Seven Labor members of parliament quit their government posts on
Wednesday in protest against Tony Blair's refusal to set a
timetable for his departure as both Labor leader and British prime
minister.
Tom Watson quit as a junior defense minister and was followed by
six Parliamentary Private Secretaries including Khalid Mahmood,
Wayne David, Ian Lucas, Mark Tami, Chris Mole and David Wright, Sky
news reported.
They said it was not "in the interest of either the party or the
country" for Blair to remain in office.
Four of the group said in a joint statement that Blair had "not
ended the uncertainty over when he intends to leave office, which
is damaging the government and the party."
"I share the view of the overwhelming majority of the party and
the country that the only way the party and the government can
renew itself in office is urgently to renew its leadership," Watson
wrote in his resignation letter.
He was also among a group of MPs who had earlier signed a
confidential letter to Blair urging him to name a date for his
departure.
In reaction, Blair accused Watson of being "disloyal,
discourteous and wrong" by leaking the letter to the press.
The Sun newspaper on Wednesday published a front-page
story screaming that Blair will resign on May 31 as party leader
and depart as Prime Minister on July 26 next year. There has been
no official comment from Downing Street.
Meanwhile, supporters of Chancellor Gordon Brown are also
calling for Blair to make a public declaration about when he will
go.
The wave of resignation and appeal gives rise to John McDonnell,
chair of the socialist Campaign Group of Labor MPs, who confirmed
on Wednesday that he would stand for the leadership campaign to
succeed Blair.
Although Blair had publicly announced that he would not run in
the next general election, he refuses to set a timetable for his
departure, insisting that he wants to go ahead with the reforms
instead of being pressed with the obsession of the exact time to
quit his job.
Recent opinion polls showed that the Conservative Party has been
taking the lead over Labor in support rate, largely due to Blair's
foreign policy both on the war against Iraq and on the
Israel-Lebanon conflict, not to mention his domestic policies of
pursuing nuclear power station and nuclear weapons.
(Xinhua News Agency September 7, 2006)