Anthony Blair

Articles by Anthony Blair

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Codes today, law tomorrow?

  • 21 June 2007

From The New Statesman 29 August 1980 Tony Blair claims that one of his many achievements in office was not to repeal the employment laws passed by Margaret Thatcher's government to weaken trade union power. But Blair, as a young and politically ambitious barrister, was a staunch supporter of trade union rights. In this article, published in 1980, he even backed the use of mass picketing in strikes, something he later condemned as part of the unacceptable face of trade union power. Selected by Robert Taylor

Return to sweated labour

  • 14 May 2007

A young Tony Blair argues for the repeal of Margaret Thatcher's anti-union laws

Thatcherism, logic and the law

  • 11 September 2006

Taken from the New Statesman archive, 22 February 1980. When he wrote this, Tony Blair (for it is he) was a lawyer of 26 and still three years away from becoming an MP. It was one of several articles he contributed on legal themes around this time. The Prior he mentions is Jim, Margaret Thatcher's first employment secretary, and the MacShane is Denis, who was then president of the NUJ and whom you may read on page 17. The ISTC is the Iron and Steel Trades Confederation, now called Community. Selected by Brian Cathcart

Fidel Castro

The last revolutionary

The last revolutionary

Steve Richards

On Tory policy

Our future in their hands

Science

Religion and Darwin

Since the dawn  of time

James Macintyre

Miliband's dilemma

Brussels is back with a vengeance

Will Self

On Oscar Wilde

Where the Wilde things are

Film review

Bright Star

Bright Star (PG)

Books

Paul Auster

Invisible

Interview

Alain de Botton

The Books Interview: Alain de Botton

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