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Prime Ministers
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1997 - |
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| Tony
Blair |
| Party - Labour |
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b-May 6, 1953, Edinburgh, Scotland
The son of a barrister, Blair graduated from St. John's College, Oxford, in
1975 and was called to the bar the following year. While specializing in
employment and commercial law, he became increasingly involved in Labour Party
politics and in 1983 was elected to the House of Commons. His entry into
politics coincided with a long political ascendancy of the Conservative Party
(from 1979) and Labour's loss of four consecutive general elections (from 1979
through 1992).
Entering Labour's shadow cabinet in 1988, Blair became the most outspoken of
those party leaders calling for Labour to move to the political centre and
deemphasize its traditional advocacy of state control and public ownership of
certain sectors of the economy. In 1992 John Smith was elected Labour leader,
and he appointed Blair shadow home secretary. After Smith's death in May 1994,
Blair was elected the new leader of the Labour Party in July. By mid-1995 he had
revamped the Labour Party's platform, obtaining unprecedented commitments to
free enterprise, anti-inflationary policies, aggressive crime prevention, and
support for Britain's integration into the European economy. Blair summed up his
reforms by describing the party as New Labour. Under his leadership, it easily
defeated the Conservatives in nationwide municipal elections held in May 1995.
Labour achieved a landslide victory over the Conservatives in the general
election of May 1997, and Blair became prime minister.
Weeks after entering office, Blair made the historic decision to grant the
Bank of England the right to determine interest rates independent of the
government. In June 1997 he announced that talks concerning the future of
Northern Ireland would resume and that Sinn Féin (the political arm of the Irish
Republican Army [IRA], a semimilitary organization that sought to unify the
British province of Northern Ireland with the Republic of Ireland) would be
allowed to participate if the IRA called a cease-fire. On July 19 the IRA laid
down its arms, and in December Blair welcomed two prominent figures of Sinn Féin
to the prime minister's Downing Street residence, the first time since 1921 that
leaders of the IRA had been received there. In April 1998 Blair oversaw the
signing of a peace agreement that led to self-rule in Northern Ireland the
following year.
At present, none of Tony Blair's papers are deposited at archive
institutions.