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Blair Battered in Local Vote LONDON English voters dealt British Prime Minister Tony Blair a blow as early results on Friday showed his Labor Party losing seats in local elections and a minister predicted a cabinet shakeup. The Labor government has faced a barrage of criticism in past weeks over the failure to consider deporting foreign prisoners, hospital staff cuts and his married deputy's admission that he had had an affair with his secretary. "I think it's going to be a difficult night for us as a party," Labor minister Valerie Amos told Sky television. Her cabinet colleague Geoff Hoon said he expected Blair to shake up his cabinet later on Friday in a bid to give his government fresh impetus. "This seems to be about the right time, it is time for a new team to take over," Hoon told BBC television. "There is going to be a reshuffle, I am sure," he added. Analysts say very poor results could increase calls from within Labor for Blair to name a departure date or hand power to his presumed successor, Finance Minister Gordon Brown. Blair, in power for nine years almost to the day, has said he will not stand for a fourth term in national elections, due by mid-2010. Some 4,360 seats on 176 local councils in England were contested on Thursday. The loss of many more than 200 seats would be seen as a bad result for Labor, analysts say. With results in from 48 councils, Labor had lost control of two but neither was won outright by the Conservatives or the Liberal Democrats. Kicking Voters traditionally use local elections to punish the government of the day, though local issues such as crime, litter and loutish behavior were high on some voters' minds. The Labor Party suffered heavy losses in local elections in 2004 caused partly by public opposition to waging war on Iraq, but went on to win a national election the following year. A week ago the government admitted it had released more than 1,000 foreign criminals who had served their sentences without considering deporting them, and Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott, who had lectured the Conservatives on morality when they were in power, admitted his affair. Controversy over foreign criminals revived on Thursday when British media said a foreigner facing terrorism charges had served a prison term for robbery in the late 1990s but had not been deported on his release. They said he could not be named for legal reasons. An Interior Ministry spokeswoman declined comment. The elections are also a test of strength for the main opposition Conservatives and Liberal Democrats, both of whom have new leaders keen to show they can deliver results. The Conservatives must win more urban votes to stand a chance of winning the next parliamentary election due by 2010. Far-right groups, helped by the emergence
of violent crime by foreigners as a top electoral issue, also stand
to make gains, particularly in east London. --------------------------------------------------- Prison Planet.tv: The Premier Multimedia Subscription Package: Download and Share the Truth! Please help our fight against the New World Order by giving a donation. As bandwidth costs increase, the only way we can stay online and expand is with your support. Please consider giving a monthly or one-off donation for whatever you can afford. You can pay securely by either credit card or Paypal. Click here to donate. |