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Blair faces revolt within his Labour Party


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Image: British Prince William and Centrepoint CEO Seyi Obakin preparing for a night in freezing temperatures
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Prince William sleeps on the street
Dec. 23: To get a taste of what life is like for the poor, Britain’s Prince William spends a night on a London street. Meantime, are wedding bells in the future for Prince Harry? NBC’s Stephanie Gosk reports from Buckingham Palace.

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Signs of turmoil
“Sadly, it is clear to us — as it is to almost the entire party and the entire country — that without an urgent change in the leadership of the party it becomes less likely that we will win election,” said the letter, released Wednesday.

Tom Watson, the most senior of those to resign, was minister for veterans in the Ministry of Defense. “I no longer believe that your remaining in office is in the interest of either the party or the country,” he said in a separate resignation letter to Blair.

The seven other lawmakers who quit their jobs — Khalid Mahmood, Wayne David, Ian Lucas, Mark Tami, David Wright, Iain Wright and Chris Mole — had worked as unpaid aides to government ministers.

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After receiving Watson’s letter, Blair said he would have fired Watson if he had not quit. The prime minister called Watson’s decision to sign the lawmakers’ letter “disloyal, discourteous and wrong.”

“To put (the party’s gains) at risk in this way is simply not a sensible, mature or intelligent way of conducting ourselves if we want to remain a governing party,” Blair wrote.

Last week, the prime minister shrugged off demands that he announce his plans at Labour’s annual conference this month. Announcing a departure date would likely make him an instant lame duck.

But his health secretary and close ally, Patricia Hewitt, said Wednesday that Blair “has made it clear that he will step down next year,” the strongest statement yet from a Cabinet minister about when Blair might leave.

“Everyone knows that the contest for the new leadership will take place next year,” Hewitt said. “It is madness for some Labour (lawmakers) to demand conditions from the prime minister.”

Anger at stance on Hezbollah-Israeli conflict
Many Labour stalwarts were furious at Blair’s stance on the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah, saying his refusal to call for an early cease-fire was simply a parroting of President Bush’s position, which critics saw as tacitly allowing Israel to bomb Lebanon for weeks.

David — one of the seven lawmakers who resigned — said Blair’s handling of the Mideast crisis demonstrated he was detached from the views of his party’s supporters.

The Sun newspaper reported Wednesday that Blair intended to resign as Labour leader on May 31, triggering a leadership election likely to take about eight weeks. He would then be replaced as prime minister on July 26, the newspaper said, without citing sources.

Blair’s official spokesman declined to comment on the report, saying only that any leak to the newspaper had not been authorized.

Opposition Conservative leader David Cameron, whose party has surged in the polls since he took charge in December, commented Wednesday during a visit to India: “What seems to have happened ... is a complete meltdown.”

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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