The PM of the second draft

by Saleem - May 2nd, 2007
why read this?!fairly good.interesting...GREAT READ!oh give us MORE of this!!! ( 11 votes, average: 4.27 / 5 )
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I am in New York for professional reasons, at an NGO, and at my office there is a large format photograph of Tony Blair, mid-oration and in full liberal interventionist swing, hanging on a wall near the director’s office. The photograph is technically perfect: a low angle gives Blair the impression of speaking to the sky, his mouth syllabically articulate so that Americans swoon, his arms spread open to encompass his global theme, but the hands tense and half-clenched, holding power in his grasp. And arching above him, the NGO’s logo frames the shot.

But there is a problem with the photo: Blair’s autograph, written over his white dress shirt in thick black marker. The personal touch would be welcome, were it not for Blair’s assertion that he shall “cherish” the evening - this, surely, is disingenuous. Statesmen speak at many such events; they cannot be expected to cherish all of them, or indeed any of them. It is akin to asking a pediatrician to cherish every single running eight year old nose.

And so Blair’s emptiness as a politician is evident even here, in New York, even as I watch his dog days from across the Atlantic. They used to say about the young British generation that the Conservatives (and Thatcher) had been in power for such a long time, they had never known anything different, and that Labour in 1997 and Blair in Downing Street was a huge upset of the status quo. For me, this sound backwards.

I moved to Britain three years before the 21st century, but in truth, Britain’s new millennium started three years early. I arrived the day Princess Diana was killed, three months after Blair’s ascension, and so my Britain - the green, pleasant land that completely re-wrote me - has always been post-Tory and post-Diana. I am one of the few true Blairites of the world: and I am sensitised to his impending quietude. I regret watching it from afar. It seems I am missing a closing circle.

8 Responses to “The PM of the second draft”

  1. Saleem says:

    How are there seven votes yet no comments? Why is this so electorally popular?

  2. Sanisha says:

    i wanted to ask what the second draft is ?

    but you hardly ever answer questions, so i just voted.

    this is a great read, i like the detail.You arrived in London at a very dramatic time, must have been sucha great atmosphere ‘cos people were so unified in their mourning over Diana.Have you felt that kind of unity by the masses since then, 10 yrs ago?

  3. Mandel Cola says:

    Let it be said that I have not voted and yet I comment.

    I had always thought you to be British through and through. Tell me Sir, from whence do you trace your origins?

  4. Saleem says:

    Quick answers, for I’m deadlining it right now.

    Sanisha: there was no real sense of unity when Diana died, you should know that. It was an atomised experience of individual grief expressed communally via Diana, not for Diana. Whatever gap is inside the standard British heart was exposed and it hurt. Fill that with something, people.

    Mandel Cola: I’m half Persian, quarter British, quarter Canadian, grew up in Canada and the US until ten years ago whence I moved to England/London and became rather more that than anything else… and now I’m in New York, for some reason.

  5. Saleem says:

    PS the second draft is me - England wrote a second draft of me. Tony is my PM. So there we are. This is how I arrive at titles, thanks for deconstructing me, thanks a lot.

  6. Behi says:

    Princess Di’s death certainly shook up the whole of the UK population. Journalists, and the lengths they go to capture a picture or elicit information was seriously questioned during that time.

    What you have written about Blair seems to sum everything up I think about the guy in a nutshell! Although he’s made mistakes, his overall decisions, ethics and morals I feel were to benefit the British Community. He doesn’t seem to have the squirmy characteristic of normal politicians.

    How sad, he’s not going out with the ‘bang he deserves.
    After all he didn’t embrace the ‘hug a hoodie’ campaign devised by the Conservatives, which is utterly ridiculous.

    Well-written Sal. By the way, has the impression of Blair completely deteriorated in the US?

  7. Sarmad says:

    See that little skinhead, aged 10? Well, he is likely to be a threat to your children when he grows up. He will probably get violent. Lets beat him up now before he gets too strong!

  8. nemoDreamer says:

    there was no real sense of unity when Diana died, you should know that. It was an atomised experience of individual grief expressed communally via Diana, not for Diana. Whatever gap is inside the standard British heart was exposed and it hurt. Fill that with something, people.

    Wonderfully put.

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