I'll be
president of Europe if you give me the power - Blair
Former PM consults old Downing Street allies
on campaign for new EU role
Patrick Wintour, political editor

France's President Nicolas Sarkozy and former
British prime minister Tony Blair. Photograph: Benoit
Tessier/Reuters
Tony Blair has been holding discussions with some of his
oldest allies on how he could mount a campaign later this
year to become full-time president of the EU council, the
prestigious new job characterised as "president of
Europe". Blair, currently the Middle East envoy for
the US, Russia, EU and the UN, has told friends he has
made no final decision, but is increasingly willing to
put himself forward for the job if it comes with real
powers to intervene in defence and trade affairs.
Blair, who is being actively promoted by the French
president Nicolas Sarkozy, recognises he would need to
abandon his well-paid, private sector jobs if he won. His
wife Cherie - often portrayed as seeking ever more wealth
and well-paid consultancies for her husband - is
understood to be supportive of him accepting the job.
Some Blair allies also say that he now recognises that as
envoy in the Middle East he is not going to be allowed to
become the key player in furthering Israeli-Palestinian
talks this year, and will be reduced to a role of
supporting political development in Palestine and
boosting its economy.
The president of the European council of ministers is a
post created under the Lisbon treaty. The president will
be the permanent chair of the council of ministers,
Europe's chief decision-making body.
Jonathan Powell, Blair's Downing Street chief of staff,
is among the former lieutenants he has met to discuss a
bid for the European role.
Some senior figures believe he could yet be a loser in
the carve-up of four big European jobs due to be
distributed at the end of the French presidency in the
second half of this year. Some claim that if the
commission president, José Manuel Barroso, wanted to
remain in post for a second term, it would be difficult
for Blair, a political ally and previous advocate for
Barroso, to hold the parallel, prestigious European
council job.
Decisions also have to be made on the appointment of a
new, "high representative" on foreign policy,
and the post of president of the European parliament.
Smaller EU countries are sensitive about key jobs being
taken by leading figures from larger countries,
especially from one that is not part of the eurozone or
the Schengen free-movement area, and that actively
supports Turkish membership, as Britain has. Some French
socialists have already come out against Blair, citing
his role in the war in Iraq. Former French president
Valéry Giscard D'Estaing has also expressed his
opposition.
It is thought that the German chancellor, Angela Merkel,
is not persuaded of the advantages of a Blair presidency.
The Christian Democrats have recently been politically
weakened in state elections, and fear a Blair presidency
might strengthen the German Social Democrats. Neither the
Germans nor the French would push Blair if they believed
his appointment was going to be opposed by Gordon Brown.
Blair himself is still doubtful that the role of council
president will become a powerful job, saying he senses
that even pro-Europeans might recoil from ceding power
from the nation state.
With most countries currently focused on ratifying the
Lisbon treaty through their national parliaments,
decisions on the powers of the full-time president are
unlikely to be made until the second half of the year.
Apart from Blair, two other candidates most often
mentioned are the former Austrian chancellor Wolfgang
Schüssel, promoted by Germany, and the current
Luxembourg prime minister, Jean-Claude Juncker.Guardian
Newspaper
AL;EXANDER
CHANCELLOR COMMENTS: Politicians who have a
weakness for money and the good life may be high-minded
in their political purposes, so the exposure of the odd
bad apple doesn't induce much cynicism in me. But the
front page of last Saturday's Guardian suddenly did.
Its main story, under the headline "I'll be
president of Europe if you give me the power -
Blair", was about his agonising over whether to go
for the new job as full-time president of the European
Union. Written by the Guardian's political editor,
Patrick Wintour, it said that Blair "is increasingly
willing to put himself forward for the job if it comes
with real powers to intervene in defence and trade
affairs".
This is the same man who claimed, as prime minister, to
be opposed to European federalism and tenacious in
defence of Britain's national sovereignty. But now that
the job of European president may be within his grasp,
his desire is for it to be as powerful as possible,
whatever the consequences for Britain; and he doesn't
seem to mind that the power he seeks could even stick in
the gullet of "pro-Europeans".
By the same token, he is reportedly unhappy with his
present job as Middle East envoy for America, Russia,
Europe and the United Nations because "he is not
going to be allowed to become the key player in
furthering Israeli-Palestinian talks this year, and will
be reduced to a role of supporting political development
in Palestine and boosting its economy".
Who could hope for more than a chance to help put
Palestine on its feet? But for Blair, nothing less than
being a "key player" in world politics is good
enough. Now that does make me feel cynical.
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