Family and Cherie Blair at the
Red Bull Air Race in 2007 in London In 1976, while she was studying to become a barrister, she met future prime minister and husband
Tony Blair. She obtained a
pupillage in the chambers of
Derry Irvine ahead of him, although he was also taken on. Married on 31 March 1980, the Blairs have three sons and one daughter:
Euan (born 1984),
Nicholas (born 1985), Kathryn (born 1988), and Leo (born 2000). Leo was the first child born to the wife of a serving British prime minister in over 150 years, since
Rollo Russell was born to Lady Frances Elliot-Murray-Kynynmound and
Lord John Russell on 11 July 1849. Another pregnancy at the age of 47 ended in miscarriage in early August 2002. The Blair children attended Catholic secondary schools, including The
London Oratory School. All four children have Irish passports, by virtue of Tony Blair's mother, Hazel Elizabeth Corscadden, a Protestant, the daughter of George Corscadden, a butcher and
Orangeman who moved to
Glasgow in 1916 but returned to
Ballyshannon in 1923, where Hazel was born to George and Sarah Margaret (née Lipsett), above her family's grocery shop. Via her father, Blair and her younger sister Lyndsey have six half-sisters, including British journalist
Lauren Booth. Her first grandchild (a girl) was born in October 2016.
Political and religious views Blair has described herself as a socialist and, at times, has appeared to have views further to the
left than those of her husband. She is a
republican and reportedly chooses to handshake rather than
curtsy when meeting royals, including
Elizabeth II. According to the royal historian Carolyn Harris, Blair's preference for a handshake "attracted controversy as it was seen as making a statement about her republican views". In March 2008, Blair chaired the Street Weapons Commission on behalf of the broadcaster
Channel 4. She toured the UK and took evidence from people affected by street crime and published a report and practical advice in June 2008. She is a practising Roman Catholic. In 2009, Blair urged the Catholic Church to reconsider its opposition to
contraception, suggesting it could be holding some women back from pursuing a career. In
George W. Bush's 2010 autobiography
Decision Points, Blair is briefly described as a fierce opponent of the
death penalty. ==Writings, portrayals, and coverage in books, film and theatre==