Quote ="sally cinnamon"Blair damaged his reputation with his wars and his foreign policy was bad and left long standing consequences. To be honest I expect most British PMs would have gone in with America to Afghanistan and Iraq however what grates with Blair is he seemed to be even more enthusiastic for war than Bush and he helped Bush presentationally.
However taking aside his foreign policy and looking at Blair's domestic policy he was a good and effective politician, and Blair's Britain was a big improvement on the Tory Britain of the 1980s and 1990s. I think he was generally in tune politically with where most of the electorate are, centre left but quite close to the centre, and authoritarian on law and order and security. I think there were definitely downsides, excess of reliance on target setting etc, but overall I think if most people are honest, even if they criticise Blair, if you ask them was Britain better under Thatcher, Major, Blair, Brown or Cameron, the vast majority of people would take Blair's Britain every time.'"
Bliar was incredibly lucky to come to power at a time when a period of sustained economic growth* was beginning and with an unprecedented level of public goodwill behind him. But his economic policies at least weren't centre-left, they were predominantly to the right of centre, with a smattering of centre-left thrown in.
I can never decide who is more to blame - Bliar or Brown - when it comes to running a fiscal deficit during a time of economic growth, and thus leaving the Treasury piggybank empty when the shatstorm hit and we needed to get the chequebook out to invest in public services to offset the economic contraction.
* built on foundations of blancmange, as it happens