is descending into outright Marxism.
      Here is the Labour legacy
      - Iraq and Afghanistan
      - Rotherham grooming and abuse scandal, Mid Staffs NHS scandal, Birmingham schools Islamic fundamentalism Trojan horse.
      - Continued anti Semitism and support for terrorists.
      - Increased political correctness, particularly in the education system to brainwash children.
      - Policy run by the Unions
      - Started HS2, stuffed us with NHS PFI
      - Sowed the seeds of the destruction of the Union with lopsided devolution, ignoring England.
      - Destroyed the final salary pension system
      - Gave away our EU rebate
      - Sucked up to the bankers creating horrendous consequences for britain in the global recession taking a generation to fix
      - Gave away sovereignty through Lisbon and the Human Rights Act
      - Abused state finances with 0.7% overseas aid pledge
      - Halved manufacturing from 22% to 11% of gdp
      - Abolished Primary Purpose Rule and allowed immediate A8 accession allowing 7 million immigrants into Britain 1997 to 2010 in a deliberate attempt to build its voting base.
      - Sucked up to crony public sector Unions by inflating pay and pensions of an unreformed public sector
      - Did nothing to invest in our infrastructure.
      - Imposed postal voting extension open to political corruption.
      - Spent so much money on Labour cronies that we had a 5% structural deficit at the height of the boom.
      - Impoverished millions with the Climate Change Act of alternative energy zealotry.
      - Created the conditions in which thousands died unnecessarily in the NHS
      - Created the catastrophe of multicultural extremism.
      - Allowed failed asylum seekers and illegal immigrants to stay in Britain.
      - Sent our military to wars under equipped
      - Failed to secure our borders.
      - Sold off our gold at rock bottom prices
      - Created hundreds of quangoes to carry out Labour ideology and stuffed them with socialist placemen.
      - Created welfare as a lifestyle, with the totally dysfunctional tax credit system, and the catastrophe of excessive housing benefit
      I am sure there is much more incompetence, self interest and cronyism but who would vote for Labour Based on that record ?
      And then there's all the orchestrated lies and accusations of paedophilia and murder spread by Tom Watson against innocent men. Watson (knowing Carl Beech as he undoubtedly did) knew it was lies. And yet Labour hierarchy and grandees like Harriet Harman and her husband Jack Dromey actively supported, and advocated for known paedophiles in the Paedophile Information Exchange (PIE).
      Labour and its socialist following are utterly disgusting.

    • @mit6635
      @mit6635 Před 4 lety +3

      I think it was Julius Caesar and William The Conqueror actually. Oh... and the Vikings, and the Angles, Saxons and Jutes.

    • @alongsleep
      @alongsleep Před 4 lety +5

      @@mit6635 I don't know how you look at mass immigration and see it as a positive, as constructive. Especially with the state of the NHS

    • @alongsleep
      @alongsleep Před 4 lety +4

      @MrQuidestveritas tell that to Rotherham

    • @alongsleep
      @alongsleep Před 4 lety +4

      @MrQuidestveritas They're all certainly factors, but there is no getting away from the fact that drastically increasing the population puts pressure on society at all levels.

  • @NordicAxe
    @NordicAxe Před 4 lety +46

    You can see why he was a leader.
    He looks and sounds professional.

  • @GuyWithBadHair
    @GuyWithBadHair Před 4 lety +133

    "I wanted to do everything I could to stop Brexit"
    Says all you need to know...

    • @stueymorris
      @stueymorris Před 4 lety +10

      Exactly

    • @elwynjones763
      @elwynjones763 Před 4 lety +3

      and so it does and rightly too.

    • @stueymorris
      @stueymorris Před 4 lety +1

      @@elwynjones763 you thought he should have stopped Brexit?

    • @gwmcd
      @gwmcd Před 4 lety +5

      If he was smart, he would have campaigned for Brexit. That would've helped remain far more.

    • @stueymorris
      @stueymorris Před 4 lety +1

      @@gwmcd no one would have believed him and he'd have to admit working against the country to sign us away in the first place after a promised referendum he'd reneged on, not to mention he's nationally despised, we see through that shite

  • @chrislacey8776
    @chrislacey8776 Před 4 lety +19

    The fire in his belly is back!

  • @Elusive9T2RETRO
    @Elusive9T2RETRO Před 4 lety +78

    I love the way Tony Blair takes no credit for Brexit

    • @jasonkingshott2971
      @jasonkingshott2971 Před 4 lety +5

      Blair should take a lot of credit for Brexit, with all his and his cronies pro EU preaching, as a result, most of the great British public did the opposite, thanks Tone, and sorry about your future EU income.

    • @bryangeake5826
      @bryangeake5826 Před 4 lety +8

      He's not responsible, the Conservatives, particularly the ERG ARE!"!!

    • @jasonkingshott2971
      @jasonkingshott2971 Před 4 lety +4

      @@bryangeake5826 The Great British public are democratically responsible for leaving the racket called the EU.
      Blair was just one conduit in their decision making process. After all these years, he still doesn't get it but, thanks tone.

    • @bryangeake5826
      @bryangeake5826 Před 4 lety +5

      @@jasonkingshott2971 Racket?? For every £1 we put into the EU the UK economy benefits via the customs union and free trade areas status with a £16-17 Trillion economy on our doorstep to the ratio of £6. Through better prices, better investment opportunities, improved access to capitol and flexible labour supply!! If thats a racket, more please!!

    • @mit6635
      @mit6635 Před 4 lety +3

      @@jasonkingshott2971 The ENGLISH public. The parts of the English public with an inflated sense of English exceptionalism.

  • @IrishBog
    @IrishBog Před 4 lety +43

    As a Brexiteer I can still respect Blair's sincerity and integrity - at least he hasn't turned into a bitter curmudgeon like Alistair Campbell

    • @hazchemel
      @hazchemel Před 4 lety +1

      seems to be allusions to past wrongs in criticisms of mr blair ..... and i simply have no knowledge of it ..... but on the face of it, surely his views are at least worth airing

    • @tompitman8672
      @tompitman8672 Před 4 lety +2

      Sincerity and integrity!? He votes labour while disagreeing with the policies!!

    • @jacklewis3803
      @jacklewis3803 Před 3 lety

      It’s weird since I’m a remainer and I think the complete opposite of him. Anyway well done on winning the ref 👏👏

  • @johnnyutah7003
    @johnnyutah7003 Před 4 lety +42

    I don't like Blair but he talks a lot of sense here

    • @philread7668
      @philread7668 Před 4 lety +17

      He always talks a lot of sense. and he knows how to win elections. For all his failings - he is/was a very good politician

    • @monkeydan33
      @monkeydan33 Před 4 lety +1

      Until he goes on about denying a democratic vote

    • @dreamer2260
      @dreamer2260 Před 3 lety

      @@philread7668 Yep, exactly.

  • @stephenconlon653
    @stephenconlon653 Před 4 lety +68

    He talks a lot of sense. There is no longer a cohesive working class based on occupation as there was in the ‘70s. Labour has to appeal to a new constituency

    • @HappyBob701
      @HappyBob701 Před 4 lety +12

      The working class is generally defined by its social conservatism Johnson did well to appeal to that labour has rejected that with crazy virtue signal liberalism

    • @TheZimboNation
      @TheZimboNation Před 4 lety +5

      BOB Supple Exactly. This is why the labour MP’s had been trying to get Corbyn out for years prior- they knew attracting the young urbanites with their SJW liberal tendencies would alienate their base. Lo and behold.

    • @bhangrafan4480
      @bhangrafan4480 Před 4 lety +6

      On the contrary, the cohesive working class in the North voted solidly for Brexit and felt abandoned and betrayed by the 'middle class Londoners' running Labour. Tony Blair wanted a stronger REMAIN stance and was part of the problem, not part of the solution.

    • @stevenroberts7435
      @stevenroberts7435 Před 4 lety

      Sauron Merciful it could take 5-10 year as long as it happens. Thats the mane thing.

