Poll: Britain’s Nick Clegg is no one-hit wonder, 3rd party leader keeps edge in new debate

By AP
Thursday, April 22, 2010

UK 3rd party leader Clegg keeps edge in new debate

LONDON — A poll shows British third party leader Nick Clegg has held on to his momentum after the second of Britain’s three election debates.

The Liberal Democrat leader threw Britain’s election wide open after what was widely seen as a breakout perfomance in Britain’s first-ever televised debate last week.

An automated telephone poll taken immediately after the second debate shows that 2,691 viewers of Thursday night’s debate favored Clegg by a tiny margin.

About a third of viewers believed that Clegg won the debate, while 30 percent believed that current Prime Minister Gordon Brown or his Conservative challenger David Cameron won. Pollster ComRes did not publish a margin of error for its survey.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.

LONDON (AP) — Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg will be in the hot seat Thursday as Britain holds its second televised election debate, with Labour’s Prime Minister Gordon Brown and Conservative leader David Cameron both gunning for the man who upstaged them a week ago.

The debate could be a game-changer, with candidates dueling over foreign affairs at a time when the country is broke and voters are angry. Any mistakes could tip the scales in this razor-sharp race.

Britain’s May 6 general election is expected to be the closest in decades, with polls suggesting that no party will win an outright majority. That situation could turn the Liberal Democrats into a kingmaker, bartering with both Labour and the Conservative for things they want — namely electoral changes that could weaken Britain’s traditional two-party system.

Audience members in the 90-minute live debate will get a chance to question Brown, Cameron and Clegg, whose winning performance in Britain’s first U.S.-styled televised debate last week gave his party an unprecedented boost in polls.

Afghanistan, Europe, Iran and Britain’s special relationship with the United States will dominate Thursday’s debate, even though Britain’s ailing economy is expected to be what ultimately influences voters. Unemployment has soared and Britain’s deficit is one of the largest in Europe. The topic of economics has mostly been reserved for the final televised debate next week.

U.S. interests have long influenced elections in Britain. The Labour Party, which has been in power for 13 years, lost many seats in the 2005 general election when voters cast protest ballots against Tony Blair’s decision to lead Britain into the Iraq war. The fighting in Afghanistan is now one of Britain’s longest and most costly conflicts, draining government coffers as the country tries to recover from its worst recession since World War II.

Analysts say Clegg could win the foreign policy debate simply because he stands apart from his rivals on international issues. His party voted against the war in Iraq, he has questioned what he calls Britain’s “subservience” to U.S. interests and has proposed scrapping a costly plan to replace the country’s four nuclear-armed submarines so money can be better spent.

But expectations are also high for Clegg, and Brown and Cameron will be on the attack. Unlike last week’s debate, Clegg will be sandwiched in between Cameron and Brown.

Clegg scored points in last week’s debate by looking confident and relaxed, speaking clearly on issues ranging from immigration to banking greed and coming across as a “nice guy,” according to pollsters.

“Clegg has discovered the secret formula that connects him with the British people,” said Frank Luntz, a U.S. consultant who advises Republicans. “He will score points on Iraq and Afghanistan, but he will lose points on his position with Europe, which is very unpopular. Britain does not want to be part of euro and does not want to be part of the continent.”

Clegg, a former member of the European Parliament, once backed Britain adopting the euro and has talked about forging stronger ties with Europe. He says Britain needs cooperation from other European countries if progress is to be made on immigration, climate change and bank regulation.

Cameron has long been a euro-skeptic, while Brown welcomes European cooperation but still believes Britain should retain its own currency.

Unlike Clegg’s party, both the Conservatives and Labour voted to join the U.S.-led war in Iraq — a decision that haunted Labour for years. A poll this week showed 72 percent of Britons think the war in Afghanistan is unwinnable.

“I’m sure Iraq will be Clegg’s strongest point,” said Malcolm Chalmers, a security specialist at the Royal United Services Institute. “Whatever people felt at the time, the overwhelming retrospective perspective is that it was a mistake. I think Gordon Brown and to lesser extent Cameron will be vulnerable on Iraq.”

A small but diverse clutch of anti-war protesters gathered outside the venue, waving placards and banners which read: “Troops Out” and chanting slogans. Police appeared to outnumber the demonstrators.

Although Clegg emerged as the winner in the first debate, he is unlikely to become prime minister — Britain’s electoral system is not proportional so parties need to win the majority of districts not the popular vote. This puts smaller and newer parties at a disadvantage. Most core voters still either vote Conservative or Labour.

Candidates also may try to eclipse foreign policy issues with campaign mantras — with the Conservatives warning that a hung Parliament and a coalition government could hurt the pound and Britain’s credit rating. Cameron has also repeatedly said a vote for Clegg would be a vote for Brown — appealing to voters who seek a change from the Labour-led government.

The British electorate has reached an all-time low for trust in politicians after an expenses scandal last year tarred all three major parties.

Hugh Colver, press secretary to former Conservative Prime Minister John Major, said the Liberal Democrats may come across as an alternative to mainstream parties but expectations are so high for Clegg to do well that Brown and Cameron may benefit.

Brown, gruff and deeply unpopular in the polls, enters the foreign policy debates with the most experience.

He supports the Afghanistan operation to stem the spread of terrorism, has been a strong proponent of U.S. and European cooperation, and has called for tougher U.N. sanctions if Iran moves closer to test-firing an upgraded version of its most advanced missile.

Clegg’s party — which usually takes about 20 percent of British votes — is fiscally conservative but socially liberal. It won’t support strikes against Iran if diplomacy fails over its disputed nuclear program, and is uneasy at a rising death toll in Afghanistan.

Cameron says ties to the U.S. will remain Britain’s most important relationship, but also said we “don’t ever think that it’s a sort of equal partnership, because it isn’t.”

His party’s election manifesto suggests focusing attention on better ties with India, where Britain was colonial ruler until 1947, and on strengthening ties in the Middle East, North Africa and South Asia.

Sky TV has launched a huge advertising campaign to promote the debate on its new high definition product.

British bookmakers are betting on Brown’s known temper — he is the 6/4 favorite to be first to raise his voice.

Clegg, who bookies thought would be the first to sweat in last week’s debate, is now expected to win Thursday with odds of 5/6. Cameron is set at 6/5 odds to win.

Associated Press Writers Gregory Katz and David Stringer contributed to this report from London.

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