http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/politics/article6962649.eceBetter still, he can finally make a tidy sum himself. When he became an MP he took a big financial hit for the sake of his political ambitions, seeing his income cut in half. Thanks to his disastrously timed house purchases, he left office in debt. He’s wasting no time making up for lost earnings. JP Morgan pays him around £2m a year directly, more than 10 times his former prime ministerial salary. He gets another £2m or so directly from Zurich Financial Services, the Swiss insurer.
The coffers of his new private consultancy, Tony Blair Associates, are swelled by a total of £2m a year from the government of Kuwait and from Mubadala, an Abu Dhabi state-backed investment fund and green technology incubator. He advises both. There are deals in the offing in Saudi Arabia, too. Much of his work is spent using contacts to open doors. Senior Tesco officials approached him to help them open stores in the Middle East, but the deal fell through.
Blair is trousering another £4.6m for his memoirs, which will be out next year, once the last of the ink has flowed from his trusty fountain pen. In addition to the £140,000 plus expenses that he gets for speeches, it was widely reported that he was paid a £600,000 signing-up fee when he joined the Washington Speakers Bureau. Finally, he is entitled to a taxpayer-funded pension of £63,468 a year, which he has deferred, and receives an annual £84,000 allowance to run a private office. Small wonder, since leaving office, he has amassed an estimated £15m.
...
Ask Blair a simple question, such as: who owns the Bombardier jet he used to hop across the Middle East and then fly to Rwanda and back at an estimated cost of £200,000 and he gets terribly shy. “I don’t know. It’s not mine. That’s, er. You don’t . . . the only . . . Er . . .”
He has good reason to be coy. It turns out the plane is President Kagame’s. Travelling the world on a jet used by the government of one of the poorest countries on Earth smacks of self-aggrandisement and self- enrichment and is about as far from a mission to save the world as it gets.