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CHAPTER 44

Traditional NHS administrators …
Mays and Tan,
Journal of Health Service Research Policy,
vol. 17, supplement 1, January 2012, p. 135

Economists in the Department of Health
… Smee,
Speaking Truth to Power: Two Decades of Analysis in the Department of Health
(CRC Press, 2005), p. 26

Researchers, he wrote
… Ham, ‘Reforming the NHS from Within’, King’s Fund, 2014, p. 12


vast network of
…’ Blair, p. xxiii


Attendances at A&E
…’ Warner, pp. 122, 125

the cost of the IT project
… King and Crewe, p. 196


short-term imperatives
…’ King’s Fund, ‘Audit of the NHS under Labour 1997–2005’, 2007, pp. 20, 44


We succeeded in strategy
…’ Powell, p. 187


a real and imminent …’ The Times,
27 June 2006


Tony’s fascination with technology’
Powell, p. 175

To her alarm
… Reform, ‘NHS Reform: The Empire Strikes Back’, January 2007


We’ll put doctors
…’
Lancet
, vol. 369, issue 9,574, May 2007, p. 1,679


We consciously decided
…’ Powell, p. 300

she would be officially
… King and Crewe, p. 174


We were mired by
…’ Blair, p. 594


Eighteen months of
…’ ibid., p. 608


frivolous … Unfortunately for
…’ Powell, pp. 230–1

she had criticised Maria Hutchings … The Times
, 9 January 2007

Worse, it was clear
… Flesher, interview with author


Those dinosaurs …’ The Times,
8 May 2006

CHAPTER 45


I’ve always accepted …’ The Times
, 21 November 2005

To douse the uncertainty
… Keay, ‘Can the Market Deliver Security and Environmental Protection in Electricity Generation?’ Chapter 10 in Rutledge and Wright (Eds),
UK Energy Policy and the End of Market Fundamentalism
(Oxford University Press, 2011)

Despite spending £2.5 billion … The Times
, 26 September 2005

The result of Blair’s latest
… Rutledge, ‘New Labour, Energy Policy and “Competitive Markets”’,
Cambridge Journal of Economics
, 2007, vol. 31, issue 6, pp. 901–25

So far, only 2.4 per cent … The Times
, 11 February 2005

a ‘fantasy-land
’ … ibid., 17 May 2006;
www.oxfordenergy.org/wpcms/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/July2006-UKEnergyReview-MalcolmKeay.pdf


the (very small) risk
…’ ‘Meeting the Energy Challenge’, DTI White Paper, 2007, p. 132

The number of those suffering

www.theiet.org/factfiles/energy/uk-energy-policy-page.cfm
, pp.26–7


hopelessly, absurdly
…’ Blair, p. 533

Euro scepticism, he jibed … The Times
, 25 June 2007


around three times higher
’ Rickett, ‘Paper on Renewables’ Target’, 2007, p. 2


Overnight … our drafts
…’ Rickett, interview with author. During that period, the proportion of electricity generated from renewables grew from 2 per cent to 3 per cent. By 2015, it was 7 per cent.
www.theiet.org/factfiles/energy/uk-energy-policy-page.cfm
, p.22

CHAPTER 46

as part of NATO
… House of Commons Defence Committee Report, 8 February 2011


I returned to Afghanistan
…’ Butler, ‘Setting Ourselves Up for a Fall in Afghanistan’,
RUSI Journal
, March 2015

Others, including General Peter Wall
… House of Commons Defence Committee report, para 48, 8 February 2011

No one asked
… House of Commons Defence Committee debate, 29 March 2011; Browne, interview with author

Even Blair would say
… House of Commons Defence Committee report, para 55


had no grip on Butler’
ibid., paras 49–50

Britain was slipping into … The Times
, 1 July 2006


We’re going to a baseball match
’ Bower,
Branson: Behind the Mask
, p. 39


I managed circumstances
…’ House of Commons Defence Committee debate, 29 March 2011; Browne, interview with author

Success would require

www.iraqinquiry.org.uk/media/47317/lessons-identified-basraprt-06-07.pdf


We need to be shedding
…’ Dannatt, interview with author; Elliott, interview with author


