No Time for Trophies: Blair Prefers Medal at Mint Not on Mantle

U.S. awards Congressional Gold Medal to Blair, but Brit hasn't picked design.

ByABC News
May 11, 2007, 4:46 PM

May 11, 2007 — -- When British Prime Minister Tony Blair swings into Washington, D.C., next week for a bit of a farewell tour as leader of the United Kingdom, he is not expected to swing by Capitol Hill, even though one of the highest honors the U.S. government bestows awaits him there.

It's the Congressional Gold Medal, which was awarded to Blair in 2003 for being a staunch ally of the United States.

Blair's Britain, after all, is a major member of the "coalition of the willing" that joined the United States to invade Iraq and oust Saddam Hussein.

Blair technically accepted the award when he addressed a joint session of Congress that July, when American and British involvement in Iraq seemed to be waning.

He thanked Congress then but said the troops deserved the real credit, for supporting the United States belonged to the troops on the front lines.

"You, like me, know who the real heroes are: those brave service men and women, yours and ours, who fought the war and risked their lives still. And our tribute to them should be measured in this way, by showing them and their families that they did not strive or die in vain, but that through their sacrifice future generations can live in greater peace, prosperity and hope," Blair told the bipartisan gathering.

In the nearly four years since then, although Blair did give the speech in which he thanked Congress, he has yet to actually collect the medal itself.

The medal has yet to be made or even designed.

Tony Blair's Congressional Gold Medal is lying, unformed somewhere in the states.

In the time since Blair was awarded his medal and not picked it up, Congress conferred the honor collectively on 300 members of the Tuskegee Airmen.

It took less than two years for the medal honoring African-American World War II pilots to be awarded, designed and made.

But according to a spokesman for the U.S. Mint, Blair's is still in the design phase, even now.