    • @gugsX98
      @gugsX98 Před 4 lety

      The only hope for Labour now is to elect a leader with deep trade union roots
      Then maybe they can win a election again...

  • @walzinmatila9616
    @walzinmatila9616 Před 4 lety +34

    Still a war criminal who should be in jail

    • @VaucluseVanguard
      @VaucluseVanguard Před 4 lety +1

      true; but he's right on this and you know it; painful!

    • @robertglennon694
      @robertglennon694 Před 4 lety +2

      Which of the Geneva convention (the complete set of war crimes) are you referring to when you label him a war criminal?
      Where I get hazy is the UN resolution saying Hussein needed to be removed if he continued to eject inspectors.
      So, the whole war criminal thing, that’s codshit isn’t it?

    • @memphismemphis462
      @memphismemphis462 Před 4 lety

      Look he was wrong on the war as Bush was but Tony Blair is right the Labour Party they went too far left as some in the Democrat Party have here in the US.The far left promise way too much with no way too pay for it like free college for all I don't want too pay for someone too go to college and fuckoff and get drunk they flunk out,then have the far right loons who want too force their religion on everyone and want to cut Medicare and Medicaid and food stamps the poor depend on.

    • @robertglennon694
      @robertglennon694 Před 4 lety

      Ian... are you stoned? Are you that full of bitter, twisted vitriol about removing an actual dictator who murdered tens of thousands with poison gas that you would have the state reinstate capital punishment to execute blair?
      I am deeply morbidly curious as to your logic. Please enthral us with your thoughts as to why it would be justified.

    • @niccolorichter1488
      @niccolorichter1488 Před 3 lety +1

      @@memphismemphis462 in my country there is free college ...and thank god becuse i have no money ...

  • @montygemma
    @montygemma Před 4 lety +31

    In other words the majority will of the British people was locked in a box and we let it out.

  • @elvisleeboy
    @elvisleeboy Před 4 lety +100

    "I don't care if someone disagrees with me"
    Yes, we noticed, Tony.

    • @jackbeswick4662
      @jackbeswick4662 Před 4 lety +1

      @@joebloggs3551 He was extremely good at befriending Rupert Murdoch.

    • @jackbeswick4662
      @jackbeswick4662 Před 4 lety

      @@joebloggs3551 1) Of course people still read newspapers, especially the over 50s (who decide elections). It's also not just newspapers he owns, he has an entire media empire repeating the same messages and dictating the national conversation. Why do you think advertising is so effective? Because it works. Politics/News is no different. Rupert Murdoch's media empire has backed every election winning party since the 70's, including the Brexit referendum.
      2) That stuff about education is right wing conspiracy theory BS which there is literally no evidence for.

    • @jackbeswick4662
      @jackbeswick4662 Před 4 lety

      @@joebloggs3551 Yeah it is actually, it's a great argument. Why? because it's based on fact. People have studied this shit. It's a fact that every side he's backed since the 70s has won, you can go and look it up and everything.
      So your idea is that what, Labour bribe teachers with public sector spending so that they'll teach left wing ideas to kids? Given that Labour has been out of power for 10 years, I'm not sure you've thought that through.
      Could it not just be that Labour wants to increase education spending so that your children receive a better education and more opportunities in life? Or so that teachers can afford to live properly while they teach your kids?

    • @jackbeswick4662
      @jackbeswick4662 Před 4 lety

      @@joebloggs3551 Right, and how long ago was that?

    • @jackbeswick4662
      @jackbeswick4662 Před 4 lety

      @@joebloggs3551 Love how you've just dropped all the "Labour are bribing teachers to brainwash kids" bollocks on the slightest bit of questioning

  • @dm0065
    @dm0065 Před 4 lety +74

    I like how the Labour party gets the idea that it would be nice to hire a woman but the most important thing is they need to be the right person for the job. But only when they're talking about picking their own leader.

    • @ronclark9724
      @ronclark9724 Před 4 lety +9

      The British electorate refused to hire a communist government. After four losses, the last loss being a route, maybe it might be a great idea to shift back to the middle and give up your communist dreams of utopia...

    • @stevetattersall5933
      @stevetattersall5933 Před 4 lety +5

      The Labour party also thinks that if their next leader has a northern accent, everything will be fine!

    • @mikanfarmer
      @mikanfarmer Před 4 lety +3

      @@stevetattersall5933 ............Or God forbid, a Birmingham one !

    • @scottw3780
      @scottw3780 Před 4 lety +2

      wildebest - it’s human nature to be drawn to charismatic people..

    • @mikethebloodthirsty
      @mikethebloodthirsty Před 4 lety +2

      @wildebest Boris is honest?... Wow, I wouldn't say any politicians are honest

  • @Darwinion
    @Darwinion Před 4 lety +80

    Tony Blair: "7:17 You can't win on Brexit" Boris Johnson: "Hold my beer..."

    • @patrickproctor3462
      @patrickproctor3462 Před 4 lety +23

      I think he was saying Labour specifically couldn't win on Brexit, specifically because the base was split 60/40 on it anyway, so allowing the entire election to revolve around Brexit and the will of the people, Labour ceded the strategic advantage very early on.

    • @helicongremory8480
      @helicongremory8480 Před 4 lety

      @Derreck Jones But in 2019, if Labour had promess to uphold the result, MANY people would have voted Liberal Democrat. In 2017, the Lib Dem also promessed to uphold the result, which was always a joke. In any case, nobody voted for them. But just before Labour finally revealed their brexit policy, they were polling at 19 %, VERY CLOSE to Labour, because they actually said clearly that a vote for the Lib Dem was a vote to cancel Brexit.
      I don't think Labour had really any chance to win this election.

    • @dreamer2260
      @dreamer2260 Před 3 lety

      He was talking from a left-wing/Labour perspective.

  • @daviscapeosrs
    @daviscapeosrs Před 4 lety +48

    Blair: we needed a second referendum
    Blair: unions say they listen to the working class then ignore them

    • @th8257
      @th8257 Před 3 lety +5

      That makes no sense. You do realise that a referendum involves giving people a vote? Leavers would have been just as entitled to vote in it as anyone else

    • @manaih5652
      @manaih5652 Před 3 lety +1

      @@barry1369 He certainly isn’t a career politicians. Even the Old Labour heads who disliked him didn’t consider him a career politicians and denounced such claims. Come on, who would have wanted a career with Labour during Foot?

    • @lucykelly7152
      @lucykelly7152 Před rokem

      He means we needed to give him whatever he wanted. He is a sick b*stard! He was caught cottaging boys when he was younger.

    • @TheOfficialThundazz
      @TheOfficialThundazz Před rokem

      @@manaih5652 I think that’s precisely why he joined the Labour Party, as a destitute organisation it was much easier to take over and mould in his image.

    • @blackadder1415
      @blackadder1415 Před rokem

      The Unions have always ignored the working man or woman

  • @Retrostar619
    @Retrostar619 Před 4 lety +48

    Not a fan of Blair, but this interviewer is terrible in the way she punctuates his responses with statements and questions which interrupt the flow of the exchange.

    • @JohnnyBravo1878
      @JohnnyBravo1878 Před 4 lety +2

      Retrosta a really good point, I was thinking the same about her interruptions.

    • @indricotherium4802
      @indricotherium4802 Před 4 lety +2

      Yes, it wasn't as if Blair was prevaricating or avoiding. Probably they have their prompt sheets with the expected answers laid out and then the supplementaries they use. So if it's not going in one of the production team's proscribed directions, the interviewer has to try and get it back on track.

    • @davedogge2280
      @davedogge2280 Před 4 lety

      he's like a whiny preacher who is just bothered about power and not ideology.

    • @Retrostar619
      @Retrostar619 Před 4 lety

      ​@@davedogge2280 If you don't know when to compromise and when to push for your ideals you won't end up with the power to apply them. Blair ended up drastically over compromising (to put it mildly) and Corbyn ended up drastically under compromising. Blair may be many things, but at least he's pragmatic enough to realise the gap between where Labour and the electorate are in terms of ideology.

