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Half Britons Say Blair Should Quit: Poll

Some 64 percent of Britons are dissatisfied with Blair's performance

LONDON, September 27 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – With the Iraqi invasion decision still haunting his political future, about 64 percent of Britons vocalized dissatisfaction with Prime Minister Tony Blair and 50 percent maintained he should step down, according to an opinion poll published Saturday, September 27.

In the Mori survey for the Financial Times business daily, people were asked whether they agreed with the statement that "it's now time for Tony Blair to resign and hand over to someone else".

Fifty percent said they agreed, 39 percent said they disagreed, and 11 percent said they did not know, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).

Some 64 percent said they were dissatisfied with Blair's performance, an all-time high, according to the FT, which said the results illustrated the extent to which he had lost public trust as a result of the Iraq war.

The Financial Times poll of nearly 2,000 adults, conducted between September 11 and 16, showed that Blair’s ruling Labour had a nine-point lead over the opposition Conservatives.

When the same voters are asked how they would vote if finance minister Gordon Brown were Labour leader, the party's lead rose from nine points to 15 points.

MPs Dissatisfied

In a related development, a YouGov poll for Saturday's right-wing Daily Telegraph found Labour had been overtaken by the Conservatives.

It put the Tories on 32 percent, Labour on 31, and the Liberal Democrats, the second biggest opposition party, on 30.

At his party's annual gathering, which opens Sunday in Bournemouth, on England's south coast, Blair faces pressure over his staunch backing for the U.S. in its March invasion of Iraq, as well as hostility over his push to reform Britain's public sector.

On the eve of his tenth conference as party leader, a survey by the Guardian daily of 108 backbench Labour MPs - lawmakers who do not hold positions in government - found just under a quarter would like Blair to quit immediately.

A similar proportion wanted a "peaceful transition" in the leadership either before or after the next general election, due by 2006. Only just over a quarter offered unconditional support.

Labour has 409 MPs, 262 of whom are backbenchers.

The survey came as the Labour leadership embarked on an intensive round of negotiations to minimize dissent at this year's conference, which according to the Guardian was likely to be one of the bloodiest since Blair was elected leader in 1994.

The paper said left wingers would attempt to force a ballot on the Iraq war despite the big unions, which command half the vote, agreeing to concentrate their fire on domestic policies such as hospitals, employment rights and pensions.

Peter Mandelson, a former cabinet minister and a Blair confidant, indicated that the Prime Minister was braced for a rough ride when he said: "At present, the government is steering its way through what you might call politically choppy water."

The failure of international inspectors to find weapons of mass destruction, the prime rational exploited by London and Washington to justify waging war without U.N. mandate, and the death of British weapons expert David Kelly in July have plunged Blair into the worst crisis of his six-year tenure.

A group of 1400 CIA-hired American and British inspectors failed to find any traces of alleged Iraqi weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.

Citing a leaked draft report by the so-called Iraq Survey Group (ISG), the BBC reported September 25 the group would conclude that its inspectors have not even unearthed "minute amounts of nuclear, chemical or biological weapons material".

Kelly was the source of a BBC report in May that Blair’s government embellished its case for war on Iraq in a government dossier published a year ago.

Blix accused the British government Thursday, September 18, of "over-interpreted" intelligence on Iraq's alleged capability of deploying weapons of mass destruction within 45 minutes, lashing out at the "culture of spin and hyping" adopted by Downing Street.

Britain's headline-grabbing claim before the war that Baghdad could deploy weapons of mass destruction within 45 minutes was based on second-hand information, the Guardian reported Saturday, August 16.    

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