Stirrup’s not prone
…’ Elliott, p. 207

He found no mention
… Dannatt, p. 291


War is not clean
’ Flesher, interview with author


It was always about Dannatt
’ Browne, interview with author; Dannatt, p. 263


haemorrhaging
’ Powell, p. 301


We need to get people
…’ Wegg-Prosser,
Guardian
, 20 September 2013


a disgraceful attempt …’ The Times
, 7 September 2006


Very well done
…’ Wegg-Prosser,
Guardian
, 20 September 2013


feeling utterly sick
’ McBride,
Power Trip
, p. 228

Their deaths were blamed
… Haddon-Cave inquiry, 2009


You sit down
…’ Richards, interview with author


sometime soon …’ Daily Mail,
12 October 2006


I wasn’t best pleased
’ Blair, p. 470

Both the chiefs and politicians
… Fry, interview with author

That explanation was … The Times
, 18 November 2006, citing interview with author on al-Jazeera TV


We spent most
…’ Powell, pp. 270, 276


lost sight of strategy
’ Cavanagh, ‘Ministerial Decision-Making …’, pp. 53–4; Elliott, p. 80; see Cavanagh, ‘Inside the Anglo-Saxon War Machine’,
Prospect
, October 2010

Shirreff duly wrote
… Shirreff, interview with author;
www.iraqinquiry.org.uk/media/47317/lessons-identified-basraprt-06-07.pdf


I dunno
…’ Boulton, p. 112

But Blair was waiting
… Chilcot, Fry, pp. 105–8


We’re loyal supporters
…’ Shaw, interview with author


the progress in Iraq is remarkable’ The Times
, 22 February 2007


You’re not security-cleared
…’ Elliott, p. 124


was just beginning
…’ Blair, p. 652


I was left with
…’ ibid., p. 571

CHAPTER 47


I want to get on …’ BBC News
, 29 January 2007


on top form
…’ Blair, pp. 593, 600


to lie for him’ The Times
, 13 March 2007


I have taken absolutely
…’ ibid., 28 February 2007


Mr Blair has made
…’ ibid., 9 September 2006

David Bell, the permanent secretary
… ibid., 15 March 2007


In schools, standards up
…’ Blair, p. 637. A TIMSS survey in 2011 placed England tenth out of forty-two countries