    • @indricotherium4802
      @indricotherium4802 Před 4 lety

      @@davedogge2280 : to some people the ideological struggle might seem purer in opposition, he might say. It's certainly just turned out nice for them.

  • @redred9882
    @redred9882 Před 4 lety +46

    As much as I dislike Blair and as much as I like Corbyn as a person, Labour are finished unless they elect a centre left leader. You cannot win an election on a hard left platform.

    • @jgmediting7770
      @jgmediting7770 Před 4 lety +13

      Seems centre left these days is viewed as being to the right of thatcher.

    • @redred9882
      @redred9882 Před 4 lety +1

      @@jgmediting7770 Yikes. So what does that make Johnson and the current Tory mob?!

    • @jgmediting7770
      @jgmediting7770 Před 4 lety +6

      Mr Red - given far right parties are backing Johnson and telling their members to join the Tory party, and old tories like major and others were telling people not to vote Tory, take a guess.
      Though ultimately, the tories are what they’ve always been, the party whose core objective is looking after the interests of the rich elite at everyone else’s expense, and they’ll move wherever they need to be to get enough votes to achieve power so they can carry out that objective. Achieving power and carrying out that objective is their only guiding principle.
      The fact the business propaganda system has moved the Overton window a long way to the right over the past 40 years explains why the so called centre ground has moved right of thatcher and the old centre left is now described as far left. The 50s/60s Tory government’s would be described as left wing today, and would have been attacked constantly if up against Johnson’s party in this election. That’s how far right the general public have been manipulated by decades of business propaganda. Labour’s policies were centre left at this election. Middle of the road social democratic, like numerous other European countries.

    • @stevenguild2707
      @stevenguild2707 Před 4 lety +2

      JGM Editing Wow. Congrats on totally misreading the general political landscape. 🙄

    • @wozzer3wa
      @wozzer3wa Před 4 lety +3

      JGM Editing you talk rubbish,torys support business,which are the wealth creators,labour want to destroy capitalism and make everyone poor .

  • @andrewkenningley4555
    @andrewkenningley4555 Před 4 lety +5

    This guy was the most successful labour leader Britain has ever had , 3 terms in power , a centre left position , not radical politics. and did not want to redistribute wealth. a winning formula .

    • @muglypunt968
      @muglypunt968 Před 3 lety

      Lol and your the kind of person who doesn't look deeper at what's really happening. This man crippled a whole region, ultimately leading to Europe's destabilisation. Gutted the working class by opening the doors to unchecked immigration. Selling out to big business and making himself extremely wealthy. All the while concreting the future to make sure labour never gets elected again till they finally get rid of the nonsense they utter and the moron they elect as leaders. Quite frankly I'd be happier if the Labour party get beaten so badly they get destroyed. They have ruined Britain domestically and internationally. Thanks to people like you who voted for them....

    • @johi367
      @johi367 Před 2 lety

      And a disgusting war criminal

    • @johnwilson5637
      @johnwilson5637 Před rokem

      "Centre left position". You didn't pay attention, did you? His Cabinet was full of hardcore Communists, and he was President of the Fabian Society. Blair had one agenda and that was to become the Life President of the EU. We scuppered that for him when we left that corrupt organisation.

  • @Freethought1987
    @Freethought1987 Před 4 lety +42

    Most certainly a criminal....

    • @trackdusty
      @trackdusty Před 4 lety +1

      Roll on the Day of the Rope...

    • @alexsmyth17
      @alexsmyth17 Před 4 lety +1

      I’ve seen worse than him.

    • @alexsmyth17
      @alexsmyth17 Před 4 lety

      nightbreed REECE In general. I can name four criminals off the top of my head:
      Hitler, Stalin, Harvey Weinstein and Saddam Hussein
      Also, Blair was a ROCK to us in NI, yes a rock; he did his part in securing peace and suffered many hardships. If he is to be judged, then let him be so in equal measure at the least, let’s try to salvage some good out of his premiership as well, hmmm?

    • @robertglennon694
      @robertglennon694 Před 4 lety

      Which law, out of interest?

    • @robertglennon694
      @robertglennon694 Před 4 lety

      nightbreed REECE “war crimes” isn’t a law though, is it? It’s like saying the “business broke employment law” (ok which one?)
      Which specific war crime is it? Which Geneva convention was broken? Genocide? Practising Perfidy? Child soldiers? Allowing Torture? Taking of Hostages?
      If you’re demanding to send someone to jail, at least be a bit specific

  • @louishindle6620
    @louishindle6620 Před 4 lety +35

    His description of Corbyn as “anti-Western” is... telling

    • @GibsonFender
      @GibsonFender Před 4 lety

      john m well said

    • @davidraley3054
      @davidraley3054 Před 4 lety +10

      Jeremy Corbyn had less charisma than a stale baguette.

    • @skinman2692
      @skinman2692 Před 4 lety

      Absolutely

    • @bnmbg731
      @bnmbg731 Před 3 lety +1

      Which he was...and Corbyn will never beat Boris Johnson

    • @user-sf7kl9uh7k
      @user-sf7kl9uh7k Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@davidraley3054Corbyn's a odious, divisive, and deeply unpleasant man

  • @DarthQueefious
    @DarthQueefious Před 4 lety +87

    "Boris was locked in a box and we handed him the key to get out of the box"
    You locked the country in a box, not just Boris.

    • @TPT91
      @TPT91 Před 4 lety +3

      Bran the Broker he’s not in government or parliament. How did he do any locking?

    • @robertglennon694
      @robertglennon694 Před 4 lety +1

      I’m very excited to hear how he managed to do that having been out of government for the last 14 years?

    • @darthpepe2994
      @darthpepe2994 Před 4 lety

      @@robertglennon694 Perhaps you should have read the replies first before responding to this comment.

    • @darthpepe2994
      @darthpepe2994 Před 4 lety

      @@robertglennon694 The "country locked in a box" quote was in reference to the radical EU institutions/reforms he tied us into.

  • @fredforsythe8310
    @fredforsythe8310 Před 4 lety +28

    Blair should be given as a peace offering to Iraq.

    • @fredforsythe8310
      @fredforsythe8310 Před 4 lety

      @historypoliticsbb Anyone that looks after their own people and Corbyn is only interested in anyone that is not native English. None of them are but Corbyn is an active racist.

    • @fredforsythe8310
      @fredforsythe8310 Před 4 lety

      @historypoliticsbb Every molecule in my body tells me not to vote Labour and I have been about long enough to know why.
      Conservatives give most of my money to their mates and Labour would give the lot to every lost cause so long as it ain't English.

    • @fredforsythe8310
      @fredforsythe8310 Před 4 lety

      @historypoliticsbb Take your pick all obsolete. You could put some money into the English Democrats and pray.

  • @MrRRHHMM
    @MrRRHHMM Před 4 lety +28

    Blair and the bbc, its what nightmares,are are made of, were is Owen, Soubry, Miller, and Grieve ?? The bbc ''Where truth and integrity go to die''

    • @estherdoyle5939
      @estherdoyle5939 Před 4 lety +1

      Like CNN here in the states worthless and liars

  • @deltahfman
    @deltahfman Před 4 lety +17

    He actually believes what he is saying

    • @kristtophon
      @kristtophon Před 4 lety

      what hes saying is totally correct (for a change)... thankfully it doesn`t matter anymore and he and corbyn are now totally irrelevant

    • @JoelWende
      @JoelWende Před 4 lety +1

      He’s 100% right on this! Regardless of what you think of him post Iraq, the man won 3 elections (including post Iraq) - he’s a master political strategist. He knows what does or doesn’t win elections.

    • @None-zc5vg
      @None-zc5vg Před 4 lety +2

      @@JoelWende Maybe he's just another political psychopath who doesn't mind what damage he does along the way.

    • @JoelWende
      @JoelWende Před 4 lety +1

      @@None-zc5vg That may or may not be true. None of that stops him being correct in what he's saying here!

