Labour’s Gordon Brown makes bid to remain British prime minister after unresolved election

By Jill Lawless, AP
Friday, May 7, 2010

Brown makes bid to remain British prime minister

LONDON — British Prime Minister Gordon Brown made a bid Friday to stay in office after Britain’s indecisive election, saying he is prepared to speak to any other party about forming an alliance. Jittery financial markets clamored for a quick resolution to the stalemate.

Brown reached out to the Liberal Democrats, saying he backed the third party’s call for electoral reform. In a carefully crafted statement that combined humility with assertiveness, Brown said there should be immediate action on reform.

“There needs to be immediate legislation on this to begin to restore the public’s trust in politics,” Brown said. With the front door of 10 Downing Street behind him, he said he would be “willing to see any of the party leaders” about making a deal.

“The question for all the political parties now is whether a parliamentary majority can be established that reflects what you, the electorate, have told us,” Brown said.

Labour came second in Thursday’s vote, which for the first time since the 1970s produced no outright winner. The Conservatives gained the largest number of seats but fell short of the parliamentary majority needed to govern alone.

The result left Labour and The Conservatives jockeying for the support of smaller parties as the uncertainty sent markets slumping.

As sitting prime minister, Brown would traditionally be given the first chance to put together a government. His left-of-center Labour Party is seen as a more natural coalition fit with the Liberal Democrats, the third-place party now thrust into the role of potential kingmaker.

But Clegg said the party that had gained the most seats and the most votes — the Conservatives — should have “the first right to seek to govern.”

“I think it is now for the Conservative Party to prove that it is capable of seeking to govern in the national interest,” he said.

Conservative leader David Cameron planned to make a statement at 2:30 p.m. (1330 GMT, 9:30 a.m. EDT), which his party said would outline his plan for “strong and stable” government.

With 638 of the 650 seats counted, the Conservatives had secured 301 seats, Labour 255, the Liberal Democrats 55 and smaller parties, 27 seats. At least 326 of the House of Commons’ 650 seats are needed to form a government with a majority.

“The country has spoken — but we don’t know what they’ve said,” former Liberal Democrat leader Paddy Ashdown said, summing up confusion.

Despite winning the largest number of House of Commons seats in Thursday’s election, Cameron’s Conservatives fell short of a majority that only a few months ago was considered inevitable. Labour could still could govern with the help of the Liberal Democrats, which surprisingly failed to capitalize on Clegg’s stellar TV debate performances. Still the decider, Clegg’s support is sure to be contingent on a promise of electoral reform, the Liberal Democrats’ main demand.

That may be an insurmountable sticking point for the Conservatives. Many of the party’s old guard distrust the Liberal Democrats’ pro-European leanings and fiercely oppose its call for proportional representation, which would make it hard for any single party to hold power alone — effectively shutting out the Conservatives indefinitely.

“The Tories would fight it (electoral reform) tooth and nail,” said Bill Jones, professor of politics at Liverpool Hope University. “It’s like asking a turkey to vote for Christmas.”

Labour is much more amenable to demands for electoral reform, but even a deal with the Liberal Democrats would leave them a few seats short of a majority, meaning they would have to turn to Scottish and Welsh nationalists for further support.

Scottish national party leader Alex Salmond, whose party won six seats, said he had already been invited to talks with Brown.

“Fate seems to have dealt us a mighty hand between ourselves and (Welsh nationalists) Plaid Cymru,” Salmond told the BBC.

Days, and possibly weeks, of political horse-trading could lie ahead — a prospect that gave the financial markets jitters.

As the pound and the FTSE-100 index fell sharply, pressure mounted for a quick solution.

“A decision would have to be made very quickly,” said Victoria Honeyman, a lecturer in politics at the University of Leeds,

She predicted that some sort of statement would have to be made before Monday when the markets reopen.

“There’s a limit to how long can that this go on,” she said. “The pound will start to crash.”

Talks were expected to begin between political players Friday, aided by civil service guidelines detailing how the process should unfold.

Although Britain has no written constitution, senior civil servants have been preparing furiously to lay out the rules and avoid market-rattling uncertainty in the event of a so-called hung parliament, a result in which no party secures a majority. The last time a British election produced such a result was in 1974.

A period of political wrangling and confusion in one of the world’s largest economies could unsettle global markets already reeling from the Greek debt crisis and fears of wider debt contagion in Europe. Britain’s budget deficit is set to eclipse even that of Greece next year, and whoever winds up in power faces the daunting challenge of introducing big government spending cuts to slash the country’s huge deficit.

In London, bond trading started in the middle of the night — six hours earlier than normal — as traders tried to make sense of the election results. Britain’s main stock index and the pound fell Friday as investors reacted to the inconclusive result against a backdrop of global market turbulence.

In the first minute of trading, the FTSE 100 share index was down 1.3 percent at 5,193 before rallying slightly above 5,200. The British pound traded as low as $1.46589 by early afternoon, down from $1.51 less than 24 hours earlier.

The Conservatives insisted they had been given a mandate by the electorate. Cameron said voters had rejected Brown and his Labour Party.

“Our country wants change. That change is going to require new leadership,” Cameron said Friday.

Turnout for the election — the closest-fought in a generation — was 65.2 percent, higher than the 61 percent seen in Britain’s 2005 election.

Some polling stations around the country were overwhelmed by those interested in casting ballots, and hundreds of people were blocked from voting due to problems with Britain’s old-fashioned paper ballot system.

Anger flared when voters in London, Sheffield, Newcastle and elsewhere complained that they had been blocked from voting as stations closed — and the head of Britain’s Electoral Commission said some legal challenges to results because of blocked votes were likely.

Electoral Commission chief Jenny Watson acknowledged that Britain’s paper voting system had been unable to cope with a surge of voters.

Former British Home Secretary Jacqui Smith was the biggest Labour lawmaker to lose her seat after being caught attempting to bill the public for porn movies watched by her husband.

But Labour won the northern England seat of Rochdale — where Brown made the biggest gaffe of the campaign, caught on an open microphone referring to an elderly voter as a “bigoted woman” after she buttonholed him on immigration. Brown later visited her home to apologize.

In the southern England resort town of Brighton, Britain’s first-ever Green Party lawmaker, Caroline Lucas, was elected.

The Conservatives were ousted by Labour under Tony Blair in 1997 after 18 years in power. Three leaders and three successive election defeats later, the party selected Cameron, a fresh-faced, bicycle-riding graduate of Eton and Oxford who promised to modernize its fusty, right-wing image.

Under Brown, who took over from Blair three years ago, Britain’s once high-flying economy, rooted in world-leading financial services, has run into hard times. In addition, at least 1.3 million people have been laid off and tens of thousands have lost their homes in a crushing recession.

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Associated Press writers David Stringer, Paisley Dodds, Raphael G. Satter and Danica Kirka also contributed to this report.

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