Alan Smithers reported that
… Sutton Trust, February 2013


the longest period of
…’ Blair, p. 637


right decision to make …’ The Times
, 2 April 2007


mishandling’ of the succession
… Rawnsley,
End of the Party,
p. 442


New Labour’, he said … The Times
, 2 January 2007


a new kind of politics
…’ Blair, p. 58

energetically denied that … The Times
, 1 June 2007


To an extent immigration
…’ Blair, p. 630

the retired chiefs turned
… House of Lords, 25 November 2007


I am right
…’ Norton-Taylor, interview with author


Mr Blair may be widely …’ The Times
, 2 May 2007


New Labour rather than the Tories
…’ ibid., 26 June 2007

CHAPTER 49

PetroSaudi being accused … Sunday Times
, 9 November 2014


If you have a safe place
…’ Hillary Clinton emails, US State Department


What’s Blair’s value?
’ Kalman,
Guardian
, 18 December 2012


I’m basically a …’ Politics Show
, BBC TV, 27 June 2011

he denied that he was … Financial Times
, 29 June 2012;
Guardian
, 2 July 2015

Two days earlier, Stephen Wall
… Chilcot, Wall, pp. 88–9

he offered his services … Sunday Times
, 29 April 2012

he had accepted $500,000
… Beckett, Hencke and Kochan, p. 254

personally ‘makes money’ … The Economist
, 20 December 2014

payments of £57 million … Sunday Telegraph
, 11 January 2015


With Tony Blair and his team
…’ ibid., 19 May 2013

Mubadala had reportedly invested
… Beckett, Hencke and Kochan, p. 208


shoulder-to-shoulder
…’ ibid., p. 194


The purpose is not to
…’
Financial Times
, 29 June 2012

the EU Commission withdrew
… The EU paid €7.8 million between 2008 and 2012


How hard would it be
…’ Alex Perry,
Newsweek
, April 2015


we have to understand …’ The Times
, 27 August 2013

Some suspected that
… Bloomberg speech, London, 23 April 2014


all the choices facing …’ The Times
, 27 August 2013

condemned Blair’s mission
… Kalman,
Guardian
, 8 September 2008

Blair looked embarrassed … The Times
, 26 November 2014


whose client needed …’
Hearst,
Middle East Eye
, 1 September 2015

  1. Abbas, Mahmoud,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
    ,
    4
    ,
    5
  2. Abizaid, General John,
    1
  3. Abu Dhabi,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
    ,
    4
    ,
    5
  4. Abu Ghraib,
    1
  5. Addis, Rose,
    1
  6. Adonis, Andrew: appointed education adviser,
    1
    ;
    1. and education policy,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ;
    2. helps with 2001 election,
      1
      ;
    3. looks for sponsors for academy schools,
      1
      ;
    4. difficulty of working with,
      1
      ;
    5. replaced by Mulgan,
      1
      ;
    6. appointed junior education minister,
      1
      ;
    7. on national tests,
      1
      ;
    8. takes advantage of Kelly’s weakness to push through TB’s education policies,
      1
  7. adoption,
    1
  8. Afghanistan: Clinton’s bombing raids,
    1
    ;
    1. Afghan asylum-seekers start to arrive in UK,
      1
      ;
    2. becomes target in wake of 9/11,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    3. Western attack,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    4. TB’s conviction it can be made democratic,
      1
      ;
    5. Boyce warns against invasion,
      1
      ;
    6. British troops deploy to,
      1
      ;
    7. TB pledges to increase British forces in,
      1
      ;
    8. Fry drafts plan,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    9. opium trade,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ,
      4
      ,
      5
      ,
      6
      ;
    10. fuzziness of Allied objectives,
      1
      ;
    11. British troop deployment goes ahead,
      1
      ;
    12. TB again given poor advice,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    13. PRTs and nation-building,
      1
      ;
    14. shortfall of UK troop numbers,
      1
      ;
    15. UK mission expanded to Sangin, with disastrous results,
      1
      ;
    16. confusion over chain of command,
      1
      ;
    17. escalation and mission creep,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ;
    18. Nimrod surveillance aircraft crash,
      1
      ;
    19. more troops to be sent,
      1
      ;
    20. TB defiant to the end,
      1
      ;
    21. see also
      Helmand
  9. Africa Governance Initiative (AGI): and Rwanda,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
    ;
    1. staff,
      1
      ;
    2. and Nigeria,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ;
    3. London HQ,
      1
      ;
    4. and Sierra Leone,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    5. and Liberia,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ;
    6. and Guinea,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ;
    7. possible conflicts of interest,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    8. and Libya,
      1
  10. African debt relief,
    1
    ,
    2
  11. agriculture and farming: foot-and-mouth epidemic,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
    ,
    4
    ;
    1. Ministry of Agriculture merged into Department of Environment,
      1
      ;
    2. New Labour policy,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    3. Rural Payments Agency collapse,
      1
  12. Ahmadinejad, Mahmoud,
    1
  13. Ainsworth, Bob,
    1
  14. air-traffic control,
    1
  15. Aitken, Jonathan,
