Multimillionaire Blair handed £1,000 to each of the candidates in Labour’s 106 ‘must-win’ seats, despite controversy over his highly lucrative work for authoritarian governments.
In a letter to candidates, the former Labour leader wrote he was giving them the money because he knew the outcome of their campaigns would determine the Labour Party fortunes in May.
Blair did not mention current Labour leader Ed Miliband in his letter. The former prime minister has previously criticized Miliband for being too left-wing.
He wrote: “I know how hard it can be to raise money to fund a local campaign, but for you, in one of our 106 battleground seats, it is even more vital.”
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“This is where the election will be won for Labour and that is why I am making a donation to all 106 campaigns.
“As one of our key seat candidates you know better than most the scale of the challenge we face, but I have every confidence that with your drive, determination and organizational skills, you will deliver a successful local campaign that will also see our party returned to government,” he added.
Blair’s significant donation was welcomed by the Labour Party.
“We’re delighted that Tony Blair has given so generously to the local campaigns in the battleground seats our party is targeting at this general election,” a spokesperson for the party said.
The large contribution to Labour’s campaign, however, raises ongoing questions over the source of Blair’s wealth.
Blair has been mired in fresh controversy in recent years, after his business transactions were linked to the governments of Saudi Arabia, Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan – all three of which are widely known for human rights abuses.
He also worked for energy company BP, advising on a new gas pipeline to connect Azerbaijan with Turkey and Italy.
Tory MP Andrew Bridgen tabled a motion in Parliament demanding former prime ministers be bound by the same rules of transparency and oversight as serving politicians.
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Speaking to the Sunday Times, he said: “Tony Blair has embarked on a career of personal enrichment and has blurred the lines between his public and private interests.”
“No other former prime minister has gone to work for other sovereign states. Mr Blair is still in public life, but is not bound by its principles, and that needs to be changed.”
Blair’s letter to candidates standing for election in key target seats was conspicuously quiet on current Labour leader Ed Miliband.
In an interview with the Economist, Blair suggested Miliband had swung too far to the left and was alienating business.
“I am still very much New Labour and Ed would not describe himself in that way, so there is obviously a difference there,” he said.
“I’m convinced the Labour Party succeeds best when it is in the center ground,” he added.
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