|
Brown arrived with his wife, Sarah, to vote near his home north of Edinburgh, on Scotland's east coast. He said hello to reporters waiting outside the polling station, but made no comment. Cameron voted Thursday morning in his Oxfordshire constituency, accompanied by his wife Samantha. He told reporters, "I am feeling good. I will leave it at that." This British election has already been historical. The country's first-ever television debates offered Clegg rare equal billing with Brown and Cameron, and he shined
-- combining his telegenic, friendly manner with sharp attacks on his rivals and the country's electoral system. The Liberal Democrats -- who have traditionally won about 20 percent of the vote since the party formed in a merger in 1988
-- have held on to that unlikely surge although polls still put the Tories ahead but without a majority. The same system that Clegg wants to overhaul, in which the number of districts won
-- not the popular vote -- determines who runs the country, could produce the most bizarre election scenario. Labour could win fewer seats than the Conservatives, but still stay in power. That's because convention holds that in the event of a hung Parliament, Queen Elizabeth II should offer the sitting prime minister the first chance to try to form a government
-- even if his party wins fewer seats than the opposition.
In such a scenario, Clegg could find himself with the balance of power. The backing of his expected bloc of about 80 seats in a coalition would give Cameron or Brown the ability to form a government and pass laws. It's also possible that as early as Friday, Cameron will take the keys to London's No. 10 Downing Street after ousting the 59-year-old Brown
-- who may decide to quit if his party is humbled. Even if Cameron defied predictions and won outright with a single-digit majority, it would be in stark contrast to Blair's landslide 1997 victory for Labour. Blair won a total of 418 seats, his party's largest number ever; a party needs 326 seats to command a parliamentary majority. Several polls late Wednesday showed Britain on course for a hung Parliament. Without a firm mandate, the task for Britain's next leader of pushing through painful public spending cuts as well as a likely tax increase will be far more difficult. "There's still a lot of head-scratching going around, and that might not change for weeks," says Steven Fielding, a political analyst from Nottingham University.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching & Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries
Community |
Perspectives
|
Law & Courts |
Leisure Time
|
Spiritual Life |
Health & Fitness |
Teen Scene
Calendar
|
Letters to the Editor