Blair's sinister campaign to undermine the Queen

Blackleaf

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Blair's sinister campaign to undermine the Queen

5th September 2007
Daily Mail


No respect for the royals: The Blairs show their boredom at the Highland Games (notice Cherie yawning). Blair was critised many times for being too "presidential" as Prime Miniser.





In a provocative and important new book, the Mail's political commentator Peter Oborne paints a devastating portrait of Britain's new ruling class - an arrogant, out-of-touch alliance of MPs and other insiders who ruthlessly pursue their own interests, ignoring the public good.

Yesterday, he revealed the brutal attempt to destroy the ethics watchdog Elizabeth Filkin.

Today, in the final part, he reveals the insidious and relentless campaign New Labour waged against the Royal Family...


For a modern monarch to rebuke a serving Prime Minister is extremely rare.

The Queen has done it only once in her reign - and the object of her disfavour was Tony Blair. The telling-off came in the early days of the Blair premiership.

The occasion was the State Opening of Parliament which followed a few days after the 1997 election.

In a massive challenge to the authority of the British monarchy, Tony and Cherie Blair sought to capture the event for themselves.

They made the unprecedented decision to walk from Downing Street to Parliament while the Queen arrived in her royal coach.

This decision mattered deeply because the drama of the state opening is all about the Queen: her departure by stagecoach from Buckingham Palace, her arrival in Parliament through the Sovereign's Entrance under the Royal Tower, the putting on of the crown and robes of state before the final entrance to the House of Lords' chamber.

Although the famous ritual of the state opening theoretically celebrates the authority of the Queen in Parliament, in practice it is about something else.

When the monarch reads the Queen's Speech before all parties and both Houses of Parliament she is showing that the power of the British state has been thrown behind the ruling party.

She is demonstrating that the elected government has more than a factional programme and has a national legitimacy.

The Blairs' attempt to seize the limelight upset and disturbed the monarch, and in a rare and potentially dangerous rebuff the Prime Minister was asked not to do it again - an injunction that was reluctantly obeyed.

Later, friends of the Prime Minister presented the walk to Parliament as a chance decision made on the spur of the moment.

But by taking their walk from Downing Street to Parliament, soaking up the cheers of the crowds as they went, Tony and Cherie Blair were doing a great deal more than challenging the public role of the Crown: they were converting the state opening of Parliament into a partisan political occasion.

And although they obeyed the gentle request from the Palace, they continued to challenge the monarch both privately and publicly.

An air of understated but definite menace at all times lay behind New Labour's dealing with the monarchy.

In 1997 the New Labour manifesto gave an assurance that "we have no plans to replace the monarchy".

This undertaking - as the more intelligent courtiers grasped - would not have been made had an attack on the British monarchy not been on the agenda.

Plans to get rid of the Royal Yacht were at the heart of the election campaign, sending out what pollsters called a "dog whistle" message - not heard by everyone - that the party was opposed to the Royal Family.

In private briefings with allies in the Press, New Labour in government was openly hostile, with senior figures inside Downing Street freely attacking the Royal Family.

In private the Blairs and their official entourage showed a startling lack of respect.

For the first time since the Queen acceded to the throne in 1952, relations between senior members of the Royal Family and the Prime Minister became actively unpleasant.

This reflected a new attitude from the Prime Minister and those around him. His aides were capable of great impatience with royal procedures, often going beyond rudeness.

The worst offenders were Tony Blair's wife, Cherie, and his adviser Alastair Campbell. She would refuse to curtsy when she met the Queen, and was capable of blanking out senior members of the Royal Family when she encountered them.

She made no pretence at all that she enjoyed royal occasions, and often, through physical and other signals, made it clear that she would rather be elsewhere.

This private lack of respect towards the Royal Family came to be reciprocated. Once Cherie Blair told Princess Anne to "call me Cherie". "Mrs Blair will do," replied the Princess Royal.

This widespread private discourtesy was matched by a public failure to acknowledge the role and duties of the monarch.