    1
    ,
    2
  16. al-Assad, Bashar,
    1
  17. al-Janabi, Rafid (Curveball),
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
    ,
    4
    ,
    5
    ,
    6
  18. al-Maliki, Nouri,
    1
    ,
    2
  19. al-Megrahi, Abdelbaset,
    1
    ,
    2
  20. al-Qaeda: Clinton’s bombing raids,
    1
    ;
    1. 9/11,
      1
      ;
    2. bin Laden’s reaction to attack on Afghanistan,
      1
      ;
    3. no link to Saddam,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ;
    4. supports post-Saddam insurrection in Iraq,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    5. and Palestine,
      1
  21. al-Sabah, Nasser,
    1
  22. al-Sadr, Muqtada,
    1
  23. al-Shatti, Ismail Khudr,
    1
    ,
    2
  24. al-Thani, Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber,
    1
  25. Albania,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
    ,
    4
  26. Alberti, George: background,
    1
    ;
    1. on A&E departments,
      1
      ;
    2. watches Brown announce increased NHS expenditure to Commons,
      1
      ;
    3. advises Milburn on choice of NHS chief,
      1
      ;
    4. on Crisp,
      1
      ;
    5. on BMA,
      1
      ;
    6. on Reid,
      1
      ;
    7. recommends cost–benefit analysis on NHS expenditure,
      1
      ;
    8. on TB’s distraction from health policy,
      1
      ;
    1. on consultants’ contracts,
      1
  27. Aldred, Margaret,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
    ,
    4
    ,
    5
  28. Aliyev, Ilham,
    1
  29. Allan, Alex,
    1
    ,
    2
  30. Allen, Mark,
    1
    ,
    2
  31. Allen, Tim,
    1
  32. Amos, Baroness Valerie,
    1
  33. Anderson, Dr Iain,
    1
  34. Anderson, Ken: remit,
    1
    ;
    1. initial suggestions,
      1
      ;
    2. cataract operations plan,
      1
      ;
    3. relationship with Reid,
      1
      ;
    4. on target system,
      1
      ;
    5. relationship with Hewitt,
      1
      ;
    6. efforts sabotaged by spin,
      1
      ;
    7. helps uncover NHS deficit debacle,
      1
      ;
    8. on Bacon,
      1
      ;
    9. on lack of success of NHS reforms,
      1
      ;
    10. and search for Crisp’s replacement,
      1
      ,
      2
  35. Andrew, Prince, Duke of York,
    1
  36. Angola,
    1
  37. Anne, Princess,
    1
  38. Arab Spring,
    1
  39. Arafat, Yasser,
    1
  40. arms sales,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
    ,
    4
  41. Armstrong, Martin,
    1
    ,
    2
  42. Arnault, Bernard,
    1
  43. Ashdown, Paddy,
    1
  44. asylum-seekers
    see
    immigration
  45. Atkinson, Sir Tony,
    1
  46. Attlee, Clement,
    1
  47. Azerbaijan,
    1
  48. Aziz, Tariq,
    1
  1. Bacon, John,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
    ,
    4
    ,
    5
  2. Baghdad,
    1
    ,
    2
  3. Baker, Norman,
    1
  4. balance of payments
    see
    trade gap
  5. Baldwin, Tom,
    1
  6. Balkans
    see
    Bosnia; Kosovo
  7. Balls, Ed: as Brown’s adviser,
    1
    ;
    1. attends TB’s welfare reform committee,
      1
      ;
    2. Brown encourages to disparage TB,
      1
      ;
    3. challenges Le Grand’s market ideas for NHS,
      1
      ;
    4. and tax credits,
      1
      ;
    5. and immigration detention centres,
      1
      ;
    6. on foundation hospitals,
      1
      ;
    7. TB under attack from,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    8. Brown leaks handover deal to,
      1
      ;
    9. Brown discusses tuition fees vote with,
      1
      ;
    10. urges on Brown in fight with TB,
      1
  8. Bank of England, independence,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
    ;
    1. King’s inexperience,
      1
  9. banking crisis (2008),
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
  10. Barak, Ehud,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
    ,
    4
    ,
    5
  11. Barber, Lionel,
    1
  12. Barber, Michael: books by,
    1
    ;
    1. persuades TB to run education by targets and statistics,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ,
      4
      ,
      5
      ,
      6
      ,
      7
      ;
    2. other beliefs about education,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ;
    3. and A-levels,
      1
      ;
    4. and Independent Learning Accounts,
      1
      ;
    5. helps monitor immigration figures,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    6. to administer NHS targets,
      1
      ;
    7. Delivery Unit’s remit,
      1
      ;
    8. and NHS,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    9. praises Brown’s prudence,
      1
      ;
    10. and education targets,
      1
      ;
    11. unreliability of methods and data,
      1
      ;
    12. on Morris–Adonis split,
      1
      ;
    13. makes presentation on asylum-seeker statistics,
      1
      ;
    14. reports progress on health statistics,
      1
      ;
    15. lack of focus on finances,
      1
      ;
    16. NHS target system loses popularity,
      1
      ;
    17. appears to show improvement in education performance,
      1
      ;
    18. blamed by teachers for declining standards,
      1
      ;
    19. party piece,
      1
      ;
    20. education statistics plateau,
      1
      ;
    21. resigns,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    22. achievements assessed,
