but he has sabotaged a Bill to ban hunting Fox yet carried by his Government

He abolished the hunting to Fox, "major political error" according to him, who has thrown in the streets of London of the thousands of followers. but he has "sabotaged" a Bill to ban hunting Fox, yet carried by his Government. The day of his appointment to the position of Prime Minister, may 2, 1997, he caught the foot in a carpet of Buckingam Palace and ended his fall in the arms of Elizabeth II. He failed smother in 1999 under the long embrace of the Russian President, corpulent Boris Yeltsin... And it is much amused by observing the French President, Jacques Chirac, convié at an official dinner in the presence of the Queen, empêtré in his explanations after stating that "it can trust people whose food is bad".

The autobiographical keypad that Tony Blair yesterday published in Britain and the United States is full of anecdotes and intimate revelations about his ten years at the head of the United Kingdom. But the bulk of the work is devoted to the war in Iraq and, domestically, in his political and personal rivalry with Gordon Brown. Even if they have observed more than about the slow and irremediable deterioration of their relationship of twenty-seven years, British commentators are apparently surprised at the virulence with which Tony Blair assassinated his former friend and political partner. "The Times" talks about a "ferocious attack" and note that the tension between the two men goes back to 1994 when Tony Blair decides to be candidate for the leadership of the party before the death of the leader of the Labor Party, John Smith. He relinquish more power for thirteen years despite the "exhausting constant pressure" of his partner. While denying the existence of a formal agreement between them for the sharing of power, he calls his rival of "brilliant mind" but also "type strange", "difficult" and "frustrating". To the point that Tony Blair says have thought to get rid of his Minister of Finance before waive, because that would "destabilized immediately and seriously Government." But also because, despite everything, he was convinced that Gordon Brown "was the better Chancellor of the Exchequer for the country". He claims to passing the paternity of the granting of independence to the Bank of England in 1997.

Very critical

Compliments stop there. Tony Blair is very critical on the policy of Gordon Brown at the head of the Government, as of June 2007. It accuses him of caving in to the temptations of Keynesian economics, focusing on growth at the expense of deficit reduction. The labour party lost the elections in May 2010, if, according to him, because "we were again the"old Labour Party"" while David Cameron was able to offer a "best economic program."

The revelations are less grandiose with regard to the Iraq, Tony Blair being already extensively explained the reasons for which he launched his country in this adventure. It says "unable to regret the decision to go to war", now that it was fair to topple President Saddam Hussein. "I remain confident that leaving Saddam in power was a more significant risk to our security than to overturn". But it deplored the damage caused by the conflict and was "deeply sorry for the shortened lives." Remorse or generosity, the profits from the book will be donated to an association which supports veterans.