Queen’s dislike for Tony Blair is ‘bed-blocking’ the honours system

Tony Blair ‘will be given a knighthood’ to ‘unblock’ the honours system for politicians who came later and are still waiting for a gong because of Queen’s ‘dislike of him’, sources say

  • Sources have said that officials wish to correct the imbalance in those honoured 
  • Tory politicians hold 22 and Labour four of the 102 current highest honours  
  • Blair angered senior royals with his handling of the death of Diana in 1997

The Queen’s dislike for Tony Blair is ‘bed-blocking’ the honours system as gongs cannot be given to politicians who succeeded him without him getting them too, sources have said. 

The former Labour PM is likely to be offered a knighthood in a bid to solve the problem, it was reported this morning.

Almost all former Prime Ministers before Blair were afforded the Order of the Garter by the Queen however he is still waiting for that honour 13 years after leaving Downing Street.

Buckingham Palace is planning to give more honours to Labour politicians after concerns some senior party figures are being blocked due to the Queen's dislike for Tony Blair

Buckingham Palace is planning to give more honours to Labour politicians after concerns some senior party figures are being blocked due to the Queen's dislike for Tony Blair

Buckingham Palace is planning to give more honours to Labour politicians after concerns some senior party figures are being blocked due to the Queen’s dislike for Tony Blair

Relations between Blair and the Palace have been strained since the aftermath of the death of Princess Diana in 1997.  

But the Queen’s apparent snub to Blair is causing the knock-on effect of Gordon Brown, David Cameron and Theresa May also yet to be given the traditional honour.

Courtiers are reportedly keen to address a political imbalance because, for the four most coveted honours, Tories outnumber their Labour counterparts by more than five to one. 

The Sun reported Blair is likely to be made Sir Tony in a bid to clear the bottleneck and allow more politicians from the past decade to be recognised.  

‘There is concern in the palace that the senior orders are beginning to look politically unbalanced,’ a source told the Sunday Times.

Of the 102 posts across the highest honours – the Order of the Garter, the Order of the Thistle, the Order of Merit and the Order of Companions of Honour – Tories hold 22, Labour only four and the Lib Dems three.

All but one of the Queen's nine prime ministers before Blair was made a Knight of the Garter

All but one of the Queen's nine prime ministers before Blair was made a Knight of the Garter

All but one of the Queen’s nine prime ministers before Blair was made a Knight of the Garter

All but one of the Queen’s prime ministers before Blair was made a Knight of the Garter. The only exception was Alec Douglas-Home who was given Order of the Thistle.

The Order of the Garter,  the grandest order of chivalry, was created in 1348 by Edward III and is limited to 24 people at any one time. It is personally bestowed by the Monarch.

Members of the Order have an allocated seat at the Royal Chapel of St George’s, Windsor. 

The Queen is thought to have had a strained relationship with Blair throughout his 10 years in office during which he was said to have angered senior royals with his handling of Princess Diana’s death.  

Blair’s predecessor Sir John Major, who only won one election, was awarded the honour in 2005 – eight years after leaving office.

Courtiers are suggesting Brown is made a Knight of the Thistle to avoid the embarrassment of making him Knight of Garter ahead of Blair. 

‘Blair is the block because they just won’t do it,’ the source said.

‘Which means Brown and Theresa May, who they think should have something, are blocked. They could leapfrog him but they’re now looking at giving Brown the Thistle because he is Scottish.’  

The plan to rebalance the honours could see Labour figures such as former deputy prime ministers Lord Prescott, Lord Blunkett and Harriet Harman also benefit.   

Shortly after the death of Diana, Blair told a BBC One documentary that it was ‘very difficult to work out exactly what the Queen was thinking at this time.’

He said: ‘I think she was resistant to anything that struck her as false or struck her as a public relations event in the face of something that was a profound personal tragedy.

Gordon Brown was in line to receive the Order of the Garter - an honour created by Edward III in 1348 - but efforts have been stopped as The Queen 'is reluctant' to give the same honour to Blair

Gordon Brown was in line to receive the Order of the Garter - an honour created by Edward III in 1348 - but efforts have been stopped as The Queen 'is reluctant' to give the same honour to Blair

Gordon Brown was in line to receive the Order of the Garter – an honour created by Edward III in 1348 – but efforts have been stopped as The Queen ‘is reluctant’ to give the same honour to Blair

‘Princess Diana’s relationship that she had with the monarchy and the relationship with Prince Charles, there was going to be a risk that the country’ s sense of loss turned to a sense of anger and grievance and then turned against the monarchy. So the first conversation with the Queen was an important conversation.

‘She was obviously very sad about Diana. She was concerned about the monarchy itself because the Queen has a very strong instinct about public opinion and how it plays. ‘

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