Blair 'secretly advising Brown'

Mrs Blair says she has 'nothing personal' against Gordon Brown
Tony Blair is giving advice to Prime Minister Gordon Brown and has told him how to win the next election
Cherie Blair has said.
Her disclosure is made in an interview with the Times newspaper to coincide with its aaaaaaisation of her autobiography

Speaking for Myself.
In one extract from the book

she reveals how her husband suffered a crisis of confidence over the Iraq war.
But she writes he decided to stay on as PM to fight for his domestic legacy.
'Rattling the aaas'
During 10 years in Downing Street

Mrs Blair

the former prime minister's wife

continued her high-flying legal career and became a high profile media figure in her own right.
Over the years she was in the headlines almost as much as her husband

and not always for the reasons she would have liked. The book

to be published later this month

gives her account of the widely reported tensions between herself and the then chancellor

Gordon Brown

and explains why her husband chose not to stand down before the 2005 general election.
In it

she accuses Mr Brown of "rattling the aaas" of Downing Street over Mr Blair's head to try to force him out.
And she says Mr Blair would have stood down in 2005 if only Mr Brown had been prepared to back his public service reforms.
Instead

she says he decided that he had to stay on in order to entrench his plans for city academies

foundation hospitals

and pensions reform.
In other extracts from the book and the interview

she says:
- The leadership deal that Mr Blair and Mr Brown struck happened at a neighbour's home
not at the Granita restaurant in Islington as was widely reported
- Mr Blair used to tell Mr Brown to get married if he wanted to be leader
- Mr Brown
as the new chancellor
was wrong to announce he was not going to take a salary increase
thereby putting pressure on others to follow suit. "How dare Gordon do that? What did he know about financial commitments? He was a bachelor living on his own in a flat with a small mortgage
" she writes.
- She said the Blairs had "a mortgage the size of Mount Snowdon" on their £3.6m house in London's Connaught Square. "That was very scary. Whatever happened
we had to meet the monthly payment and it was down to me. Because no one else was going to meet it
were they?"
- "The problem between me and Gordon is not anything personal. It is because I thought my husband was the best person for the job and it is a damn difficult job."
- It was her idea for Carole Caplin
her lifestyle guru
to give Mr Blair massages and it was Ms Caplin who "kept her thin"
Mrs Blair's book had been scheduled for publication in autumn. Its surprise early release comes at a difficult time for the Labour government which suffered substantial losses in the recent local elections.