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Britain: General election set for June 7
By Mike Ingram
9 May 2001
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Prime Minister Tony Blair yesterday confirmed the date for
the general election as June 7, giving just four weeks of campaigning
before the poll.
Labour had favoured holding a general election on May 3 this
year simultaneously with the local government elections. However,
with election advertising already booked, Blair capitulated to
the countryside lobby and the demands of the Conservative opposition
that the election be called off due to the foot and mouth crisis
that hit farming. After passing emergency legislation to postpone
the date for local council elections to June 7, it was widely
anticipated that the general election would also take place on
the same date.
Just prior to the deadline for today's announcement, the government's
Chief Veterinary Officer had declared the foot and mouth crisis
to be under control.
Following the archaic procedures of Britain's constitutional
monarchy, Blair first visited the Queen at Buckingham Palace,
to ask her to dissolve parliament. But following the 20-minute
meeting, in a break with usual practice, Blair announced the general
election during his visit to a south London school, rather than
in a formal statement at Downing Street.
It is expected that parliament will be dissolved on Thursday
or Friday, with Blair using Wednesday's weekly meeting of the
Parliamentary Labour Party to rally MPs before prime minister's
question time the same day.
The four-week election campaign will then begin in earnest.
Appealing for Labour to be given a second term, Blair told
reporters, "We earned the trust of the people in 1997 after
18 long years of opposition. Today we have to earn that trust
again." He said a second term was essential to see through
its programme and make a "brighter future" for UK.
His choice of venue was part of a carefully choreographed launch
to a campaign in which, despite Labour's massive lead in the opinion
polls, Blair has said nothing would be taken for granted. According
to the BBC, poll averages over the past few months show Labour
at 50 percent, the Tories at 31 percent, the Liberal Democrats
at 13 percent, with others sharing six percent of
the vote.
Blair is concerned that unless Labour is able to mobilise its
traditional base in the working class, and keep former Tory voters
who switched to Labour onboard, it may lose many of the seats
won in 1997. Other reports anticipate voter turnout could fall
below 70 percent, and could be particularly low in inner-city
areas, which would cost Labour disproportionately.
In an effort to combat this, Labour has pledged greater spending
on public services; at the same time promising further reforms
in the public sector, which throughout their first term in office
was a codeword for privatisation and the abolition of universal
welfare provisions in favour of means testing. In order to try
and steal the thunder from the Conservatives, Blair has also promised
to cut taxes and a clamp down on asylum seekers. Labour will warn
voters that Tory tax cuts would be at the expense of public spending.
Labour is particularly anxious to avoid any discussion on Europe,
and the adoption of the single currency the euro, with increasing
divisions on the issue emerging within its own ranks.
See Also:
British government rushes
through legislation postponing elections until June 7
[6 April 2001]
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