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Hung parliament predicted as Britain gears up for polls
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By Anasudhin AzeezLondon, March 30
As the campaign to elect the
next British Parliament begun on Monday, surveys have predicted a hung
House of Commons with minor parties like Scottish National Party (SNP)
and UK Independent Party (UKIP) calling the shots.
British Prime
Minister David Cameron met Queen Elizabeth II at the Buckingham Palace
on Monday and requested her to dissolve the parliament. The election
for all 650 seats of the house will take place on May 7. The last day
to file the nominations is April 9.
Sky News' projection on what
parliament would look like gives Labour 279 seats, with the Tories just
one behind on 278. The SNP would win 52, the Liberal Democrats 16,
UKIP two and others 23.
A Sunday Times poll put Labour ahead by
three points, but a ComRes Poll for ITV News and the Daily Mail shows
the Conservatives four points in the lead at 36 percent to Labour's 32
percent.
Prime Minister Cameron launched the formal Conservative election campaign at 10, Downing Street.
"There
is a stark choice at the polls," Cameron told the media. "The next
prime minister walking through that door will be me or Ed Miliband."
Labour
leader Ed Miliband launched his campaign at Bloomberg in London with a
mini-manifesto focusing on the business policies of his party.
Miliband
warned that a European Union referendum proposed by Cameron in 2017
would trigger a bitter two-year campaign in which a re-elected Tory
party would tear itself apart over whether Britain should remain in
Europe.
Labour hopes to use fears about this uncertainty as a
lever to urge companies to look again at some of Miliband's pro-business
policies. The party also plans to highlight Britain's falling
productivity ahead of figures due to be published this week.
However,
business leaders have expressed fears about Miliband's approach to
failed markets and his apparent opposition to the role of the private
sector in public services. Some have also expressed concern about a
possible Labour tie-up with the Scottish Nationalists, fearing the SNP
will push Labour's stance on economic management to the left.
Deputy
Prime Minister Nick Clegg said the Liberal Democrats would never "play
footsie" with the possibility of quitting the European Union.
Speaking
on "Good Morning Britain", UKIP leader Nigel Farage said his party
would not win the election but could be key in helping shape a future
government.
With the parliament dissolved, MPs immediately lose
their title and are asked to remove references to it, or place
disclaimers on any email or social media account which names them as an
MP.
(Anasudhin Azeez can be contacted at [email protected])