Latest Channel 4 News:
Third to use home for retirement
New poll suggests hung Parliament
Fears for hacker facing extradition
UK and Ireland optimistic over NI
Bono and soccer stars in Aids drive

Blair the brand

Updated on 10 May 2007

By Nicholas Glass

We look at the spinning of Tony Blair - the rock star politician who could seemingly sell anything - except Iraq.

So the ugly rumour is finally political history. As certainly as the hair will thin and retreat - he'll write his memoirs - and will be well paid for them. But did politics change under Tony Blair? How much did he shape his times?

The advertising industry persuades us to buy this and that. Together with some of their finest, we've been taking an acute look at how Tony Blair sold himself to the British electorate not once - but thrice.

As Tony Blair and his faithful bulldog ride off into the sunset all our admen seized on one early defining moment in his career - his speech referring to the 'people's princess' over the death of Princess Diana

All our admen and women recognised some of their own skills in the Blair government machine - impressively, ruthlessly organised - and much more professional than any British government before it. If the leader was presented as nice and trustworthy, his advisors seemed - well - Machiavellian.

The smooth road tested spin machine got its severest test - six years into the Blair Government and arguably, the wheels began to fall off - Iraq. As the guy visibly aged, there was a sense - as with any brand - that it was getting tired and needed refreshing.

In terms of Blair's legacy, our admen were broadly agreed on two things.

We - the electorate all feel wearily manipulated and that's meant a deeper cynicism about politicians and secondly that Tony Blair may well prove to be the prototype for a new breed of politician.

Send this article by email


Watch the Latest Channel 4 News

Watch Channel 4 News when you want

Latest Domestic politics news

More News blogs

View RSS feed

Queen's speech 2009

Snowcloud

Snowcloud: what was in the Queen's speech at a glance.

Blond redhead

Phillip Blond from the ResPublica think tank.

Is Phillip Blond the red under David Cameron's bed?

Cathy Newman on Twitter

Snowclouds

See how many times a word is used in key speeches, and in what context.

The Freedom Files

Freedom Files

Revealed: the stories they didn't want to tell.

Making a FoI request?

Channel 4 News tells you how to unearth information.




Channel 4 © 2009. Channel 4 is not responsible for the content of external websites.