      1
      ;
    23. misleading nature of education statistic presentations,
      1
      ;
    24. drawback of his targets,
      1
  13. Barton, Rod,
    1
  14. Basra: conditions round,
    1
    ;
    1. initial British control,
      1
      ;
    2. British aid attempts,
      1
      ;
    3. TB visits,
      1
      ;
    4. situation deteriorates for British army,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ;
    5. British military police murdered,
      1
      ;
    6. communications with Northwood,
      1
      ;
    7. calibre of British commanding officers,
      1
      ;
    8. TB and Fry ignore chaos,
      1
      ;
    9. snatch of two undercover SAS soldiers,
      1
      ;
    10. British helicopter shot down,
      1
      ;
    11. deteriorating situation,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    12. Operation Salamanca,
      1
      ;
    13. Operation Sinbad,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    14. British retreat to Basra airport,
      1
  15. Bassett, Phil,
    1
  16. Battle, John,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
  17. BBC: and 1997 general election,
    1
    ;
    1. and the immigration debate,
      1
      ;
    2. and Gilligan–Kelly affair,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    3. Labour bias,
      1
      ;
    4. and Hutton inquiry and report,
      1
      ,
      2
  18. Beckett, Margaret: character,
    1
    ;
    1. appointed trade and industry secretary,
      1
      ;
    2. effect on her department,
      1
      ;
    3. and energy policy,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    4. replaced by Mandelson,
      1
      ;
    5. and foot-and-mouth epidemic,
      1
      ;
    6. performance as minister for environment and agriculture,
      1
      ;
    7. attitude to nuclear power,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ,
      4
      ;
    8. placated by TB in advance of Iraq invasion,
      1
      ;
    9. reaction to Commons vote for war,
      1
      ;
    10. achievements at DEFRA assessed,
      1
      ;
    11. appointed foreign secretary,
      1
      ;
    12. and Iraq,
      1
  19. Beckham, David,
    1
  20. Beckham, Victoria,
    1
  21. Bell, David,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
    ,
    4
  22. Bender, Brian: and EU single currency,
    1
    ;
    1. and Ecclestone scandal,
      1
      ;
    2. and foot-and-mouth epidemic,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ;
    3. on Beckett,
      1
  23. Benedict XVI, Pope,
    1
  24. Benn, Tony,
    1
  25. Berlusconi, Silvio,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
  26. Berwick, Don,
    1
  27. Bevins, Anthony,
    1
  28. Bexley Business Academy,
    1
  29. Bichard, Michael: and education policy,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
    ,
    4
    ,
    5
    ,
    6
    ;
    1. TB’s growing closeness to,
      1
      ;
    2. frustration with targets,
      1
      ;
    3. replaced by Normington,
      1
      ;
    4. considered for post of Cabinet secretary,
      1
  30. Bigley, Ken,
    1
  31. bin Laden, Osama,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
    ,
    4
  32. Birt, John: donates to Labour Party while still employed by BBC,
    1
    ;
    1. TB asks to draft plan to strengthen PM’s office,
      1
      ;
    2. ‘blue-sky’ report for Home Office,
      1
      ;
    3. and health policy,
      1
      ;
    4. TB asks to draft secret nuclear energy plan,
      1
      ;
    5. legacy of political bias at BBC,
      1
      ;
    6. TB asks to solicit five-year plans from departments,
      1
      ;
    7. and energy policy,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
  33. Black, Dame Carol,
    1
  34. Blackburn,
    1
  35. Blackhurst, Chris,
    1
  36. Blair, Cherie (née Booth; CB): character,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    3
    ;
    1. children’s education,
      1
      ;
    2. holidays,
      1
      ;
    3. unhappiness as PM’s wife,
      1
      ;
    4. and Ecclestone scandal,
      1
      ;
    5. on Guthrie,
      1
      ;
    6. dinner with Clintons,
      1
      ;
    7. at handover of Hong Kong to Chinese,
      1
      ;
    8. holidays,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    9. consoles Mandelson after his resignation,
      1
      ;
    10. holidays,
      1
      ;
    11. continuing jealousy of Hunter,
      1
      ;
    12. visits Kosovan refugee camp,
      1
      ;
    13. at Millennium Dome for New Year’s Eve,
      1
      ;
    14. stopped for travelling without ticket,
      1
      ;
    15. criticised for holidaying while Euan takes exams,
      1
      ;
    16. another argument about TB’s staff,
      1
      ;
    17. and front cover of
      Readers’ Wives
      ,
      1
      ;
    18. US visit to meet Bush,
      1
      ;
    19. asks again for Hunter to be sacked,
      1
      ;
    20. holidays,
      1
      ;
    21. Hunter still an irritant,
      1
      ;
    22. holidays,
      1
      ;
    23. trip to India with TB,
      1
      ;
    24. Bristol flats scandal,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    25. relationship with Caplin,
      1
      ;
    26. relationship with TB,
      1
      ;