  • @johnsimmonds16
    @johnsimmonds16 Před 4 lety +23

    This man's handling of Iraq ultimately screwed labour. He's never admitted it.

  • @williamgardiner2010
    @williamgardiner2010 Před 4 lety

    By the way, the caption to the video clip is wrong. Gordon Brown was Labour's prime minster surely?!

  • @Goldstone93
    @Goldstone93 Před 3 lety +9

    Terrible interviewer but nevertheless Blair displays his formidable insight into British politics and the Labour Party. We’ve not had a leader like him since.

  • @TiminTende
    @TiminTende Před 4 lety +68

    I suspect the thing that Blair is most angry about is that his dream of one day becoming President of the EU will now never come true.

    • @mscott3918
      @mscott3918 Před 4 lety +3

      I think that's why most of the politicians don't want to leave the EU. They know that when the UK voters get sick of them they will find a nice, cosy sinecure there, with a fat salary, private jet and a pension. The EU was OK when it was just a free trade association. It went wrong when it became a political alliance as well. There are too many different national identities for it to work. I suspect that once we go others will follow.

    • @theanswer00
      @theanswer00 Před 4 lety +1

      @@mscott3918 once you go we'll laugh and laugh looking at your country breaking down to pieces and the people angrily asking to be let back in 😉

    • @theanswer00
      @theanswer00 Před 4 lety +2

      @Andrew Battersby except you're not even going to keep what comes before that deficit if Boris gets his loved hard brexit. See you're running a deficit in trade but 45% of your export (291bn) is going to be lost. Good fucking luck

    • @terencewallis540
      @terencewallis540 Před 4 lety +2

      @Qwfwq66 Not just but LOT & LOTS think like that......Hungary, Poland, Italy, Spain, along with US anti EU trade tariffs as well as Brexit.....keep up.

    • @kinglicks5646
      @kinglicks5646 Před 4 lety

      @Qwfwq66 Thanks Cpt Obvious that is what he posted. There is no fooling you!

  • @asher8464
    @asher8464 Před 4 lety +9

    Labour; "self indulgence, misguided ideology and utter incompetence. The hand maiden of Brexit." Yep, says it all.

  • @patrickcooney5423
    @patrickcooney5423 Před 4 lety +4

    A recent poll conducted with Labour Party members showed unbelievably that they considered Corbyn the best ever leader of the Labour Party . Not Blair , who won 3 elections or Wilson who won 2.or even Attlee the founder of the Welfare State , who won 1 .
    Labour are doomed to self destruction if that's the case , picking Corbyn in a skirt to lead the party forward is the next step in that process

    • @muglypunt968
      @muglypunt968 Před 3 lety

      And the fact both those monsters are talked about positively shows why the Labour party is doomed to eradication. They are unfit for purpose and will probably die. Most people in Britain know Tony Blair is a monster and Corbyn is a communist.

    • @jonnobloggs1139
      @jonnobloggs1139 Před 2 lety

      Your comment is dated Flash forward 8 months and the Corbynist faction in the party has been muted, the Shadow front bench is mostly left of centre and Labour is ahead in the polls Would you like to review it?

    • @patrickcooney5423
      @patrickcooney5423 Před 2 lety

      @@jonnobloggs1139 No , not yet . The polls are meaningless at this point in time , the real poll, the next GE is far away . I see Sir Keith is trying to reposition Labour as a patriotic party , good move and not before time , but he is getting resistance from even his shadow cabinet . Pity he can’t bring himself to state a medical fact ,that only women have a cervix , in order not to upset the Trans community and the lefties .
      This nonsense will never pass the pub test . Patriotism, policies that appeal to the aspirational working class and straightforward and honest communication with the people is what is needed to have a chance of getting into power again - even with the incompetence of the present Tory leadership .

    • @jonnobloggs1139
      @jonnobloggs1139 Před 2 lety

      Keir already has a cunning plan for your problem. At the weekend he will call himself Rebecca Long Starmer!!!

  • @chronictown5802
    @chronictown5802 Před 3 lety +4

    this man is a natural and instinctive politician.

    • @dreamer2260
      @dreamer2260 Před 3 lety +4

      Yep. People of his talent come very rarely, especially on the left, sadly. We desperately need someone else of his calibre again, but I don't see anyone rising through the ranks.

  • @hogdog567
    @hogdog567 Před 4 lety +21

    So what he's taken from this that the British people shouldn't have been allowed a say on the matter, how predictable!

    • @theanswer00
      @theanswer00 Před 4 lety +1

      @Andrew Battersby see, what you guys haven't been told in the UK is that there's EU elections taking place every few years. You elected fucking FARAGE to the EU Parliament instead of sensible politicians who would push for policies to benefit your country

    • @JamesWilson-gw2ij
      @JamesWilson-gw2ij Před 4 lety

      Because it was not on the agenda, only the Conservative party agenda. DC never thought he would lose, that’s why he resigned. Coward.

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Před 4 lety +2

      @@laurencelong In 1973 I voted for a TRADE Agreement ONLY with 6 AFFluent Countrues.
      NOT to be part of some bureaucratic European Project...

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Před 4 lety

      @@laurencelong Time will tell Laurence....:)

  • @Osk94
    @Osk94 Před 4 lety +59

    Wow, Kirsty all over the place on this one

    • @scottw3780
      @scottw3780 Před 4 lety +8

      I’m not impressed with her at all, seen a few flaky interviews lately

    • @curiositypiqued6573
      @curiositypiqued6573 Před 4 lety +2

      @wildebestagree all GOTCHA bs they use

    • @apollomemories7399
      @apollomemories7399 Před 4 lety +1

      @@curiositypiqued6573 He needs got, he's a prize tosser.

    • @apollomemories7399
      @apollomemories7399 Před 4 lety

      @@scottw3780 Bollocks. Every question she asks is worthy. Maybe too uncomfortable for your leftist sensibilities. Tough.

    • @apollomemories7399
      @apollomemories7399 Před 4 lety +1

      @MetaPat She's anything but "over the place". What an idiotic comment to make.

  • @rebeccasimpson8470
    @rebeccasimpson8470 Před rokem +10

    He's far from perfect but speaks SO much sense. Where did these politicians go?

    • @dreamer2260
      @dreamer2260 Před rokem +4

      Yep. The decline in leadership quality since his day is so depressing. Went off a cliff really. Though in fairness Blair always was a remarkable political talent, and something of an outlier himself.

    • @user-sf7kl9uh7k
      @user-sf7kl9uh7k Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@dreamer2260Apart from Clown Corbyn, and a few of his closest goons & Momentum, they're no where near as bad as the Tories.

    • @dreamer2260
      @dreamer2260 Před 10 měsíci

      @@user-sf7kl9uh7k Oh I totally agree on that don’t get me wrong. I think Labour’s long stretch now out of power also hasn’t offered huge incentives for talent to get involved with the party. Hopefully that will change now with our prospects looking up.

    • @user-sf7kl9uh7k
      @user-sf7kl9uh7k Před 10 měsíci

      @@dreamer2260 Yup, just got to keep those sneaky self serving 'socialists' at bay. They're actually nothing of the sort, and are deeply unpleasant and divisive people.

  • @darengardner6219
    @darengardner6219 Před 3 lety +7

    Now this is a politician not a protester masquerading as a politician. He knows what it takes to win and Labour with momentum pulling the strings are a million miles off .

  • @gracesaulog
    @gracesaulog Před 4 lety +42

    Awesome interview. I didn't want to hear the former PM articulate his views on the recent election and the far-left takeover of the Labour Party. I wanted to watch Blair cut off every five seconds by an arrogant interviewer hell bent on tossing out nothing but gotcha questions. Very satisfying not having to watch ideas thoroughly examined and opinions completely fleshed out.

    • @IceMan-il7dx
      @IceMan-il7dx Před 4 lety +1

      Hey it's Newsnight - what were you expecting?!😂

  • @Machismo1983
    @Machismo1983 Před 4 lety +49

    Did anyone else notice his hair parts CENTRE LEFT?

