British Prime Minister Gordon Brown put economic recovery at the heart of his battle to win a looming election — but was dealt a blow when a leading newspaper said it would not support him.
Brown unveiled his Labour party’s key pledges on Saturday as he and David Cameron, leader of the main opposition Conservatives, both ramped up campaigning ahead of a close vote widely expected to be held on May 6.
But hours later, the News of the World — Britain’s biggest selling newspaper — said it was ditching its support for Labour after 13 years and turning to the Conservatives because the country was “crying out for change.”
Brown, buoyed by recent opinion polls showing the race between Labour and the Conservatives has narrowed sharply, earlier said he would fight to win the election as he unveiled a pledge card bearing five key commitments.
“When people ask what are my top three priorities for the country, let me tell them — keeping on the road to recovery, keeping on the road to recovery, keeping on the road to recovery,” Brown said in Nottingham, central England.
In a thinly-veiled attack on the Conservatives, he warned of the dangers of taking the wrong decisions as Britain emerges from a deep recession.
“Securing the economic recovery or wrecking it — that is the choice the country will face in the weeks ahead,” the prime minister said.
Cameron hit back, saying the suggestion Labour had done well on the economy was an “insult to people’s intelligence.”
In a speech in Milton Keynes, northwest of London, Cameron said: “On their economic record alone, which is what they’re running on, they do not deserve to be re-elected.”
Britain escaped recession in the final quarter of last year after six quarters of contraction, the longest on record. It exited after the US, France and Germany, and experts have warned of the risk of a relapse.
The Conservatives had been leading Labour by double digits in the opinion polls, but in recent months the gap has narrowed to just a few points, suggesting Britain could face a hung parliament for the first time since 1974.
The latest Sunday Times/You Gov poll put the Tories on 37 percent support and Labour on 32 percent. YouGov interviewed 1,533 voters online on Thursday and Friday.
Explaining its decision to ditch Labour, which it backed for three elections under former prime minister Tony Blair, Sunday tabloid the News of the World said the Tories offered “our best hope for a brighter, saner, safer, more honourable future.”
“It is time to give change a chance and move forward with fresh vigor and hope,” it said.
Its sister newspaper the Sun — Britain’s biggest daily seller — announced last September that it would be backing Cameron.
A former editor of the News of the World, Andy Coulson, is now Cameron’s communications director.
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