    27. relationship with Brown and Campbell,
      1
      ;
    28. persuades TB to take tough line with Brown,
      1
      ;
    29. accompanies TB on Washington glory trip,
      1
      ;
    30. Marie Claire
      photo shoot,
      1
      ;
    31. and TB’s political allegiance,
      1
      ;
    32. watches Commons debate over Hutton report,
      1
      ;
    33. tries to stop TB resigning,
      1
      ;
    34. thwarted desire to launch ship,
      1
      ;
    35. holidays,
      1
      ;
    36. Ant and Dec give underwear gift,
      1
      ;
    37. boasts about TB’s sexual performance,
      1
      ;
    38. money-making plans,
      1
      ;
    39. bill for hair stylist during 2005 campaign,
      1
      ;
    40. speaks to BBC about TB’s likely length of tenure,
      1
      ;
    41. holidays,
      1
      ;
    42. denigrates Brown at 2006 party conference,
      1
      ;
    43. her farewell to the media,
      1
      ;
    44. desire for wealth,
      1
      ;
    45. and TB’s commercial work,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    46. furnishes South Pavilion,
      1
      ;
    47. own commercial activities,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    48. denies TB having affair with Strauss,
      1
      ;
    49. Gaddafi donates to one of her foundations,
      1
      ;
    50. and the Murdochs,
      1
      ;
    51. denies TB having affair with Deng,
      1
      ;
    52. sixtieth birthday party,
      1
  37. Blair, Euan,
    1
    ,
    2
  38. Blair, Ian,
    1
  39. Blair, Kathryn,
    1
    ,
    2
  40. Blair, Leo,
    1
  41. Blair, Nicholas,
    1
  42. Blair, Tony (TB)
    1. EARLY LIFE:
      education,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
    2. FIRST TERM:
      overview,
      1
      ;
    3. takes office and establishes government style,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ;
    4. core team,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ;
    5. red box work,
      1
      ;
    6. selects new Cabinet secretary,
      1
      ;
    7. relationship with Brown,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ,
      4
      ;
    8. modernisation strategy,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ;
    9. holidays,
      1
      ;
    10. Diana’s death,
      1
      ;
    11. Downing Street flat,
      1
      ;
    12. problems with CB,
      1
      ;
    13. other problems,
      1
      ;
    14. Ecclestone scandal,
      1
      ;
    15. developing interest in foreign moral crusades,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    16. Robinson scandal,
      1
      ;
    17. father’s stroke,
      1
      ;
    18. holidays,
      1
      ;
    19. Brown’s conviction he should have been PM,
      1
      ;
    20. worsening relationship with civil service,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    21. more scandals,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    22. holidays,
      1
      ;
    23. Simon tries to help with management issues,
      1
      ;
    24. Brown’s role in Mandelson’s first resignation irreparably damages relationship with Brown,
      1
      ;
    25. Richard and Judy interview,
      1
      ;
    26. reshuffle,
      1
      ;
    27. criticised for perceived elitism,
      1
      ;
    28. holidays,
      1
      ;
    29. confusion over personal agenda,
      1
      ;
    30. social equality agenda,
      1
      ;
    31. embarks on foreign wars with campaigns in Iraq and Kosovo,
      1
      ;
    32. his Messiah complex develops,
      1
      ;
    33. forces of conservatism speech,
      1
      ;
    34. relationship with Brown,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    35. popularity problems,
      1
      ;
    36. Cockerell film,
      1
      ;
    37. and fuel-delivery lorry drivers’ protest,
      1
      ;
    38. minor engagements in East Timor and Sierra Leone,
      1
      ;
    39. 2001 general election,
      1
      ;
    40. more rows with Brown,
      1
      ;
    41. Mandelson’s second resignation,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    42. befriends Desmond,
      1
      ;
    43. meets Bush for first time,
      1
      ;
    44. foot-and-mouth epidemic,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    45. another row with Brown,
      1
    46. SECOND TERM:
      overview,
      1
      ;
    47. retreats from sending Brown to Foreign Office,
      1
      ;
    48. holidays,
      1
      ;
    49. decides to stand firm against Brown’s demand for his resignation,
      1
      ;
    50. Brown goes in for backstabbing,
      1
      ;
    51. sets up three Downing Street divisions to manage and modernise the government,
      1
      ;
    52. instantly pledges support for Bush in wake of 9/11,
      1
      ;
    53. attack strengthens his feelings against Iraq,
      1
      ;
    54. build-up to Iraq war,
      1
      ;
    55. holidays,
      1
      ;
    56. his secrecy about his plans,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ;
    57. commits to Iraq invasion as key player,
      1
      ;
    58. flies to meet Bush,
      1
      ;
    59. unconditional guarantees to him,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ;
    60. more fights with Brown, over NHS and succession in particular,