    • @benno2395
      @benno2395 Před 4 lety

      And

    • @peace-now
      @peace-now Před 4 lety

      Great. He is centre left.

    • @Machismo1983
      @Machismo1983 Před 4 lety

      @wildebest that's the most Tory comment ever.

    • @peace-now
      @peace-now Před 4 lety

      @wildebest
      1. Tony Blair's hair is parted left of centre.
      2. The Chief Rabbi proscribed the Labour Party as being anti-Semitic. That is fact that we are proscribed, and we can't do anything about it.

    • @Machismo1983
      @Machismo1983 Před 4 lety

      @wildebest tl;dr

  • @henkkoonstra4014
    @henkkoonstra4014 Před 4 lety +33

    Its lucifer himself

    • @throwow1014
      @throwow1014 Před 4 lety

      Law T it’s strange, bcuz that’s EXACTLY what the tories are all about, yet labour did it!?

    • @throwow1014
      @throwow1014 Před 4 lety

      Law T wdym? I hate both tories and labour dw, I’m more of a Nigel farage guy

  • @cogrfi
    @cogrfi Před 4 lety +6

    So what yo are saying is, to coin a phrase, Labour have neither the people or the policies to be re-elected any time soon.

    • @nigelft
      @nigelft Před 4 lety +2

      In a single word, yes ...
      I am -- sadly -- old enough to remember both Michael Foot and Neil Kinnock, and the battles they had with the 'looney left', as personified, in particular, by Derek Hatton. The result was the 1987 GE, which, effectively, locked Labour out for the next decade, despite even the best efforts of John Smith, arguably the Labour Party's best leader since Clement Attlee. Had he not tragically died in 1994, from a massive heart attack, there was a chance he may have been PM in 1997 ...
      But to return to the original question, it looks like the latter day version of the 'Militant Tendency' has taken over almost the entire Labour Party. Those MPs, on the right of the party, were, and still are, dismissed as 'traitors' of, and to, Jeremy Corbyn, despite their repeated warnings that he was a severe liability, not least due to him calling Hamas and Hezbollah as 'friends'; those of a certain age, recalling Gerald Kaufmann's infamous 'longest suicide note in history' probably felt the same, again, about the last party manifesto.
      So no doubt many in the PLP expected to lose. But not by as much; what has been oh so neatly brushed under the rug is that a longstanding MP, whom had held his seat for 49 years, and would have been named Father of the House, by dint of being the longest serving MP, lost his seat by a considerable majority. Ousting a MP who has represented his constituency for 49 straight nears was no easy thing, and a utter shock to me.
      But, now the dust has settled, it was symptomatic of the utter distrust that even traditional, working class (read: Labour voting) constituencies had for the current leadership. And as loathed as I am to say this, the only way Labour will ever win another election, is if another moderate, like either a John Smith, or, -- gag -- Tony Blair is elected Leader.
      In this, Tony Blair is, regrettably, correct: if Momentum/Far Left, stays in charge of the Labour Party, although people will still vote for them, the share of that the Party current has, will mostly likely crash, given enough time. I doubt it will drop as low as where the Lib Dems current are, at about 11-12%, but who knows ... since no one saw Dennis Skinner losing his seat, all bets are off ...

    • @cogrfi
      @cogrfi Před 4 lety

      Don’t be sad! So am I - old enough to remember what you remember that is. It seems the Labour Party we knew is no more and perhaps that is because the needs/aspirations of the majority of working people have changed.
      In fact the current Labour Party seem intent on fighting a 1950s style class war, which is daft given the standard if living that most working people have now. Income inequality becomes less of a problem when people feel deprived if they don’t own an iPhone. Which of course is not to say that poverty does not exist, only that real not relative poverty is small and a political movement will not gain enough momentum (sorry) if it relies on votes from such a small percentage of society.
      I understand that it is tempting to hanker after times when societies problems seemed simpler - the wicked bosses and the downtrodden workers represented by the forthright and honest trades unions, who actually were not and are not so forthright and honest ( Do you remember the film ‘I’m All Right Jack’ staring Peter Sellers?)
      Anyway my point is that we need an opposition, a relevant opposition that represents the interests of working people. The trick will be to identify and articulate exactly what those interests are or at least provides a more socially cohesive vision of how our society could be run.
      Without a massive blunder by the Tories I see little chance of a Labour Govt for at least 10 years which gives plenty of time for policy development and good people to rise through the ranks replacing the ‘absolute shower’ (Terry Thomas quote from ‘I’m All Right Jack’) that are in place now.
      You will have notice that I have not suggested any role for Tony Blair. Personally, I think he made good and bad decisions as PM, was deceived by G W Bush, felt he couldn’t admit to error and then sold out to globalist interests. He is just not likeable, is absolutely toxic to many voters and would be the kiss of death to Labour.

  • @thehammerdk5208
    @thehammerdk5208 Před 4 lety +66

    Dunno why the opinions of this war criminal is still taken seriously.

    • @seerjc123
      @seerjc123 Před 4 lety +9

      Oh get real! Iraq may not have been his finest hour but let's not throw out the baby with the bath water! This is a man who won three elections in a row and was the last Lab leader actually to win a general election .... He presided over a moderate, progressive, social democratic government that wasn't infused with the hatred of patriotism, anti-semitism and jaw-dropping economic illiteracy that was Corbyn's toxic prescription. Come back Blair....your country needs you!

    • @marcibelle4462
      @marcibelle4462 Před 4 lety +8

      seerjc123 he accelerated the selling off of the NHS and put it into debt. He's vile. Jeremy is not anti Semitic not matter how hard you try to will him to be. 🤦🏻‍♀️ what a bunch of gullible subjects. And his manifesto is being revered around the world as exemplary. Keep reading the Sun 😂

    • @benon2511
      @benon2511 Před 4 lety +2

      May be because he won 3 general elections 🤔.

    • @andrewmarwick1078
      @andrewmarwick1078 Před 4 lety +2

      The 'illegal war' was not purely Blair's fault, Blair only decided to intervene in middle Eastern affairs over the false information he and bush received, this was his only downfall trusting information that was not true in the hopes of protecting world affairs. In reality he changed Britain's view of the left with him arguably swinging right and reformed the Labour party from neoliberal Thatcherism. If you want to dwell on a war started by false information and the need of protection for the British people, then your not ept for politics.

    • @rocketmunkey1
      @rocketmunkey1 Před 4 lety +1

      @@marcibelle4462 Jeremy is a member of the tribe, they're just reading from a script handed to them by the bankers, they know the vast majority of people dont want a communist world government and hate Labour for sh1tting on the working class in favour of MASS immigration and social "justice" AKA cu1tura1 marx1sm.
      We're supposed to believe that the reason for all this hate is that Labour "pretend" to criticise the supremacist religion of the bankers. They're just trying to stem the growing awareness amongst the overwhelmingly nationalist populace, that the religion of the bankers is behind all of our woes whether we consider ourselves left or right !
      it goes something like You hate Corbyn right, well he hates )ews so that means us )ews are on your side, and you should make "antisemitism" your number one weapon against him, the wellbeing of the self proclaimed "ch0sen people" is more important than EVERYTHING else ! Only it hasn't worked because the vast majority couldn't give two sh1ts about the bankers being criticised, they're more concerned with fulfilling Brexit and stopping mass immigration !

  • @nimraha.5064
    @nimraha.5064 Před 4 lety +82

    I love interviews like this one where the interviewer is trying to trap them but they refuse to fall into those traps.

    • @blackout07blue
      @blackout07blue Před 4 lety +5

      Lol. Tony Blair is a corrupt dumb fuck. Literally a non-serious propagandist.

    • @pablorages1241
      @pablorages1241 Před 4 lety +4

      LOL...he fell into every trap .... he exposed labours hypocrisy !

    • @muglypunt968
      @muglypunt968 Před 3 lety +2

      You should inform your self quickly. There are evil people pretending to be good and with your help they get power. Tony Blair is a monster. Labour have been for a very long time.

