Tony Blair
Tony Blair is a British politician, lawyer, jurist, diplomat, and autobiographer who was born in Edinburgh on 6 May 1953.
Blair's education took him through several institutions, beginning at the Chorister School and St. Peter's Boys School, before he went on to Fettes College in Edinburgh. He later studied at St John's College and the City Law School, laying the groundwork for a career that would span law, politics, and diplomacy.
Over the course of his public life, Blair accumulated a notable list of honours and awards from both sides of the Atlantic and beyond. He received the Knight of the Garter, one of the oldest and most senior orders of chivalry in the United Kingdom, along with the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Congressional Gold Medal in the United States. He was also awarded the Charlemagne Prize, which is given in recognition of work done in the service of European unity, and the Philadelphia Liberty Medal. Further recognition came in the form of the Dan David Prize, the Thomas J. Dodd Prize in International Justice and Human Rights, and the Financial Times Person of the Year. He also received honorary doctorates from both the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and Haifa University, rounding out an extensive record of international recognition.
Blair has worked across several professional fields simultaneously — as a politician, a lawyer, a jurist, a diplomat, and an autobiographer — and has operated primarily in the English language throughout his career. His range of roles reflects a public life that has moved between domestic governance, legal practice, and international engagement. The awards and honours he has received, stretching from European institutions to American governmental bodies to Israeli universities, point to a career that has consistently engaged with questions of international affairs, justice, and human rights, themes that recur across the different capacities in which he has worked.
Quotes by Tony Blair
Tony Blair's insights on:

A simple way to take measure of a country is to look at how many want in. And how many want out.

The best philanthropy is not just about giving money but giving leadership. The best philanthropists bring the gifts that made them successful the drive, the determination, the refusal to accept that something can't be done if it needs to be into their philanthropy.

Inaction is also a decision, a policy with consequence. The wish to keep out of it all is entirely understandable, but it is every bit as much a decision as acting.

However much the right honorable gentleman may dance around the ring beforehand, at some point, he will come within the reach of a big clunking fist.

Tough is the life my Dad had, his whole career cut short at the age of 40 by a stroke.

We know the problems, and we know the solution: sustainable development. The issue is the political will.

The blunt truth about the politics of climate change is that no country will want to sacrifice its economy in order to meet this challenge.

We will respect family life. We will develop it and encourage it in any way we can, for strong families are the foundation of strong communities.

By nature, I am a unifier. I am a builder of consensus. I don't believe in sloppy compromise. But I do believe in bringing people together.
