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The vultures (sorry, press) began to gather early on the leafy street outside
Quinton Kynaston School in St John’s Wood yesterday. The rumour was that
Tony Blair was going to say something about his future. This was history in
the making. You cannot be too early for that.
We were. We had been tipped off as to the location (covering the Prime
Minister is like living in a very bad spy novel) by some disgruntled
socialist teachers and had headed up to North London immediately. We arrived
at lunchtime to scenes of chaos.
The police were everywhere. The men from the “barrier hotline” arrived and
started throwing crash barriers down with alarming gusto. “Move or you’ll
get hurt!” they grunted. Later they told us that this originally had been a
20-barrier job but then they had received a call to say “better make that
40”.
The satellite lorries were lined up in a row, spewing cables. The Stop the War
protesters shouted into a wonky megaphone. The street was a sea of light
blue, the colour of the QK school uniform. There were hundreds of pupils
roaming around. “Shouldn’t you be in school?” I asked one little boy. “No,
we’ve got a half day because of Tony Blair,” he said.
This seemed a bit strange. What is the logic there? The Prime Minister’s
coming, clear the school of pupils. The school claimed that it was an
induction day and so it was always going to end early for its 1,400
students. Only 50 (very well-behaved) pupils were allowed to stay for the
great “My Future” speech.
By the time that Mr Blair’s silky grey Jag swept through the crash barriers a
few minutes early at 2.13pm, everything about the event had been
micromanaged for the television cameras. The police had moved the protesters
and their enthusiastic band of pupils up the road, citing Section 14 of the
Public Order Act. The press had been corralled into our very own vulture
pen. We were not going to be allowed anywhere near the speech, obviously,
for that could lead to something horrendous like an unscripted question.
Downing Street allowed in one agency reporter.
On television this event may have looked good but, in reality, it was as cheap
as fake Rolex. Mr Blair emerged from one side of the Jag. At first I thought
he was glowing but that was only his tan. He gave us a wave. I don’t know
why because we weren’t waving at him. Perhaps he is practising for his
upcoming Legacy Tour or perhaps he has picked up this tip from the Queen:
when in doubt, wave. Alan Johnson, the Education Secretary, popped out of
the other side of the Jag. The PM still has one friend.
The 50 chosen pupils clapped and cheered. I began to wonder if they were being
paid. Round the corner, I could hear a faint chant of “Out! Out! Out!” from
the unchosen pupils and their Stop the War spinmasters. Mr Blair shook hands
as he walked up the stairs and then disappeared inside for his historic
moment.
It is very strange being on the spot at a major Tony Blair news event because
it is possibly only there that you know nothing. “I’m going to call someone
who can see a television,” said one broadcaster impatiently. Someone emerged
from the school with a plate of chocolate digestives for the police.
I was sad to have missed the actual speech because, from what I saw, this was
a vintage performance. He was on truly theatrical form. That furrowed brow
and that air of faintly bemused puzzlement. This was TB as humble leader of
the people. He did not talk to the camera so much as muse. There was no
interviewer to upset things, just TB talking to himself about himself.
He began with an apology. He used to find these difficult (remember the trauma
of the Iraq War non-apology?) but clearly things have changed. He
apologised, on behalf of the Labour Party, for the entire week, which “has
not been our finest hour, to be frank”. This set off alarm bells. When the
PM says he is being frank, it is exactly when you know he is not being
frank. Sure enough, he then said that this would be his last conference (I
think we knew that) and his last TUC (no tears there). He definitely seemed
to be signalling that he was going to set a date about when he was going to
set a date. Is that progress? Still, it looked good on telly.
BLAIR'S STATEMENT
THIS is the full text of what Tony Blair said during his visit to the Quinton
Kynaston School in St John’s Wood, northwest London:
'The first thing I would like to do is to apologise, actually, on behalf of
the Labour Party for the last week, which with everything that is going on
back here and in the world, has not been our finest hour, to be frank.
But I think what is important now is that we understand that it is the
interests of the country that come first and we move on.
Now, as for my timing and date of departure, I would have preferred to do this
in my own way, but as has been pretty obvious from what many of my Cabinet
colleagues have said earlier in the week, the next party conference in a
couple of weeks will be my last party conference as party leader, the TUC
next week will be my last TUC, probably to the relief of both of us.
But I am not going to set a precise date now. I don’t think that’s right. I
will do that at a future date and I’ll do it in the interests of the country
and depending on the circumstances of the time. Now, that doesn’t in any way
take away from the fact it is my last conference but I think the precise
timetable has to be left up to me and got to be done in a proper way.
I also say one other thing after the last week. I think it is important for
the Labour Party to understand, and I think the majority of people in the
party do understand, that it is the public that comes first and it is the
country that matters and we cannot treat the public as irrelevant bystanders
in a subject as important as who is their Prime Minister.
So we should just bear that in mind in the way that we conduct ourselves in
the time to come.
In the meantime, I think it is important we get on with the business. I was at
a primary school earlier — fantastic new buildings, great new IT suite,
school results improving.
I am here at this school that just in the last few years has come on by leaps
and bounds, doing fantastically well.
We have got the blockade on the Lebanon lifted today. You know there are
important things going on in the world.
And I think I speak for all my Cabinet colleagues when I say that we would
prefer to get on with those things because those are the things that really
matter and really matter to the country. So, as I say, it has been a
somewhat difficult week, but I think it is time now to move on, and I think
we will.'

Sam Coates's blog about Westminster, politics and spin
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