Shortly after he was appointed Foreign Secretary in 2002, Jack Straw gave an interview to the Guardian in which he referred twice to Tony Blair as "head of state".

At one stage the Downing Street website described how the Queen enjoyed audiences with Tony Blair, and not the other way around.

The Treasury moved fast to remove the royal coat of arms from its logo and drop the initials HM from its official title. The change was said to "reflect a modern image under Gordon Brown's stewardship".

During a visit to Kosovo Tony Blair referred to "my" armed forces, oblivious to the important constitutional fact that British troops owe their allegiance to the monarch as head of state.

Meanwhile the Government set out to write the monarchy out of British public life, an audacious task involving the unravelling of 1,000 years of history.

The most important example of this was the very serious attempt by the Labour government to create a new national identity.

This involved disregarding the institutions of the state that had historically been at the heart of Britain, and replacing them by others, such as a new national day.

In a series of public statements Labour ministers argued that Britain should be defined by abstract values such as fairness. They never mentioned the monarchy.

A series of speeches by Gordon Brown about "Britishness" - an ugly and artificial word - systematically excluded the British monarchy, even though the Queen is head of state and the monarchy encapsulated Britain's long history better than any other institution, including Parliament.

As recently as June this year a pamphlet by the ministers Ruth Kelly and Liam Byrne explored ways of creating a new British identity.

The pamphlet cited local branches of the Sure Start child welfare initiative as important institutional statements of Britishness, but made only a cursory and passing mention of the monarchy.

The pamphlet showed how the new Political Class refused to recognise that the head of state could represent the nation with all its traditional pomp and splendour, while the head of government appeared in a more workaday role.

This very separation of pomp from politics has persuaded even some radical critics of the merits of the monarchy.

"It is at any rate possible," wrote George Orwell in 1944, "that while this division of functions exists, a Hitler or a Stalin cannot come to power."

Orwell's point was that the existence of the Royal Family prevented totalitarian movements from appropriating the symbolism of the state - a key factor in the rise of fascism and communism in the 1930s.

This symbolic role occupied by the monarchy was, however, an affront to the Political Class and in particular the New Labour government which came to power in 1997.

It swiftly sought to occupy the public space that had long been the proper preserve of the British monarchy. Attempts to intrude on the territory of the monarch were to become a repeated feature of the Blair period in office.

The death of Diana, Princess of Wales in August 1997 gave a massive opportunity for the Prime Minister.

The words he uttered on the morning after the tragedy, in which he expressed his devastation at the death of Princess Diana, were brilliantly chosen and widely praised for expressing the mood of the nation.

Members of the Royal Family had been trained from birth to suppress their emotions, exercise restraint and show dignity.

The political philosopher David Marquand noted that when Diana died "the royals behaved as they had been taught to do: as symbols of the state, quintessential inhabitants of the public domain, with all its emotional austerity and self-control".

Previous generations of politicians, had shown comparable restraint (and the Tory leader William Hague was criticised for an inadequate expression of grief when he made his statement about the Princess's death).

Tony Blair, in his response, was at his most formidable as a politician. By showing open grief, and by using the phrase "people's princess", he was opening up new ground and massively extending the territory of the Political Class.

Five years later, following the death of the Queen Mother, the Prime Minister sought to intrude once again into the public domain occupied by the British Royal Family.

Within 24 hours of the Queen Mother's death on March 30, 2002, Tony Blair was seeking to enlarge his public role in the funeral.

Downing Street officials persistently rang Lt-General Sir Michael Willcocks, known as "Black Rod", putting pressure on him for the Prime Minister to play a more prominent part than had originally been planned, including the astonishing proposal that Tony Blair should break with precedent and walk from Downing Street to Westminister Hall in order to meet the Queen Mother's coffin. This pressure was rejected.


