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Tony Blair slaps down David Cameron over Lynton Crosby comparison Tony Blair slaps down David Cameron over Lynton Crosby comparison
(about 3 hours later)
Tony Blair has slapped down David Cameron after the prime minister tried to fend off questions about the business interests of the Tories' chief election strategist, Lynton Crosby, by drawing a comparison with his predecessor but one. Since his departure from No 10 just over six years ago, Tony Blair has gone out of his way to be polite about his successors.
A spokesperson for the former prime minister, who is usually careful not to criticise his successors, said nobody could "seriously compare" Blair's work as Middle East envoy with that of a business lobbyist. But the former PM's patience finally snapped on Thursday when David Cameron sought to fend off questions about the business interests of the Tories' chief election strategist Lynton Crosby by drawing a comparison with Blair. Cameron said the former PM was a "good example" to compare to Crosby, saying "he does lobby me from time to time".
The spokesperson said: "Tony Blair does not 'lobby' David Cameron. You cannot seriously compare Tony Blair's role as Quartet representative, which requires him to talk to governments around the world about the Middle East peace process, to that of a lobbyist." A spokesperson for Blair then hit back, saying nobody could "seriously compare" Blair's work as Middle East envoy with that of a business lobbyist. "Tony Blair does not 'lobby' David Cameron," the spokesperson said. "You cannot seriously compare Tony Blair's role as quartet representative, which requires him to talk to governments around the world about the Middle East peace process, to that of a lobbyist."
Blair's office hit out after Cameron said the former prime minister was a "good example" to compare to Crosby. Asked by the ITV News UK editor, Lucy Manning, about Blair, who famously described himself as a "pretty straight kind of guy" in 1997 when he ran into trouble over grand prix tobacco advertising, the prime minister added: "Tony Blair is a good example. Tony Blair is someone who does lobby me from time to time on things like the Middle East peace process. Do I have to know who all Tony Blair's other clients are? If I did that, I don't think I've got enough paper in my office to write them all down on." Cameron's decision to draw a comparison raised eyebrows at Westminster. Blair meets Cameron in a formal capacity as envoy for the Middle Eastern "quartet" the EU, US, UN and Russia in which Britain plays a role as an EU member state.
The prime minister's decision to draw a comparison between Blair and Crosby raised eyebrows at Westminster. The former prime minister sees Cameron in a formal capacity as envoy for the Middle Eastern "Quartet" the EU, US, UN and Russia in which Britain plays a role as an EU member state. The prime minister is facing pressure after declining on at least 12 occasions according to Labour to say whether he discussed the government's plans to abandon plain cigarette packaging with Crosby. The firm founded by the Crosby Crosby Textor acts on behalf of the tobacco giant Philip Morris International.
Cameron spoke out after Ed Miliband depicted him in the Commons on Wednesday as the "Benson and hedge funds" prime minister when he refused once again to say whether he had discussed the government's plans to abandon plain cigarette packaging with Crosby. The firm founded by the Tories' Australian chief electoral strategist Crosby Textor acts on behalf of the tobacco giant Philip Morris International. Cameron mentioned his predecessor-but-one when ITV News's Lucy Manning asked him about how Blair ran into trouble over tobacco advertising in 1997 after the Formula One boss Bernie Ecclestone donated £1m to the Labour party.
The prime minister gave vent to his frustration after weeks of questions about Crosby during an interview with Gary Gibbon, the Channel 4 News political editor. Gibbon challenged Cameron, who was doing a round of television interviews in a west London police station to mark the fall in crime, to explain why he keeps "denying a question that isn't asked". In answer to questions about whether he has ever discussed plain cigarette packaging with Crosby, Cameron says he has never been lobbied by his election adviser. Cameron said: "Tony Blair is a good example. Tony Blair is someone who does lobby me from time to time on things like the Middle East peace process. Do I have to know who all Tony Blair's other clients are? If I did that, I don't think I've got enough paper in my office to write them on."
