Britain's Brown plays down talk of early election
LONDON, Sep 3 (Reuters) - Prime Minister Gordon Brown said toady that now was not the time for an election in Britain,but refused to rule out calling one before the end of the year.
Faced with opinion polls suggesting that the ''Brown bounce'' in ratings that he has enjoyed since taking over from Tony Blair in June may be starting to fade, Brown said he was not concerned with election timing, but busy getting on with the job.
''There will be a time and a place for a general election, but it is not now,'' he told BBC radio.
A ComRes poll in toady's Independent newspaper showed Brown's Labour Party tied with the opposition Conservative Party on 36 per cent, with the Liberal Democrats on 15 per cent. The same poll a month ago had given Labour a three-point lead over the Conservatives.
A YouGov poll for Good Morning Television put Labour at 38 percent and the Conservatives on 35 per cent.
In an interview with today's right-leaning Daily Telegraph, Brown said he wanted to move away from old-style factional politics and seek broad support from all sections of Britain.
The Telegraph said his comments were a clear sign that he was ''preparing the ground for a poll next month''.
Asked on BBC radio whether he would rule out an election in the autumn -- a date many commentators have been speculating on -- Brown said: ''There is a time and a place for these things, but I am getting on with the business of governing.'' POLITICAL PLOY? Political analysts that doubt Brown will call an October vote.
Many say his apparent hints at an early election are simply a political ploy to try to destabilise the Conservatives, whose leader David Cameron has struggled to make headway in surveys in recent months.
In a speech , Brown said today he wanted to end ''politics as usual'' and reach out to people because political parties had not been successful enough in engaging them.
He unveiled a series of ''citizens' juries'' to look at areas such as crime, healthcare and children -- intended to allow independent experts and representatives of the community to help shape policy by feeding their findings into government.
He will also establish standing commissions to look at issues such as security and sustainable rural communities. Two will be run by opposition Conservative lawmakers and a third by a Liberal Democrat member of parliament.
''This is a new kind of politics I want,'' Brown said in his speech, made to representatives of voluntary organisations.
''It
is
a
politics
of
consensus,
because
our
progressive
ambitions
for
Britain
will
only
be
met
in
the
mainstream
centre
ground,
where
all
the
talents
and
energies
of
the
country
can
be
prepared
to
come
together.''
REUTERS
SYU
AS1820