Britain's current Black Rod is Lt-General Sir Michael Willcocks. During the State opening of Parliament, Black Rod is dispatched to the House of Commons where he bangs three times on the door with his ebony staff. As a reminder that MPs fought hard to gain independence from the Crown, the door is slammed in his face before he is allowed in to summon them to the Lords. Other Commonwealth countries, such as Canada, Australia and New Zealand countries have copied this eccentric British tradition (each Canadian state parliament has one)


Sir Michael also faced intimidation in the wake of the funeral. He refused to endorse the false Downing Street claim that Tony Blair had not tried to muscle in.

After he withstood constant pressure, Tony Blair's press secretary Alastair Campbell vowed that "we'll get him one day".

The problem for Tony Blair and New Labour is simple to explain. The ten-day remembrance period for the Queen Mother left him without a central role.

At state events such as the Queen Mother's funeral, the Prime Minister of the day ranked lower than politically far less significant figures such as the Lord Chancellor and the Speaker of the House of Commons.

This was not, of course, a threat to the Government: the funeral of the Queen Mother had nothing at all to do with politics as it had conventionally been practised.

But it was a challenge specifically to New Labour, because the commemoration period for the Queen Mother claimed back a part of British public life, normally outside politics, that New Labour has asserted as its own.

This meant that the queues for the lying-in-state were almost as disconcerting for New Labour as the grief for Princess Diana had been for the Royal Family five years previously.

The great celebration of the Queen Mother's life was an affront to the Political Class because it was a reminder of the existence of a Britain whose loyalties and allegiances went far deeper than party, but had everything to do with the love of Queen, country, village, school, town and family.

These allegiances were wholly compatible with voting Labour, Liberal Democrat, Tory or any number of other political parties.

They are not, however, compatible with totalitarian politics, which lays claim to space that lies well outside party politics as it has always been practised in Britain.

There is little doubt that New Labour in power yearned to make a full-frontal and lethal attack on the British monarchy. There is little doubt that only the sustained popularity of the Queen prevented it from doing so.

Had Prince Charles become king ten years ago, New Labour and the Political Class would have taken advantage of any weakness to strip the Royal Family of its remaining public role, and given a much fuller expression to its private republicanism.


Extracted from THE TRIUMPH OF THE POLITICAL CLASS by Peter Oborne, published by Simon & Schuster on September 17 at £18.99. & Peter Oborne 2007. To order a copy at £17.10 (p&p free), call 0845 606 4213

dailymail.co.uk
 
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Zzarchov

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Aug 28, 2006
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How is it a waste of 1's and 0's?

This is CANADIAN content, for all the thousands of posts about Bush and America I have yet to see one "What a waste of 1's and 0's".

The Queen is our head of state and this does impact us, as a strip of the monarchy in the UK will no doubt lead to calls for it here.
 

Twila

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Latest studies suggest yawing is the bodies way of cooling the brain.
 

I think not

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It didn't take long for a thread to turn into another US bashing did it?

Some of you are really pathetic.

By the way ger, New York is still standing, suck it up. :smile:
 

Zzarchov

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Well, The thread immediately started by bashing the concept that Canadians on a Canadian Content Forum, might care about their head of state more than yours.

So I think its unfair to complain about Anti-americanism when the first post (after the OP) is an American Trolling.
 

gerryh

Time Out
Nov 21, 2004
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It didn't take long for a thread to turn into another US bashing did it?

Some of you are really pathetic.

By the way ger, New York is still standing, suck it up. :smile:


Well ITN....if you "mericans" don't want to be "bashed", maybe consider getting your compatriots to do the same.
 

s_lone

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Feb 16, 2005
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Well, The thread immediately started by bashing the concept that Canadians on a Canadian Content Forum, might care about their head of state more than yours.

So I think its unfair to complain about Anti-americanism when the first post (after the OP) is an American Trolling.

Hmmm...?

I'm perplexed... what do you mean by the fact that my post was an American Trolling?
 

Outta here

Senate Member
Jul 8, 2005
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New York still standing after 9/11 is a waste.

Is this supposed to be a joke?

Wikkipedia sez there's 8.2 MILLION people living in New York. You'd wish them all dead?

I'm lost for words.

