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BEIJING, May 9 -- British Prime Minister Tony Blair
resisted a chorus of calls over the weekend to resign before he finishes the
historic third term he just won, amid discontent over his leadership from fellow
party members.
A number of Labour Party members said they wanted Blair to step down as early as a year from now and make way
for his powerful and popular finance minister, Gordon Brown.
"The prime minister is the prime minister, he has
made as clear as he could possibly make it that he intends to serve for a full
third term," Culture Secretary Tessa Jowell said on Sky Television late
Saturday.
Blair stirred up rebels within his party by taking
Britain to war in Iraq in 2003. The rebels say the chickens are coming home to
roost now that voters in Thursday's election have slashed the huge majorities he
won in 1997 and 2001.
At the same time the divisions have raised concerns
about whether the Labor Party can remain an effective force and prompted
comparisons with the bickering that tore Prime Minister John Major's
Conservatives apart a decade ago.
A spokesman for the prime minister reminded
journalists of Blair's statement last September in which he said that if
re-elected he would serve a full third term. "There has been no change," the
spokesman said.
The prime minister only committed himself then not to
run for a fourth term, which prompted immediate complaints he had made himself a
lame-duck leader.
Blair delivered an historic third successive general
election victory for the party Thursday, albeit with a much smaller majority
over the previous elections amid anger over the way he led the country to war in
Iraq.
Labor obtained 356 seats in the 646-seat House of
Commons, against 197 for the main opposition Conservatives and 62 for the
Liberal Democrats.
The outcome meant Blair's majority had been slashed
by more than half to a projected 66 but was still healthy compared with previous
governments.
The Observer newspaper reported meanwhile that within
Blair's own private circle, the timetable being discussed would involve him
triggering a party leadership contest in July 2008 and remaining as prime
minister while the succession is resolved, allowing the new leader to take over
that autumn.
The Observer quoted an unnamed source within the
prime minister's office as saying: "The best thing would be to get in at party
conference 2008, that gives you a year to establish yourself but not become
over-familiar."
(Source: Shenzhen Daily) |