Gibbon said: "The question was: did Lynton Crosby in the room, during a strategy meeting say: 'Actually some of these bits of legislation rather clutter up the business of government and the focus of government and maybe it would be better to focus on other things.' Do you deny those details?" The prime minister gave vent to his frustration after weeks of questions about Crosby during an interview with Gary Gibbon, the Channel 4 News political editor. Gibbon challenged Cameron, who was doing interviews in a west London police station to mark the fall in crime, to explain why he keeps "denying a question that isn't asked". In answer to whether he has ever discussed plain cigarette packaging with Crosby, Cameron says he has never been lobbied by his election adviser.
The prime minister replied: "I don't recognise the conversation that you are putting forward at all, right? I have been very careful about what I have said which is to say he hasn't lobbied me on any of these issues and that is absolutely the case. Gibbon said: "The question was: did Lynton Crosby in the room, during a strategy meeting say: 'Actually some of these bits of legislation rather clutter up the business of government and the focus of government and maybe it would be better to focus on other things'. Do you deny those details?"
"So the decisions are my decisions, the government's decisions. You're trying to invent a set of conversations that somehow you think took place." The prime minister replied: "I don't recognise the conversation that you are putting forward at all, right? I have been very careful about what I have said which is to say he hasn't lobbied me on any of these issues."
Gibbon said: "I was trying to throw some sunlight the best disinfectant, as you called it. So we are quite clear: he never discussed this bill with you." "So the decisions are my decisions, the government's decisions. You're trying to invent a set of conversations that somehow you think took place.
The prime minister replied: "I have answered the question very, very clearly. I have not been lobbied by anybody on any of these issues." Gibbon said: "I was trying to throw some sunlight the best disinfectant as you called it. So we are quite clear: he never discussed this bill with you."
Cameron indicated that he may in the end decide to introduce plain cigarette packaging. "I think the idea does have merit and I think there may well be a time for it. But I took the decision with the health secretary that the time was not now." The prime minister replied: "I have answered the question very very clearly. I have not been lobbied by anybody on any of these issues."
Jon Trickett, the shadow Cabinet Office minister, sought to intensify the pressure on the prime minister by highlighting 12 occasions on which he had declined to answer whether he discussed plain cigarette packaging with Crosby. Cameron indicated that he may in the end decide to introduce plain cigarette packaging. "I think this idea does have merit and I think there may well be a time for it. But I took the decision with the health secretary that the time was not now."
Trickett said: "David Cameron is taking dodging the question to a whole new level. He has now been asked at least 12 times whether he has ever had a conversation with tobacco lobbyist Lynton Crosby about tobacco policy – and at least 12 times he has refused to give a straight answer. It's astonishing that the prime minister won't be clear about what conversations he has had with a man who is being paid by a big tobacco company at the same time as he is being paid by the Conservative party. Jon Trickett, the shadow Cabinet Office minister, highlighted 12 occasions on which he has declined to answer whether he discussed plain cigarette packaging with Crosby. Trickett said: "David Cameron is taking dodging the question to a whole new level. He has now been asked at least twelve times whether he has ever had a conversation with tobacco lobbyist Lynton Crosby about tobacco policy – and at least 12 times he has refused to give a straight answer. It's astonishing that the prime minister won't be clear about what conversations he has had with a man who is being paid by a big tobacco company at the same time as he is being paid by the Conservative party.
"The prime minister needs to stop taking the public for fools, and start being straight with people. If he has never had a conversation about tobacco policy with Lynton Crosby, he should just say so. If he has, then he needs to stop dodging and admit it right now. He used to say sunlight was the best disinfectant – but this suppression of the truth is making the whole government stink.""The prime minister needs to stop taking the public for fools, and start being straight with people. If he has never had a conversation about tobacco policy with Lynton Crosby, he should just say so. If he has, then he needs to stop dodging and admit it right now. He used to say sunlight was the best disinfectant – but this suppression of the truth is making the whole government stink."