    • @AsadAli-jc5tg
      @AsadAli-jc5tg Před 2 lety +3

      Tony Blair, the war monster was just a right-wing planted into labour.

    • @villeporttila5161
      @villeporttila5161 Před 2 lety +1

      The interviewer is absolutely infuriating. So unprofessional

  • @syedadeelhussain2691
    @syedadeelhussain2691 Před 2 lety +19

    I have always admired Blair's hypermetropia minus the Iraq War.
    He has an impeccable mind and understands that socialists need to move to the centre-right to win votes.

    • @dreamer2260
      @dreamer2260 Před 2 lety +4

      Centre-left. But yes, otherwise I agree, and cheers for teaching me a new word.

    • @syedadeelhussain2691
      @syedadeelhussain2691 Před 2 lety +1

      @@dreamer2260 THANKS

    • @duality5503
      @duality5503 Před 2 lety

      Socialists must go to the right politically they have abandoned the working class for Wokism and globalism.

  • @batner
    @batner Před 4 lety +42

    1:00 "Don't give Boris a Brexit general elections". Sometimes it seems Blair hates democracy.

    • @fleetstreet11
      @fleetstreet11 Před 4 lety +4

      Brexit is anti-democratic and anti-European and anti-liberal.

    • @sebastianeastment4553
      @sebastianeastment4553 Před 4 lety +4

      Hardly. He didn't want a general election to resolve Brexit. He wanted a referendum exclusive to the matter of Brexit.

    • @batner
      @batner Před 4 lety +2

      @@sebastianeastment4553 I am sure he did. Those funny EU guys always want another referendum if the first one doesn't go their way. Doesn't make him much of a democrat.

    • @batner
      @batner Před 4 lety

      @@fleetstreet11 How brexit is anti-allofthat?

    • @sebastianeastment4553
      @sebastianeastment4553 Před 4 lety +1

      @@batner I think the Brexit referendum highlighted how silly it was to put the issue to to a straight in-out referendum. The issue was that "OUT" meant different things to different people. Many people who wanted to leave for instance probably wanted to remain in the Customs Union, while others would've wanted a hard Brexit - neither has got what they wanted. It's also become abundantly clear that a good chunk of the arguments Brexiteers employed during the referendum campaign have been proven entirely false, so there's a good case to host another referendum based on more accurate information available to the voters. Nevertheless, Labour stupidly allowed for the general election and thus Boris Johnson has won a democratic mandate to pass his Brexit deal. Coming from an international perspective I think that's a huge mistake for the UK and/or a rather destructive action globally, but it's what the English have voted for.

  • @jacsfalconer1929
    @jacsfalconer1929 Před 4 lety +28

    Dennis Skinner was never on your side Blaire

    • @user-yc5kk7pk4d
      @user-yc5kk7pk4d Před 4 lety +7

      Jack The Film Fanatic He was the only labour leader to actually get elected in modern times with a huge majority, Corbyn is the one who’s destroyed labour with the largest defeat since the 30’s.

    • @elwynjones763
      @elwynjones763 Před 4 lety

      Nor was Corbyn... So what!!!!

    • @jjh2920
      @jjh2920 Před 4 lety

      Blair won because he made labour tory-lite. And this allowed him to get murdoch on his side. What the hells the point in even having a labour party if they just become a slightly better version of the tories? The issue is not labour's politics but instead the right wing framing of British political discourse.

    • @steffanhoffmann8937
      @steffanhoffmann8937 Před 4 lety

      And the MODERN ELECTORATE were not on Skinners

  • @trotter6930
    @trotter6930 Před 4 lety +22

    i know why he didn't want to say he wants to be leader. cause they would never win under his name.

  • @SinnedNogara
    @SinnedNogara Před 4 lety +2

    6:35 That's literally what was in the Labour manifesto

  • @GroomsdayBookcom
    @GroomsdayBookcom Před 4 lety +16

    Just imagine if he was labour leader - we’d walk next election

    • @harrisonmckenzie4905
      @harrisonmckenzie4905 Před 4 lety +8

      He's a war criminal and should be on trial in The Hague for the war in Iraq.

    • @britopia1341
      @britopia1341 Před 4 lety +5

      GroomsdayBook.com Goes to show how detached you are. No Brit in their right mind would vote him. All he is known for is the Iraq war and mass immigration.

    • @hogdog567
      @hogdog567 Před 4 lety +9

      GroomsdayBook.com Wow! Seriously? He's probably the most hated man in Britain. I'm guessing you're not old enough to remember his Government?

    • @jonathancooper4914
      @jonathancooper4914 Před 4 lety +6

      GroomsdayBook.com Bliar is utterly discredited.

    • @1969reverend
      @1969reverend Před 4 lety +1

      GroomsdayBook.com Great sarcasm 😂🤣

  • @AICabal
    @AICabal Před 4 lety +41

    He wants to come back so badly.

  • @markreardon7520
    @markreardon7520 Před 4 lety +42

    He should be being interviewed in The Hague...not on the BBC.

  • @BedsitBob
    @BedsitBob Před 3 lety +3

    How can Jeremy Corbyn have taken full responsibility, "to a degree"?

  • @laszlosandor4870
    @laszlosandor4870 Před 4 lety

    Anyone seen his debate with Christopher Hitchens (PBUP)?

  • @judewestburner
    @judewestburner Před 4 lety +6

    I can once again watch him. I haven't been able to hear him since Brexit

  • @ElzevereBlock
    @ElzevereBlock Před 4 lety +39

    ".....said the man who let anyone who asked into our country and then walked away.....!"

    • @meltodd5634
      @meltodd5634 Před 4 lety +4

      You must be truly deluded!

    • @karlos543
      @karlos543 Před 4 lety +4

      @@meltodd5634 Not deluded. .true..
      Thats one of the many reasons Labour just got a kicking.

    • @mrmyloc
      @mrmyloc Před 4 lety +3

      @@karlos543 Did you not get the memo?.. Tories in power for the last 10 years?

    • @karlos543
      @karlos543 Před 4 lety

      @@mrmyloc Labour left this country broke. .I got that memo! "There is no more money" remember?
      We've spent the last ten years trying to pay that showers debt.
      Suppose you voted for them for free Internet 😅

    • @dreamer2260
      @dreamer2260 Před 4 lety

      @Karlos You’ve done exactly what the Tories and their fat cat friends told you to do.

  • @madjock2878
    @madjock2878 Před 4 lety +4

    Hold on wasn't Gordon Brown the last Labour Prime minister ? Or doesn't 5 mins in the job count ?

    • @hotrodd29
      @hotrodd29 Před 2 lety

      I think they mean he was the Last Labour prime minister to win an election

  • @ericjenkin7461
    @ericjenkin7461 Před 4 lety +18

    He looks and sounds better than he did going through all the things he had to deal with as PM

    • @normagriffiths9570
      @normagriffiths9570 Před 3 lety +2

      He bombed innocent kids for years

    • @muglypunt968
      @muglypunt968 Před 3 lety +5

      What committing war crimes and become stupidly wealthy. Wake up son

    • @tommyhoul1han
      @tommyhoul1han Před 2 lety

      @@muglypunt968 you feel the same about cameron drone striking Syria?

    • @blackadder1415
      @blackadder1415 Před rokem +1

      @@muglypunt968 👍

    • @muglypunt968
      @muglypunt968 Před rokem

      @@tommyhoul1han just because they are in different parties doesn't mean they aren't on same team. Only the plebs pick teams, it's why we are in a cycle of picking pathetic leaders.... Sheeple, sheeple everywhere

  • @leo1766
    @leo1766 Před 4 lety +12

    0:00 She calls him 'Tony BEAR!" 🐻 😂

    • @samjoshi1812
      @samjoshi1812 Před 4 lety +1

      wow so funny

    • @bobwelham8792
      @bobwelham8792 Před 4 lety +2

      Not as funny as Victoria Derbyshire's version of Jeremy Hunt! 🤣🤣🤣

    • @--Fish
      @--Fish Před 4 lety

      Lol

  • @Alexanderodell
    @Alexanderodell Před 4 lety +29

    Speak to the Hague because the hand is not hearing

  • @BB-mr3vy
    @BB-mr3vy Před 3 lety +7

    "Brexit general election" or "defeat of an ideology"? Choose one, Tony.

