Politicians don't like to reveal physical problems. In
fact, they don't even like to wear overcoats, which might suggest
that they get cold like us ordinary mortals. So, it's no wonder
that British prime minister has made light of recent medical
problems. In October, Mr. Blair was in the hospital suffering from
an irregular heartbeat, and last week, he was back suffering from
severe back pain. Keeping a stiff upper lip, the press office at 10
Downing Street insisted that Mr. Blair's back troubles have not
caused him to miss a single engagement.
And yet. The strains of public office are showing on Mr. Blair,
now in his third term. British voters returned the Labor Party to
power on May 5 with a sharply reduced majority of 66 seats in the
House of Commons, with both the Conservatives and the Liberal
Democrats making significant electoral gains. Though a clear Labor
victory, it was not exactly a triumphant endorsement of Mr. Blair's
seven years in office.
As a consequence, both the ruling Labor Party and the opposition
Conservatives are considering their options for when Mr. Blair
steps down. The likely time frame is six months to three years down
the road. Labor activists, who have fiercely opposed the war in
Iraq, would like to see Mr. Blair gone sooner rather than later.
Chances are that he will stay through a British referendum on the
European Constitution in 2006. What the British succession will
mean for the "special relationship" between the United States and
Britain, this country's best ally in Europe will be of great
importance.
The man waiting in the wings of the Labor Party is Chancellor of
the Exchequer Gordon Brown. In American terms, Mr. Brown is
treasury secretary, the second most powerful office in the British
government. He has been Mr. Blair's junior partner in government
since 1997.
Mr. Brown has run the British economy very capably, in large part
inspired by the American, indeed conservative, economic model,
based on deregulation and labor market flexibility. Mr. Brown's
first move in office, for instance, was to make to make the British
Central Bank independent of the government, like the Federal
Reserve. During his tenure, Britain has achieved lower levels of
unemployment and higher growth rates, over 3 percent last year,
than most Continental European countries. This very unusual
achievement for a Labor government has ensured Mr. Blair's
reelection twice.
Mr. Brown hails from Scotland and would be a different kind of
partner for President Bush. He is intense, brooding, and very
sharp. Mr. Brown knows the United States and usually spends summer
vacations on Martha's Vineyard - though reportedly often in the
company of Democratic strategist Bob Shrum, who helped John Kerry
lose the 2004 election. Mr. Brown is fiscally prudent, believes in
welfare-to-work programs, but is also committed to a strong welfare
system. With his own hands on the levers of power, he might well
veer further left than Mr. Blair.
Mr. Brown is also one of the driving forces behind British
government's commitment to doubling international foreign aid
globally and he has helped make this goal the centerpiece of the
G-8 summit in Scotland in early July. On the war in Iraq, Mr. Brown
backed Mr. Blair policy of support for the United States, though he
would probably not be as strong a partner in another war. All this
adds up to a pretty mixed picture.
British Conservatives, meanwhile, are looking at Labor's weaker
showing as a chance to return to government in the next general
election - after what will have been a Tory decade in the
wilderness. Following the May election, Tory leader Michael Howard
declared he would step down, which from an American conservative
perspective is probably good news, as he managed to alienate the
Bush White House so profoundly with his attacks on Tony Blair that
Mr. Howard was barred from the Republican convention last summer.
Contenders for the Tory leadership include former minister for
Europe David Davis and Shadow Foreign Minister Liam Fox, both of
whom are well liked in Washington and would make good partners for
a Republican administration.
Invariably, British prime ministers have found it in their
interest to maximize the British-American "special relationship,"
no one more so than Tony Blair. It is in the interest of both sides
of the Atlantic to keep this relationship strong and healthy, which
one hopes his successor will realize as well.
Helle
Dale is director of the Douglas and Sarah
Allison Center for Foreign Policy Studies of the Heritage
Foundation.
First appeared in The Washington Times