This article was published on July 6, 2011

The Huffington Post UK nets Tony Blair as unpaid blogger


The Huffington Post UK nets Tony Blair as unpaid blogger

We reported yesterday that some of The Huffington Post UK’s pages started going live ahead of its official launch today. Well, the website IS now officially live, and news has emerged that former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair has been brought on board as an unpaid blogger.

The likes of Alastair Campbell, former Director of Communications to Tony Blair, is one of the publication’s bloggers, as is comedian Ricky Gervais. But as the Telegraph reports today, the big scoop for The Huffington Post seems to be having Tony Blair on board, though he hasn’t actually written his first post yet.

The Huffington Post has courted controversy in the past, with no bloggers being paid for their writing. We reported back in April that The Huffington Post and AOL were being sued by one of its bloggers following the publication’s sale to AOL.

The real prize, it would seem, is writing for a high-traffic website and having millions of people read their work. Tony Blair hardly needs the exposure, so he’s clearly just looking for a big audience to write for. The Huffington Post’s main portal attracts 36m readers worldwide, so if the UK edition can attract a fraction of that, he will still have a huge audience.

Bloggers are not under any commitment in terms of how often they blog, so it’s not clear when we can expect to see Blair’s first post. And even then it could be every week, month or even year. But getting Blair on board is clearly a massive draw for the publication’s UK launch.

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