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How Labour Became a Party of the

Super-Rich

With the recent Government departures of Peter Mandelson and Morgan McSweeney over the Jeffrey Epstein affair, James Bloodworth considers how the Labour Party ended up at its current juncture

The architects of New Labour – including Gordon Brown, Tony Blair, and John Prescott – fundamentally changed the party
Photo: Barry Batchelor

The Telegraph journalist Charles Moore once remarked that whereas Margaret Thatcher believed in privatisation, Tony Blair just liked rich people.

Unfair or otherwise, the New Labour project will be viewed by posterity as an attempt to make peace with the messianic capitalism of the 1990s. 

Spin doctor Peter Mandelson told the media that the Labour Party was “intensely relaxed” about people getting filthy rich. Blair himself boasted that Britain had “the most lightly regulated labour market of any leading economy in the world”. His Chancellor, Gordon Brown, claimed to have abolished ‘boom and bust’. 

From Coal Tip to Clean Energy The UK Projects Turning Former Mines Into Renewable Powerhouses

It was announced this month that the construction of a mega-solar project with a cumulative capacity of 2.1GW had been completed on the site of former coal mines – providing enough energy to power approximately 1.5 million homes.
Josiah Mortimer

From Tax Haven to Crime Heaven How the Isle of Man ‘Broke Bad’

Once upon a time, in the mists of Gaelic folklore, an Irish giant threw a great handful of earth at a giant from Scotland.
Dan Evans