    • @Assenayo
      @Assenayo Před 2 lety

      Why? Voter's got to kill two birds with one stone

  • @DonkinDChannel
    @DonkinDChannel Před 4 lety +3

    I know it’s the trendy thing to call him a war criminal, but can we try and remember what he did right? If it wasn’t for him, we wouldn’t have a minimum wage, we’d still have to pay for state education, the Good Friday agreement in Northern Ireland may not have been signed for another ten years, most of the people of Kosovo would have been slaughtered by a war criminal, Saddam Hussein (another war criminal) would have killed even more innocent people and he also allowed LGBT people to be in legal civil partnerships. The deaths in Iraq wasn’t a good idea I’ll admit but I’ve seen too many people here completely forget about the other things he did. Not to mention, he knows how to get things done (He won three elections and allowed the Labour Party to enjoy success it hadn’t seen since it was ran by Harold Wilson in the 60s and 70s). It’s an unpopular opinion and may garner some hate but I think he’d be doing a far better job than Boris is currently doing. Blair is actually smart and understands politics and gives educated, coherent answers even on issues like Brexit compared to the bumbling, scripted rants and blurts of the sexist, racist and inept pig in office now who I’d wager can’t even tie his shoe laces by himself (he can barely sort his hair out or string a sentence together). I’d personally be happy to see him return to power.

    • @dreamer2260
      @dreamer2260 Před 2 lety

      Bloody well said. I'd vote for him in an instant. Sadly it's extremely unlikely. But yes he's always interesting to listen to.

    • @maureenstarr5744
      @maureenstarr5744 Před 25 dny

      Devolution was a very bad mistake for this country and also so many going to University and indoctrinated. The Labour are not for working class anymore

  • @jacamodotcom650
    @jacamodotcom650 Před 4 lety +58

    *THIS IS WHY I DON'T PAY ME TV LICENCE*

    • @yamabushi170
      @yamabushi170 Před 4 lety +8

      I've built a lovely thick pile of threatening letters from TV licencing. I love reading through them from time to time and laughing.

    • @RiverIvy
      @RiverIvy Před 4 lety

      @@yamabushi170 😂

    • @gilgammesh1
      @gilgammesh1 Před 4 lety +2

      same.. same..

    • @importedmusic
      @importedmusic Před 4 lety

      *My you northern commoner.

    • @theone8789
      @theone8789 Před 4 lety +1

      What is wrong with this interview??

  • @harryh3203
    @harryh3203 Před 4 lety +17

    Labour lost the Scotland heartlands first.......was a sign of things to come.

    • @stunninglad1
      @stunninglad1 Před 4 lety

      Let's hope an ENP doesn't replace them in England.

    • @harryh3203
      @harryh3203 Před 4 lety +2

      @@stunninglad1 well the SNP is basically all about the idea that the English are bad people who are holding Scots hostage and ruling over them. A throwback to hundreds of years ago which is why some are antagonistic towards England. Its evident in films like Trainspotting and the rant about being Scottish. Without that kind of historical grudge I dont think you would get an ENP.

    • @citizensnips2348
      @citizensnips2348 Před 4 lety

      The media and politicians act like there’s no long game and everything is an instantaneous reaction.

    • @stunninglad1
      @stunninglad1 Před 4 lety +2

      @@harryh3203 Yes, an ENP doesn't bear thinking about. The SNP are delusional about their Independence agenda. It wouldn't work. Brexit has been hard enough to organize without the impossible task of having to split up the UK, too. That would be a nightmare and must be avoided at all costs.

    • @garydansie6625
      @garydansie6625 Před 4 lety +1

      @@stunninglad1
      Why?

  • @banksy2386
    @banksy2386 Před 2 lety +3

    What made Mr Blair such an effective revolutionary Marxist, is that he implemented the gramscian form of revolution. In fact he was so effective people still don’t realise what he did to this country. And it is the ability to look past his own desires and see what the electorate want or don’t want that meant he could be so effective. I say this through gritted teeth as a true social conservative….but it is present from the very beginning of this interview.

    • @susannamarker2582
      @susannamarker2582 Před 2 lety

      What do you think hacking hereditary peerage out of the Lords was about ? Straight out of the marxist playbook. We should put hereditary peerage back into the House of Lords. What he did was not a proper reform.

  • @Falco45able
    @Falco45able Před 4 lety +20

    It was a brexit general election, it gave the people the opportunity to show/ prove the first! If you remember he and people like him said we didn’t have all the information the first time, well they certainly made sure we had it for this ! And they got the definitive results! 😉

    • @TBrl8
      @TBrl8 Před 4 lety +1

      Falco 666 hope brexit makes all your wildest dreams come true.

    • @Falco45able
      @Falco45able Před 4 lety

      T B88 Ha,Ha, 😂

    • @alanglasgowbassist
      @alanglasgowbassist Před 4 lety +2

      T B88 you fucking idiots just don’t get it. Brexiteers voted to leave the EU because they didn’t want to to be a part of it. We don’t care if we are worse off or not. It is a price worth paying in our opinion. That’s what you guys failed to grasp when you were trying to get us to change our minds

  • @bittersweet7145
    @bittersweet7145 Před 4 lety +7

    I feel sick - I think I just largely agreed with Blair! Hypocrisy on talking about being in touch with working people with his Brexit stance aside that is. Labour certainly need to move significantly further over to the soft left, at least for the time being. It also needs a strong, charismatic and competent leader that can bridge the divisions.

  • @bonir2003
    @bonir2003 Před 4 lety +40

    In the Australian federal election of May 2019, the Labour Party lost the "unlosable " election by over-promising on social services by an un charismatic leader. The ALP was actually ahead in the polls. Corbyn should have observed and taken note. It seems to me as an outsider that British Labour would rather keep their ideology than win government with centrist manifesto.

    • @blackout07blue
      @blackout07blue Před 4 lety +4

      In other words, don’t put up a candidate with a 25% Approval rating... charisma matters.

    • @blackout07blue
      @blackout07blue Před 4 lety +3

      “centrist manifesto” LOL. You’re a dumbass if you think that is what wins. Maybe centrist on cultural issues but not economics. Boris went left-wing.

    • @Ninjjadog
      @Ninjjadog Před 4 lety +2

      Yes, the charismatic leaders always deliver don't they?

    • @tommyhoul1han
      @tommyhoul1han Před 2 lety +2

      @@blackout07blue Boris is not left wing lmao

    • @tommyhoul1han
      @tommyhoul1han Před 2 lety +1

      Absolutely right, and the Corbyn line after the election, “we won the argument” sums it all up really

  • @sumukhhegde6677
    @sumukhhegde6677 Před 4 lety

    The way interview happened is a lesson for indian polititians and media

  • @brianocallaghan7172
    @brianocallaghan7172 Před 2 lety +2

    the guy is just clever and some people cannot hack that fact.like him or not he has a full grasp of what he believes in and has the vision to know how to persuade.he has a mesmerizingly quick intellect and you can see his obvious intelligence as he formulates cogent replies to questions on the hoof without stuttering or stammering.it will take a long time for labour to find his equal and he cares enough about the party he served to lament that fact .all in all I greatly admire him

  • @mhargz
    @mhargz Před 4 lety +11

    It really shows the dire state of politics when Tony Blair comes across as 'direct'... Like him or loathe him, he is a much more talented politician than this current crop put together.

    • @ryanfreda9671
      @ryanfreda9671 Před 4 lety +4

      Mike Hargreaves he has been direct, intelligent and thoughtful his entire career. Simply, now people can see past “war criminal” this “should be tried” that and actually listen to what this man has to say. He has always spoken sense, he’s an incredibly gifted and pragmatic politician and had to make decisions we couldn’t make as he was leading the whole country. It’s really beyond me why people reject Blairism (if that’s a word) and him as a prime minister - this country was fantastic when he was in power. Hopefully labour supporters will at least consider labour moving towards the centre again on certain policies.

