6
Apr
The General Election 2010

Today Gordon Brown has announced what the whole country has been
expecting for months and has called the General Election for May
6.
The Telegraph reports "The Prime Minister put
the economy at the heart of the campaign by urging the electorate
not to risk the recovery by voting for the Conservatives.
Standing in front of his Cabinet, he said:
“Britain is on the road to recovery and nothing we do should
put that recovery at risk.
"Over the next few weeks I will go round the
country - the length and breadth of our land - and I will take to
the people a very straightforward and clear message. Britain is on
the road to recovery and nothing we do should put that recovery at
risk.
"Get the big decisions right - as we did in
the last 18 months since the world recession - and jobs, prosperity
and better standards of living will result.
"Get the big decisions wrong and the lives of
hundreds of thousands of people are diminished as a
result."
Disclosing the “worst-kept secret”
in politics, Mr Brown confirmed that the General Election would
take place on May 6.
He said: "The Queen has kindly agreed to the
dissolution of Parliament and a General Election will take place on
May 6."
Minutes before he spoke, David Cameron, the
Conservative leader, attempted to steal a march on Mr Brown, making
his first speech of the campaign before the date was even
confirmed.
He said that he was fighting on behalf of the
“Great Ignored,” describing the election as the most
important for a generation.
"It comes down to this. You don't have to put
up with another five years of Gordon Brown," said Mr
Cameron.
Mr Brown asked the Queen to dissolve
Parliament and call a general election on May 6 during a 23 minute
audience at Buckingham Palace.
Their talk followed a Cabinet meeting lasting
three-quarters of an hour, with ministers signing off on
Labour’s election manifesto.
Labour’s intention is to portray the
strength of the party’s top team compared to that of the
Conservatives.
Mr Brown said that he wasn’t a
“team of one,” and highlighted the strength of the
Cabinet.
He also disclosed that he would set out a full
programme of constitutional reform in coming days in a bid to
restore the trust in politics which had been lost following the
expenses scandal.
“I have one final mandate to ask of the
British people as well,” he said, “to improve the
public trust in our democracy and public life.”
Prime ministers usually claim all of the spot
light when calling an election, and the Tories will point out that
the tactic highlights how, unlike most leaders, Mr Brown is clearly
not seen being portrayed by Labour as their strongest
card.
David Cameron, the Conservative leader,
welcomed the start of the general election campaign and vowed that
he had the energy to get the country moving again.
The Tory leader began the first day of the
campaign with a half-hour jog, leaving his west London home at
6.30am.
As Mr Brown drove back from the Palace, Mr
Cameron made his first speech of the campaign. He said: "We're
fighting this election for the Great Ignored - young, old, rich,
poor, black, white, gay, straight.
"They start businesses, operate factories,
teach our children, clean the streets, grow our food and keep us
healthy - keep us safe. They work hard, pay their taxes, obey the
law.
"They're good, decent people - they're the
people of Britain and they just want a reason to believe that
anything is still possible in our country.
"This election is about giving them that
reason, giving them that hope. That's the Conservatives mission -
that's my mission - for the next 30 days and I can't wait to get
started."
Afterwards, members of the shadow cabinet
headed off to campaign in every region in the country, including
Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
Nick Clegg, the Liberal Democrat leader, told
party workers that the official start to the election campaign
marked “the beginning of the end for Brown”.
He said: "I think it's great that the
campaign's now going to start. People finally have a say about the
big changes they want, to make this country fairer and
better
"This is a choice now between the old politics
of the two old parties and something new, something different,
which the Liberal Democrats offer.
"This is not a two-horse race between the two
old parties, Labour and the Conservatives. People have got a real
choice this time and I think that's why this election is wide open.
All bets are off.
"I'm really looking forward to being able to
put the case for real change, for real fairness, to people up and
down the country.
"I think people are just crying out for
something different, and that's what we offer."
Parliament will not be formally dissolved
until Monday, with MPs spending the next three days rushing
legislation through the Commons during what is known as the
“wash up”.
Like the other party leaders, however, Mr
Brown is expected to head off on the road immediately, making a
campaign visit with his wife, Sarah, in a marginal seat in Kent,
where he will warn voters that they can not trust the Conservatives
with the economy.
Mr Cameron and his wife Sarah will later head
to Birmingham, before holding an evening rally in Leeds.
After being formally dissolved on Monday, the
Commons will not meet again until May 18, far later than usual,
raising speculation that Mr Brown has warned the Queen that a hung
Parliament was likely.
While it is usual for a new House of Commons
to meet the week following a general election, in this case, the
parties will have time for a protracted period of negotiation in
the event that all fail to win enough seats to form an outright
majority."
Back to Top (↑)