Britain's public standards watchdog has launched a stinging attack on Tony Blair, accusing the prime minister of undermining trust in politics after coming to power 10 years ago promising to be "purer than pure." A "cash-for-honours" scandal has dogged Blair's last months in office and he has twice been questioned by police as a witness. Blair is expected to stand down by July. Police investigating allegations that political parties illegally nominated people for state honours in return for loans are now also trying to discover whether any of Blair's aides sought to conceal evidence.
"I suspect Blair and his government are going to be as strongly associated with the loss of public trust as (former Conservative prime minister John) Major's was with sleaze," standards watchdog Alistair Graham told the Sunday Times.
"Blair has betrayed himself. He set such a high bar for people to judge him and he has fallen well below the standards he set for himself," said Graham, due to step down in April as chairman of the Committee for Standards in Public Life.
The independent committee was set up by the previous Conservative government.
In the latest twist in the affair, biotechnology businessman Christopher Evans, one of the Labour donors caught up in the scandal, has admitted discussing state honours with the party's chief fundraiser, Lord Levy.
But Evans, in a letter to business partners obtained by The Sunday Telegraph, said Levy never offered him anything in return for his loan to the party.
In January, Levy was arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to pervert the course of justice and close Blair aide Ruth Turner was arrested on suspicion of perverting the course of justice.
Both were released without charge.
In the letter to partners in his company Merlin Biosciences, quoted by the Telegraph, Evans said "It is my deepest and sincere conviction that I have done nothing wrong here at all and I have repeatedly made that clear to the police."
Evans, insisting that his £1 million (BD730,000) loan was motivated solely by his support for Labour, wrote: "I certainly did not do it because Lord Levy ever made any offer to procure a peerage or guarantee that he could do so."
Evans said he and Levy had discussed the issue of a peerage.
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British Prime Minister Tony Blair leaves 10 Downing Street 14 March. (AFP)
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