    • @mhargz
      @mhargz Před 4 lety +3

      @@ryanfreda9671 I think it was a case of live and die by the sword... Labour would have unlikely gained power without the support of the likes of Murdoch, however when the UK press turned against him, the public displayed how fickle they can be. It never ceases to amaze me how the public blames the Iraq war more on Blair than Bush, yet the Americans were responsible for nearly all the 'heavy lifting'. The danger of the persecution of Blair over Iraq means subsequent politicians will always avoid conflict even when the implications of taking no action are worse. Society's current nature of cynicism rather than scepticism worries me...

    • @ryanfreda9671
      @ryanfreda9671 Před 4 lety +1

      Mike Hargreaves couldn’t agree more

    • @dreamer2260
      @dreamer2260 Před 2 lety

      @@ryanfreda9671 Absolutely spot on.

  • @davidyoung8157
    @davidyoung8157 Před 4 lety +9

    That’s right Tony Tell the voters they are wrong, you have learned nothing.

    • @Milkysponge
      @Milkysponge Před 4 lety

      Absolutely, he said new deal vs remain referendum when that is what Corbyn ran on and lost. Completely delusional.

    • @user-sf7kl9uh7k
      @user-sf7kl9uh7k Před 10 měsíci

      ​​@@Milkyspongeorbyn lost for being completely unsuited. He's a clown in old man's clothes.

  • @gronkmusic7973
    @gronkmusic7973 Před 4 lety +2

    She's taken off her glasses 3 times in the first minute-and-a-half. For pity's sake! Do you want to wear them or not? Are they the wrong prescription or something? Very concerning.

  • @ginskimpivot753
    @ginskimpivot753 Před 4 lety +3

    So, war criminal, liar - and hypocrite!

  • @lyndseychadwick7503
    @lyndseychadwick7503 Před 4 lety +10

    Iran iraq afganistan tuition fees wow how can u tie them together sad

  • @barongreenbackthe2nd418
    @barongreenbackthe2nd418 Před 4 lety +29

    The Turd has spoken.

    • @johnsumner1474
      @johnsumner1474 Před 4 lety

      The Labour leadership should hang their heads in shame for delivering a Tory Government

    • @MrGlobbits
      @MrGlobbits Před 4 lety

      @Christopher Poole Like the devil, truth with lies.

    • @freegedankenzurbaukunst5613
      @freegedankenzurbaukunst5613 Před 4 lety

      @Christopher Poole A WAR CRIMINAL giving advices

  • @Firedancer100
    @Firedancer100 Před 2 lety +2

    As for the unions what Thatcher did to the unions Tony Blair did not undo If he’d of been for the working class he would’ve done that straight away

  • @lknight5579
    @lknight5579 Před 4 lety +2

    A very skilled politician, I agree with him on every issue except Brexit. Which is a bit of a 'but apart from that, Mrs Lincoln, how was the play?' problem.

  • @ben70542
    @ben70542 Před 4 lety +29

    There’s no worse wolf than a punk looking for revenge.

  • @summerbankboy
    @summerbankboy Před 4 lety +103

    Hes like scrooge Corbyns ghost of Christmas past

    • @stuartkelly3106
      @stuartkelly3106 Před 4 lety +3

      Lol brilliant

    • @gartnavel89
      @gartnavel89 Před 4 lety +15

      "Blair is now a ghost, clanking his chains at dinners and symposiums, imprisoned for life in a world of irrelevance by his foolish decision to take Britain into George W. Bush’s Iraq War." - Peter Hitchens, 14-12-2019

    • @dean1039
      @dean1039 Před 4 lety +7

      Bojo the Grim Reaper...
      *Points to a tombstone saying "Labour 1900-2019"*

    • @TheClemcaster
      @TheClemcaster Před 4 lety +2

      @@dean1039 I wouldn't get too comfortable amidst your fucking great big boiler - plate; if you recall, post Major, the Tories became an unelectable shambles - not unlike the situation Labour now finds itself in.

    • @jameshodgkins559
      @jameshodgkins559 Před 4 lety +8

      Blair will be always known as a war criminal.

  • @RaferJeffersonIII
    @RaferJeffersonIII Před 4 lety +7

    The Bond villain returns!

  • @orsonkaart1853
    @orsonkaart1853 Před 4 lety +7

    I'd trust Blair as much as I'd trust Jimmy Savil , but for different reasons!

    • @throwow1014
      @throwow1014 Před 4 lety

      Orson Kaart the reasons arent too far apart

  • @robhingston
    @robhingston Před 4 lety +17

    Ask him what happened to dr David Kelly and and mr Robin cook ... The timing of the death seem very convenient

    • @sisiphas
      @sisiphas Před 4 lety +3

      Robin Cook died of a heart attack on a Scottish mountain. If you knew him, that would not have surprised you. Don’t spread stupid conspiracy theories

    • @steffanhoffmann8937
      @steffanhoffmann8937 Před 4 lety +1

      Conjecture. No proof.

    • @wtfusheeple5383
      @wtfusheeple5383 Před 4 lety

      @@steffanhoffmann8937 kelly death was a little odd,

    • @wtfusheeple5383
      @wtfusheeple5383 Před 4 lety

      @@sisiphas and kellys?

    • @ayeguyy779
      @ayeguyy779 Před 4 lety +2

      He was most likely murdered.

  • @ronpeel1878
    @ronpeel1878 Před 4 lety +16

    Jess Phillips for Labour leader ... now that would be counter-productive.

    • @splinterbyrd
      @splinterbyrd Před 4 lety

      I seem to remember that Phillips has some somewhat conservative views about white van man

    • @thomassmith2227
      @thomassmith2227 Před 4 lety +1

      I can't stand the woman, but in all honesty, she might be the best of a bad bunch. I would prefer Lisa Nandy.

    • @Treckorz
      @Treckorz Před 4 lety +5

      Theres a video on youtube with her and Jacob RM in Somerset exchanging dialogue. What comes out of that womens mouth is disgusting.
      She said that she accepts Jeremy Corbyn as her leader even though he's a WHITE MAN!!
      And then she goes on to say "As a feminist... if it's declared that two men have won the leadership and deputy leadership, whether they're great, whether they're brilliant, I will feel that the Labour Party is less for me."
      Where does such thinking come from??... it's so far from the typical brit in the UK.
      I'm an iraqi born man who came to the UK in 1999 and love this country. I cant believe English people dont retaliate enough to such nonsense. Even Jacob RM didn't criticise her for such awful prejudice thinking. Good look to the labour party with such radical left wih ideology. I prefer to go conservative.

    • @thomassmith2227
      @thomassmith2227 Před 4 lety +1

      @@Treckorz I've seen that!!

    • @WIllz2GOTA
      @WIllz2GOTA Před 4 lety +2

      Keir Starmer seems the most competent, he just doesn't have much charisma

  • @frankhughes7053
    @frankhughes7053 Před 4 lety +4

    "Realistic" "vassal state"

  • @andrewwalker3312
    @andrewwalker3312 Před 4 lety +2

    Why this guy doesn't just join the Tory party and get on with it is beyond me !

    • @helicongremory8480
      @helicongremory8480 Před 4 lety

      Because he's pro brexit.

    • @muttley8818
      @muttley8818 Před 4 lety

      @@helicongremory8480 Nah nah. Blair wanted us to stay in the EU. That means he was anti Brexit, not pro.

    • @muttley8818
      @muttley8818 Před 4 lety

      Err why does he need to? He already achieved more than Corbyn has or ever will. He won 2 elections. He was a Labour Prime Minister. He's not a politician anymore. He's not looking for re-election. But I'm willing to bet if Blair went back to Labour, they'd have a much better chance of winning...and they probably would. Corbyn and his band of Momentum merry people hate Blair. And not just because he won elections obviously. Put it this way. I'd vote for Blair over Corbyn anyday - even after Iraq.