I wasn’t qualified to be PM, admits Blair – and I didn’t enjoy it
TONY Blair has told how he did not enjoy being Britain’s prime minister due to the huge responsibility and his lack of experience.
The 67-year-old, who led the UK from 1997 to 2007, said it was ‘crazy’ that the person who moves into No 10 has often not worked in government before.
He said that he started the job at his ‘most popular and least capable’ and ended it a decade later at his ‘least popular and most capable’.
The comments were made during an interview with BBC Radio 4 for a new programme focusing on how the role of prime minister has changed over the last 300 years.
Mr Blair said: ‘I don’t think I did enjoy the job because the responsibility is so huge.
‘Every day you’re making decisions and every day you’re under massive scrutiny, as is your family. So I didn’t know if I enjoyed it.
‘The paradox is that you start at your most popular and least capable and you end at your least popular and most capable.’
Since he stepped down from parliament in 2007, Mr Blair has made a fortune giving speeches and advising banks. Recently he has re-entered politics, making suggestions on how to deal with the pandemic. The former Labour leader – who was only ever in opposition before his party’s 1997 landslide election win – compared his experience of becoming prime minister to a fan being appointed manager of Manchester United.
Mr Blair held the reins of government at a crucial time for Northern Ireland, and helped broker the peace process with then taoiseach Bertie Ahern, as well as the late DUP leader Ian Paisley and Sinn Féin’s Martin McGuinness. This was one of the highs of his career, but the decision to invade Iraq remains the nadir of the Blair era.
‘The crazy thing about the job is that it’s the only job I can think of in which the importance of what you’re doing is so immense and the requirement of experience for doing it is so nugatory,’ added Mr Blair in the fascinating interview.
‘The first job I ever had in government was prime minister.
‘I use the analogy of a football team. If you’re looking for the new coach of Manchester United and “I tell you what, we’re going to find the most enthusiastic and persuasive fan we can find and put in him charge of the team”. People would say you’re insane.’
The BBC programme also spoke with former prime ministers David Cameron and John Major, as well as to the current office holder Boris Johnson.
Recalling his own experience, Mr Cameron said the office is underpowered in comparison to other government departments. ‘Everyone thinks No10 is all-powerful because it is the office of the prime minister,’ he said. ‘But of course No 10 is very small, underpowered, compared to these massive departments of state. I remember joking after a few months that you spend far too much time trying to find what the government’s actually doing and quite a lot of time trying to stop it.’
The first of three programmes in the series airs on BBC Radio 4 today at 11am.
‘The responsibility is so huge’ ‘People would say you’re insane’