/ 3 June 2009

Rebel Labour MPs could call on Brown to quit

A group of rebel Labour members of Parliament (MPs) is seeking signatures for a letter calling on Prime Minister Gordon Brown to step down, The Guardian newspaper reported on its website on Wednesday.

No hard copy of the letter exists, but a network of backbench MPs is canvassing opinions to gauge the level of support for the prime minister, the report added.

Instead of an actual letter, an email address is being handed out to which MPs can send a message saying they would support a single sentence statement calling on Brown to go.

Communities Secretary Hazel Blears announced her resignation on Wednesday, the second Cabinet minister to quit within 24 hours, undermining Brown ahead of local and European elections on Thursday.

Blears’s decision to quit followed a similar move by interior minister Jacqui Smith and pre-empted a widely expected Cabinet reshuffle

The rebels could wait until Monday morning, when European and local elections results are in, before moving against the prime minster, the report said.

Labour faces a rout in Thursday’s elections, setting it on course for defeat in a parliamentary election due within a year.

High-profile casualties
Blears and Smith are the highest profile casualties of the fallout from disclosures about outlandish, taxpayer-funded expenses claims made by MPs at a time when recession is forcing hundreds of thousands out of work.

”Today I have told the prime minister that I am resigning from the government,” Blears, who is responsible for local government affairs, said in a statement.

Saying she wanted to focus on her Manchester constituency in northern England, she said: ”Most of all I want to help the Labour party to reconnect with the British people.”

Business Minister Peter Mandelson said the uproar over expenses, which has damaged all of the main political parties, could hurt Britain’s economic prospects.

”If people believe our political institutions are being diminished or that our democratic system is being weakened they will start to draw economic and commercial conclusions from that if we are not careful,” he said.

For their own sake
Brown’s Labour party trails the opposition Conservatives by up to 20 points with a general election due by mid-2010 and has pinned any hope of bouncing back on a fast improvement in Britain’s recession-hit economy.

Brown’s reshuffle, which could come as early as Friday, had been seen as an opportunity to revive his flagging fortunes. But analysts said the resignations would probably dampen its impact.

”They are uninterested in Gordon Brown and the appearance of Gordon Brown’s government, they are doing this for their own sake,” said Tony Travers, politics professor at London School of Economics.

Labour has faced the brunt of voter anger against many MPs who have milked the allowances system, claiming from taxpayers the cost of everything from duck houses to cleaning a moat.

Blears last month agreed to pay more than £13 000 in tax on the sale of a property.

She was seen as taking a pot shot at Brown in a newspaper article she wrote last month when she said the government had shown a ”lamentable failure” to get its message across.

Smith’s reputation suffered in March when a leaked copy of her parliamentary expenses claims showed she had charged taxpayers for her husband’s rental of two pornographic movies.

”To lose this number of ministers and ex-Cabinet ministers … is quite a blow to the confidence of the government,” said Andrew Russell, a politics lecturer at Manchester University.

But there are signs that Brown’s efforts to revive the economy, which shrank at its sharpest rate since 1979 in the first three months of this year, are working.

A highly-regarded economic survey showed Britain’s dominant services sector returned to growth last month, suggesting that the recession could end sooner expected.

”Some limited growth could occur before the end of the year,” said Howard Archer, an economist at Global Insight.

Asked whether Finance Minister Alistair Darling would keep his job in a reshuffle, Brown said only that Darling ”is leading the rest of the world in taking us out of the recession”.

The Guardian, traditionally supportive of Labour, called for Brown to go.

”The truth is that there is no vision from him, no plan, no argument for the future and no support,” it said.

Harriet Harman, Labour’s deputy leader, said she did not believe there would be a challenge to Brown and said the government had ”work to do” before it calls a national election. — Reuters