ITN, he doesn't speak for all Canadians... in fact very few, if any.
 

Zzarchov

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Aug 28, 2006
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Hmmm...?

I'm perplexed... what do you mean by the fact that my post was an American Trolling?

I mean just that, the first response to the OP, was an American who was Trolling.

Except somehow, I didn't see you had pre-ceded EagleSmack..which makes your puzzlement all make sense...

My Bad.
 

gerryh

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Nov 21, 2004
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Is this supposed to be a joke?

Wikkipedia sez there's 8.2 MILLION people living in New York. You'd wish them all dead?

I'm lost for words.

ITN, he doesn't speak for all Canadians... in fact very few, if any.


As much of a joke as Eagle_Smacks post. Or did you, as a Canadian, not find anything wrong with his post?
 

Outta here

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Jul 8, 2005
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As much of a joke as Eagle_Smacks post. Or did you, as a Canadian, not find anything wrong with his post?

Huh? The only post I see by ES in this thread is one expressing an attitude of boredom towards the Royals. Are you saying that's comparable to wishing an entire city wiped off the map? :scratch:
 

I think not

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Apr 12, 2005
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This is CANADIAN content, for all the thousands of posts about Bush and America I have yet to see one "What a waste of 1's and 0's".

The Queen is our head of state and this does impact us, as a strip of the monarchy in the UK will no doubt lead to calls for it here.

I cannot tell you how much I have argued this point on this forum over the past two years.

When I first came to this site, I came to learn more about Canada and converse with Canadians regarding Canadian issues.

Turns out you either have no issues OR the general perception from my standpoint that Canadians are obsessed and/or borderline paranoid about what goes on South is true.

Do a search and see ho many threads have to do with the US OR comparing Canada to the US OR just plain ol US bashing.

So if once in a while we feel the monarchy is an archaic tribal form of elitism, then that's our perogative.

And seriously, I can relate that you might have gotten a bit ticked at Eaglesmack, but is Royal Gossip really NOT a waste of 1' & 0's?
 

Zzarchov

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Of course you can think its a waste of space.

I think the US presidency is an archaic throwback to the Idea you NEED a head of state, abusing the very principles of democracy by turning somone into a king AND unlike us, giving them real power.

Democratic principles are much stronger without someone who has unilateral power, even if elected. Lets not forget, the word Tyrant refers to an elected official with absolute power for his pre-determined term (I forget how many years, around 5 I believe).

Quite frankly, having a president is a redundancy that only spawns corruption and an extra chance at a dictatorship (as most countries with a head of state that wield unilateral power, such as presidents or empowered monarchs inevitabley become).


None the less, I wouldn't go to US politics.com and troll by commenting how their politic institution is stupid, poorly designed and meant as a way to mollify the populace with a "The leader" and is doomed to lead to dictatorship.


Get rid of the Governor General/President/King/Queen and run things where no one person has the final say, far less room for corruption (basic Internal controls).

That being said, if we must have a head of state, I like a powerless shared monarch rather than an incredibley powerful populist with a divisive partisan rise to power (as most presidents by way of political process need be)
 

Curiosity

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Jul 30, 2005
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Many of the Canadians I trade posts with on other forums originating in the U.S. don't seem to generate the animosity carried here as national pride or some quirk of north of the 49th shadenfreude.

The Canadians make comparisons between the nations, such as the health care situation and they discuss trade issues and defense sharing but generally it is a nice learning process and I hide out in those places to get through some of the hurt delivered by Canadians who get off on ill informed insult.

Canada isn't like that in my mind - it is a good nation filled with the best of people from all over the world and I feel privileged to have that solid background during my growing up - Canadians know how to deliver substance and worth - and only falter when they get all sticky over the U.S. which seems such an impotent argument.... as many of the opinions solve nothing at all... only seeking to inflame.

I am also grateful I still belong to a family of over 200 immediate relations and many lifelong friends residing in Canada, and they are pleased I continue to keep up to date as best I can on Canadian issues through the internet.