Nick Cohen appears to have finally made the transition for left-wing demagogue to Blairbot.......just as Blair is getting ready to leave Downing Street!
http://www.newstatesman.com/200609180017What is striking in retrospect is that, by the standard of what few positive leftish ideas were around in 1997, the Blair government hasn't been all bad or all right-wing. The middle-class left of the day went on about constitutional reform, and they got it in Scotland and Wales. Everyone on the left said the answer to whatever social question was raised was more money. There aren't enough good teachers: pay them more. Waiting lists are too long: spend more on the NHS. There is too much poverty: increase benefits. All this has happened. Between 1997 and 2005, Britain had the second-largest overall increase in public spending of any advanced country. At Blair's insistence, spending on health was raised to the European Union average.
The edginess of much conversation on the left today may be explained by the fact that, far from being new Labour, this administration's tax-and-spend policies have tested old Labour ideas to the point of destruction. All the justified complaints about management consultants and the wasteful private finance initiative, and all the undoubted improvements in, say, healthcare, can't hide a gnawing doubt that the public has not got a big enough bang for its buck. The next generation of politicians, from whatever party, will look at this and be less inclined than ever to pour resources into state monopolies.
The opprobrium that followed Iraq may have finished Blair off, but it misses the point that here, too, he was behaving like a man of the left. The idea that you should confront dictatorial and genocidal regimes was a reaction against John Major's Tories. Douglas Hurd and Malcolm Rifkind made me and many others ashamed of our country as they manoeuvred through the foreign ministries of Europe to stop effective action being taken against the Serb ethnic cleansers in Bosnia. Sometimes by accident and sometimes design, Blair has been the standard-bearer of the ideas of post-cold war humanitarian intervention that developed at the time. British troops were used not only in the checking of Slobodan Milosevic's armies in Kosovo, but in the ending of the Indonesian occupation of East Timor (a good old cause of the left), the overthrow of the psych opathic religious right in Afghanistan and the removal of an Iraqi regime that was responsible for one of the last genocides of the 20th century (and whose overthrow was also once a good old cause of the left). You may not like the consequences, but my point is simply that Blair's behaviour is not necessarily as aberrant as it seems.
Just as I'm sure his successor is going to be less willing to put money into public services, so I'm certain he will be less willing to commit troops to battle. Harder to change, I guess, is the expansion in liberty of the Blair years. This may seem an odd compliment to pay a government noted for its intolerance of everyone from fox-hunters to hecklers, but the Human Rights Act has had its effect, and the best memorials to this strange time are the gay couples kissing in the register offices, the shop girls who can't be fired for asking to spend more time with their children and the prisoners who can't be given punishment beatings in the cells.