Liz Truss - The SINISTER Fabian Society: Inside Tony Blair's DEVIOUS Plan episode artwork

EPISODE · Feb 8, 2026 · 7 MIN

Liz Truss - The SINISTER Fabian Society: Inside Tony Blair's DEVIOUS Plan

from The Daily Heretic · host Andrew Gold

👉 Subscribe to Heretics Clips for more unfiltered political interviews: https://www.youtube.com/@hereticsclips/videos Did Britain’s political direction fundamentally change under Tony Blair — and if so, what were the long-term consequences? In this revealing conversation, former UK Prime Minister Liz Truss explains why she believes the Blair era marked a decisive turning point for Britain’s politics, institutions, and sense of national direction. She reflects on how ideas associated with the Fabian tradition, technocratic governance, and international alignment reshaped the way power operates — often quietly, gradually, and without much public debate. This isn’t a history lecture. It’s a political insider’s reflection. Liz Truss lays out why she thinks the Blair years didn’t just change policies — they changed assumptions: about sovereignty, the role of the state, the limits of national decision-making, and how closely Britain should be tied to international frameworks. She argues that many of the pressures Britain faces today can be traced back to that period of transformation. Andrew challenges her interpretation. She responds by explaining how political culture shifted from voter-driven accountability to expert-driven management — and why she believes that shift left many people feeling disconnected from politics altogether. They explore: Why the Blair era still shapes Britain today How institutional thinking changed in the late 1990s and 2000s Whether policy became too technocratic and distant from voters Why trust in politics has declined over time And what that means for Britain’s future direction Liz also reflects on her own time in office, how different leadership felt compared to earlier eras, and why reversing long-embedded political habits is far harder than changing surface-level policy. You don’t have to agree with her conclusions to find this fascinating. Because this conversation isn’t really about one man or one party — it’s about how political ideas become embedded, how institutions evolve, and how long it takes for the effects of those changes to become visible. This clip offers a rare moment of political hindsight: a former Prime Minister stepping back to analyse what changed, why it changed, and what that means now. 🎧 Watch the full podcast here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hA17ma1SyZ0&t=1134s Subscribe for more conversations that look beyond headlines and into how power actually works. #LizTruss #TonyBlair #UKPolitics #BritishPolitics #PoliticalHistory #FabianSociety #PoliticalDebate #Heretics #AlternativeMedia #PublicDiscussion Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

👉 Subscribe to Heretics Clips for more unfiltered political interviews: https://www.youtube.com/@hereticsclips/videos Did Britain’s political direction fundamentally change under Tony Blair — and if so, what were the long-term consequences? In this revealing conversation, former UK Prime Minister Liz Truss explains why she believes the Blair era marked a decisive turning point for Britain’s politics, institutions, and sense of national direction. She reflects on how ideas associated with the Fabian tradition, technocratic governance, and international alignment reshaped the way power operates — often quietly, gradually, and without much public debate. This isn’t a history lecture. It’s a political insider’s reflection. Liz Truss lays out why she thinks the Blair years didn’t just change policies — they changed assumptions: about sovereignty, the role of the state, the limits of national decision-making, and how closely Britain should be tied to international frameworks. She argues that many of the pressures Britain faces today can be traced back to that period of transformation. Andrew challenges her interpretation. She responds by explaining how political culture shifted from voter-driven accountability to expert-driven management — and why she believes that shift left many people feeling disconnected from politics altogether. They explore: Why the Blair era still shapes Britain today How institutional thinking changed in the late 1990s and 2000s Whether policy became too technocratic and distant from voters Why trust in politics has declined over time And what that means for Britain’s future direction Liz also reflects on her own time in office, how different leadership felt compared to earlier eras, and why reversing long-embedded political habits is far harder than changing surface-level policy. You don’t have to agree with her conclusions to find this fascinating. Because this conversation isn’t really about one man or one party — it’s about how political ideas become embedded, how institutions evolve, and how long it takes for the effects of those changes to become visible. This clip offers a rare moment of political hindsight: a former Prime Minister stepping back to analyse what changed, why it changed, and what that means now. 🎧 Watch the full podcast here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hA17ma1SyZ0&t=1134s Subscribe for more conversations that look beyond headlines and into how power actually works. #LizTruss #TonyBlair #UKPolitics #BritishPolitics #PoliticalHistory #FabianSociety #PoliticalDebate #Heretics #AlternativeMedia #PublicDiscussion Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Liz Truss - The SINISTER Fabian Society: Inside Tony Blair's DEVIOUS Plan

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👉 Subscribe to Heretics Clips for more unfiltered political interviews: https://www.youtube.com/@hereticsclips/videos Did Britain’s political direction fundamentally change under Tony Blair — and if so, what were the long-term...

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