Yahoo – AFP,
Alice RITCHIE, May 31, 2017
London (AFP) - British Prime Minister Theresa May boycotted a primetime television debate Wednesday, just days before the June 8 general election, prompting accusations of a floundering campaign as polls slashed her ruling Conservative party's lead.
![]() |
| British Prime Minister Theresa May was hoping to secure a Conservative landslide in the snap election on June 8 (AFP Photo/Leon Neal) |
London (AFP) - British Prime Minister Theresa May boycotted a primetime television debate Wednesday, just days before the June 8 general election, prompting accusations of a floundering campaign as polls slashed her ruling Conservative party's lead.
The pound
wobbled overnight after a shock projection forecast that May -- who had been on
course for a landslide just a few weeks ago -- could actually lose her majority
in the House of Commons after next week's vote.
May called
the election three years early in a bid to strengthen her hand going into
Brexit talks, which are due to begin on June 19.
Although
the YouGov model has a wide margin of error, and was met with some scepticism
in Westminster, it adds to polls showing the opposition Labour party gaining
ground.
May refused
from the start to take part in any head-to-head debate, and opposition Labour
leader Jeremy Corbyn had said he would not take part without her.
But he
changed his mind just hours before the live BBC hustings on Wednesday -- and
said May was treating voters with "contempt" by failing to join him.
Her
decision to send senior minister Amber Rudd was "another sign of Theresa
May's weakness, not strength", Corbyn said.
Tim Farron,
leader of the smaller Liberal Democrats, told voters: "You're not worth
Theresa May's time. Don't give her yours."
But May had
earlier told a campaign rally that "debates where the politicians are
squabbling among themselves doesn't do anything for the process of
electioneering".
"It's
actually about getting out and about, meeting voters and hearing directly from
voters," the prime minister said.
The debate
itself was a boisterous affair, covering Brexit, the economy, public services,
climate change, immigration and security -- a major issue after the Manchester
attack last week.
Corbyn and
Farron were joined by the leaders of the Green party, the UK Independence Party
and Welsh nationalists Plaid Cymru and the deputy leader of the Scottish National
Party.
Polls tightening
![]() |
Labour
leader Jeremy Corbyn has gradually nibbled away at the
Conservative lead in the
polls (AFP Photo/Justin TALLIS)
|
Polls tightening
The
Conservatives enjoyed a 20-point lead at the start of the campaign but this has
now fallen into single figures.
"The
movement in the polls over this campaign is bigger than in any election I've
covered since 1945," veteran poll watcher David Butler said on Twitter.
The Daily
Telegraph newspaper's rolling average of the last eight polls put the
Conservatives on 44 percent, Labour on 36 percent, the centrist Liberal
Democrats on eight percent and the anti-EU UK Independence Party (UKIP) on five
percent.
But a shock
projection in The Times newspaper forecast that the Conservatives could lose
their majority in the 650-seat House of Commons.
Using new
constituency-by-constituency modelling, the projection by pollsters YouGov said
the party could lose 20 seats to end up with 310.
However,
under the model -- based on 50,000 interviews over one week -- the
Conservatives could get anywhere between 274 and 345 seats, meaning they could
also increase their majority.
May said
"the only poll that matters is the one that's going to take place on June
8", and insisted that only she had the plan to take Britain through
Brexit.
'Liar,
liar'
In the
televised debate, Rudd accused Corbyn of having drawn up a "fantasy
wishlist" manifesto paid for with a magic "money tree", and
noting that most of his MPs backed a failed coup against him last year.
The Labour
leader hit back by accusing the government of offering five more years of
austerity "to fund tax handouts for the wealthy few".
SNP deputy
leader Angus Robertson mocked May's claim to offer "strong and
stable" leadership, saying: "Weak and wobbly is where we are."
A protest
song branding May a liar was heading for the top of the charts on Wednesday --
despite the BBC refusing to play it for fear of breaching electoral rules.
"Liar, Liar GE2017" by seven-piece band Captain Ska was released last Friday and
currently stands at number three, according to the Official Charts company.
British PM boycotts TV debate as election looms #BBCDebate https://t.co/tBZ9XfFvWs pic.twitter.com/Cc3xiOD096— AFP news agency (@AFP) May 31, 2017


No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.