      1
      ;
    61. Mittal donation scandal,
      1
      ;
    62. problems with Byers,
      1
      ;
    63. considers not fighting 2005 election,
      1
      ;
    64. NHS reorganisation rows,
      1
      ;
    65. money problems start to loom,
      1
      ;
    66. row with Brown over foundation hospitals and tuition fees,
      1
      ;
    67. build-up to Iraq war continues,
      1
      ;
    68. continuing secrecy and lack of proper advice,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    69. brushes aside all warnings,
      1
      ;
    70. holidays,
      1
      ;
    71. the first JIC dossier,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ;
    72. attempts to persuade Bush to go down UN route,
      1
      ;
    73. decides to win over the public before the Cabinet,
      1
      ;
    74. tries to prevent leak of foot-and-mouth report,
      1
      ;
    75. more failures to confront Brown,
      1
      ;
    76. scandals surrounding CB,
      1
      ;
    77. again retreats from sacking Brown,
      1
      ;
    78. countdown to Iraq war continues,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    79. decides extent of UK involvement in Iraq invasion,
      1
      ;
    80. war planning system,
      1
      ;
    81. vision of aftermath,
      1
      ;
    82. waning influence with USA,
      1
      ;
    83. authorises second JIC dossier,
      1
      ;
    84. globetrotting to raise support for war,
      1
      ;
    85. ‘hand of fate’ quote,
      1
      ;
    86. discussions about legality of war,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ;
    87. considers resigning,
      1
      ;
    88. speech to Commons,
      1
      ;
    89. strain of Iraq invasion,
      1
      ;
    90. Brown on attack again,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    91. row with Brown over foundation hospitals,
      1
      ;
    92. sacrifices Milburn,
      1
      ;
    93. wins battles with Brown over education funding,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    94. aftermath of Iraq war,
      1
      ;
    95. visits Iraq,
      1
      ;
    96. Gilligan and Kelly affair,
      1
      ;
    97. glory trip to Washington,
      1
      ;
    98. gathers new team round him,
      1
      ;
    99. tentative handover deal done with Brown,
      1
      ;
    100. Hutton report,
      1
      ;
    101. reneges on handover deal,
      1
      ;
    102. continues in denial over WMDs and civil war in Iraq,
      1
      ;
    103. meets Gaddafi,
      1
      ;
    104. row over military funding shows his real impotence vis-à-vis Brown,
      1
      ;
    105. struggles to survive,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    106. buys Marble Arch home,
      1
      ;
    107. poor health,
      1
      ;
    108. pledges more troops for Afghanistan,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ;
    109. Butler inquiry and report,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ,
      4
      ;
    110. announces will serve full third term,
      1
      ;
    111. holidays,
      1
      ;
    112. 2005 election,
      1
      ;
    113. lack of enthusiasm to carry on,
      1
      ;
    114. achievements in first two terms,
      1
      ;
    115. attempts to plan legacy,
      1
      ;
    116. nominates party donors for peerages,
      1
      ;
    117. moves against Brown, with predictable results,
      1
      ;
    118. Peston’s book attacks,
      1
      ;
    119. makes Brown election supremo,
      1
      ;
    120. self-humiliation during campaign,
      1
      ;
    121. exhaustion at end of campaign,
      1
    122. THIRD TERM:
      overview,
      1
      ;
    123. toys again with idea of sacking Brown,
      1
      ;
    124. sets up Cabinet committee to discuss health,
      1
      ;
    125. successful Olympic bid and G
      8
      Gleneagles summit,
      1
      ;
    126. and 7/7,
      1
      ;
    127. reaction to discovery of catastrophic mismanagement of NHS,
      1
      ;
    128. moves further into Tory territory,
      1
      ;
    129. more arguments over length of tenure and succession,
      1
      ;
    130. loses vote on detention of terrorist suspects,
      1
      ;
    131. row with Brown over economy and pensions,
      1
      ;
    132. pushes for deployment of UK troops in Afghanistan,
      1
      ;
    133. once more given poor advice,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    134. changes direction on education policy,
      1
      ;
    135. again under attack from Brown,
      1
      ;
    136. loans for peerages scandal,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    137. Prescott’s affair,
      1
      ;
    138. ‘bloodbath reshuffle’,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    139. increasing global travel,
      1
      ;
    140. courts Murdoch,
      1
      ;
    141. uses energy policy as building block for future career,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    142. confusion in Afghanistan,
      1
      ;
    143. growing personal interest in Middle East, and Israel in particular,
      1
      ;
    144. holidays,
      1
      ;
    145. escalation and mission creep in Afghanistan and Iraq,
      1
      ,
      2

