Robert Watts
Star musicians and your favourite Times writers at the Albert Hall
EVEN though it is eight months since he left Downing Street, Tony Blair has once again laid himself open to an unfortunate combination of the words “cash” and “honours”.
A Texas university with close links to President George W Bush will this week pay Blair thousands of pounds and hand him an honour usually reserved for Republican grandees and American war heroes.
Blair has turned down an honorarium that goes with the Medal of Freedom but has asked for a cash fee to speak to students and children from deprived backgrounds after the award ceremony.
He will become the sixth recipient of the medal awarded by the Southern Methodist University (SMU) in Dallas since it was inaugurated in 1997 in honour of a Republican senator and foreign affairs adviser to Bush’s father.
Presented every two years to an individual said to have “furthered the cause of freedom throughout the world”, the award places Blair in a select group including President George Bush Sr and Senator John McCain, the man widely expected to become the Republicans’ presidential candidate.
Retired Generals Colin Powell and Tommy Franks were awarded the honour, and in 1999 Baroness Thatcher became the first nonAmerican to receive the medal.
Blair’s citation for the award speaks of his “value-based, activist” foreign policy and his record in “transforming” Britain’s public services. “He received widespread recognition for his support for America after the tragedy of 9/11,” it reads. “Tony Blair transformed Britain’s public services through a program of investment and reform in schools and hospitals, resulting in more children achieving better school results and more people receiving faster access to healthcare, with improved survival rates for cancer and coronary disease.”
Blair, who was accused by left-wing opponents of being “Bush’s poodle” during his term of office, will be presented with the bronze medal at a dinner on Wednesday night. Afterwards, he will give an acceptance speech to 2,500 people, who have paid up to $60 (£31) for a ticket. According to Brad Cheves, vice-president for development and external affairs at SMU, Blair has waived the fee for his speech and has asked not to receive the honorarium usually bestowed on recipients.
But he said Blair – who is to be paid about £5m for his memoirs and has a lucrative sideline as a public speaker – asked for a fee to host a series of question and answer sessions with students and schoolchildren from deprived backgrounds. According to Cheves, Blair has also asked to have his expenses reimbursed. “Mr Blair has shown a very fine focus on giving opportunity and freedom around the world and can reach out beyond partisan lines and bring communities together. He is a person of great strength and dignity,” Cheves said.
“The event the next morning will be great for students, many of [whom] come from poor backgrounds. For many of them it will be their first time at a college and the first time they can properly meet and ask questions to a man of his calibre.” He declined to disclose the fee.
A spokesman for Blair confirmed he was being paid for the seminars but refused to comment further.
SMU has strong ties to the Bush White House. Ten days ago the university was confirmed as the site for the George W Bush Presidential Center. The project, expected to cost about $200m, will include a vast library of official documents from the Bush presidency.
Bush’s wife, Laura, studied at the university and serves as a member of the board of trustees. Vice President Dick Cheney has also been a trustee.
Although Blair has found time to collect the Medal of Freedom this week, he has not yet arranged to pick up the Congressional Gold Medal awarded by the US Congress for his support in the wake of the terrorist attacks of September 2001 and the invasion of Iraq in 2003.
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Bryan, It's actually SMU. Not The University of Texas. What was the point of your comment?
Colby , London,
Bryan could you clarify to the British that the University'sname is important to a lot of people reading this article.
A Brit in Florida.
M Hose, Deland, US
Mr Blair has shown a very fine focus on giving opportunity and freedom around the world and can reach out beyond partisan lines and bring communities together. He is a person of great strength and dignity,â
erm, remind me, did anyone find any wmd? which pm and govt has ripped apart communities and families in the UK through mass unchecked immigration and stealth taxes on families? i'd love to see the awards our american cousins would bestow on someone who actaully met their criteria.
paul, london,
One of the Blairs taking money for a speaking engagement - pass the smelling salts!
Glenn, Aberdare, Wales
Don't be silly. This is the same sort of honor that Britain routinely bestows on foreigners and citizens in the form of knighthoods. The reporter is reading far too much into the politics of previous recipients, considering the honor has only been around since 1997 and the Republicans have been dominant since 2000. Are we still to seek bogeymen in the honor once the Democrats are bestowing it?
J Cline, London,
I guess this is a reward for sacrificing his country's foreign policy in order to support Bush's war in Iraq.
Christopher Hobe Morrison, Pine Bush, Ulster County, NY, USA
As Blair's EU presidential war chest is topped up with US oil money the extraordinary legal process currently investigating the authorship and delivery of the '45 minute' speech to Parliament may rule him out of the job as untried war criminal.
Nick Ward, Cambridge, England
He was a traitor to the British people as far as EU and the WARS on terrorism and possibly a war criminal. Trust the US to honour him and the EU to give him a job
Alan, Chelmsford, UK
Interesting to note that while the Southern Methodists evidently think his war was a good thing, the former Pope argued against it - Tony's God is a very personal God...
David John Marusza, Islington, England
i'm not opposed to this but, could this be an attempt to make the Republican party look good? its extremly fishy to me
aya, Las Cruces, USA
Actually, It's University of Texas.
Bryan, Houston, USA