Tony Blair calls Matt Hancock 'courageous' for taking part in I'm A Celebrity

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 21: Tony Blair, Executive Chairman of the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change, TBI & former Prime Minister, United Kingdom, speaks on stage during The UK at Conjuncture at The 2022 Concordia Annual Summit - Day 3 at Sheraton New York on September 21, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Leigh Vogel/Getty Images for Concordia Summit)
Tony Blair said Matt Hancock was courageous for taking part in I'm A Celebrity. (Getty Images for Concordia Summit)

Sir Tony Blair has hailed Matt Hancock's "courage" for taking part in I’m A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here!

The former prime minister said that he had been impressed by the former home secretary's attempt to reinvent himself after being forced to resign as health secretary after his affair with government advisor Gina Colangelo during the coronavirus pandemic was exposed.

Blair, 69, told The News Agents podcast: “When you’ve been through the wringer as he has, and you know, as a politician who’s got to a certain level in politics, he’s probably got quite a lot of courage to go and do something like that.

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Matt Hancock has joined the jungle show. (ITV)
Matt Hancock has joined the jungle show. (ITV)

“And I mean, people can attack him or whatever ... But, you know, it takes a lot of courage to go do something like that. I wished him well from the outset.”

The former leader of The Labour Party defended Hancock's work as health secretary during the COVID-19 pandemic.

He said: "I worked with him a bit during the pandemic. He was working hard, they were all working hard on it.

“The government didn’t cause COVID. You can argue whether they should have dealt with it better or not, and so on, and you can make criticisms as you can with any country. The truth is we’re about in the middle of the pack as to how we handled it.”

Watch: Matt Hancock says thank you to all those who voted for him on I'm A Celebrity

Blair also said he could understand what Hancock meant when he said he was trying to reach a different part of the electorate by appearing on the show.

He said: “I don’t think people’s political views are going to be changed one way or another.

“But I think the problem with politics nowadays is how do you communicate with people when you’ve got a fragmented, media, social media, and when it’s quite difficult to get a message across to people who aren’t in your circle, because the way the media works today is essentially, it works by developing a constituency of people and essentially appealing to that constituency.

“And if you’re not careful, you don’t break out and go and talk to the people who disagree with you. So, I guess in that sense, he’s got a point. But it’s quite an extreme way of reaching the public.”

Britain's Health Secretary Matt Hancock hosts a remote press conference to update the nation on the covid-19 pandemic, inside 10 Downing Street in central London on December 14, 2020. - London is to move into the highest level of anti-virus restrictions, the health minister announced Monday. The British capital from Wednesday will go into
Matt Hancock was health secretary during the coronavirus pandemic. (PA)

Hancock, 44, came third in the ITV jungle reality show.

He is still an elected MP for West Suffolk, meaning he is being paid an annual salary to serve his constituents.

Hancock has vowed to declare his I'm A Celebrity salary to Parliament and donate it to St Nicholas Hospice in Suffolk and causes supporting dyslexia.

As a result of his signing up to the show his parliamentary whip has been suspended, meaning he is not a member of the Conservative Party.

Read more: Matt Hancock says the health secretary doesn't need to be an expert

Parliamentary watchdog the Advisory Committee on Business Appointments (Acoba) has ruled his participation in I'm A Celebrity is a breach of the government's business appointment rules. But they have advised that no further action be taken.