    146. waning party support forces him to name departure date,
      1
      ;
    147. farewell to the party at 2006 conference,
      1
      ;
    148. Dannatt’s insurrection,
      1
      ;
    149. continuing belief in overseas interventions,
      1
      ;
    150. objectives for last days in office,
      1
      ;
    151. ongoing investigation into loans for peerages,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    152. more sleaze,
      1
      ;
    153. long farewell,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    154. legacy,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    155. Brown assures self of succession,
      1
      ;
    156. achievements assessed,
      1
      ;
    157. defiant about Iraq and Afghanistan to the end,
      1
      ;
    158. Iranian capture of Navy ratings,
      1
      ;
    159. last performance at Dispatch Box,
      1
    160. POLICIES
      see individual subject areas
    161. LATER LIFE:
      overview,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    162. intermingling commercial and charitable work, and their conflicts of interest,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ,
      4
      ,
      5
      ,
      6
      ;
    163. Grosvenor Square HQ,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    164. and security,
      1
      ;
    165. acts as unpaid envoy for the Quartet, trying to bring about Israel–Palestine peace settlement,
      1
      ,
      2
      ,
      3
      ,
      4
      ,
      5
      ,
      6
      ;
    166. financial affairs,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    167. new team,
      1
      ;
    168. property purchases,
      1
      ;
    169. affair with Strauss rumoured,
      1
      ;
    170. writes memoirs,
      1
      ,
      2
      ;
    171. appears before Chilcot inquiry,
      1
      ;
    172. alienated from British life,
      1
      ;
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