Britain's incoming prime minister, Gordon Brown, vowed yesterday
to renew the government and learn lessons from the war in Iraq as
he took the helm of the ruling Labor Party from Tony Blair.
Brown, 56, said health, education and ending child poverty would
be his priorities when he succeeds Blair as prime minister on
Wednesday after a long, agonizing wait for the top job.
"This week I will form a new government with new priorities to meet
the new challenges of 2007 and beyond," Brown told a Labor meeting
in Manchester, northern England, to applause.
Focusing his sights on a fourth straight term for Labor, Brown
appointed a campaign coordinator to be ready, he said, for an
election "whenever the prime minister decides to call it".
The next election is due by 2010 but Brown can call it whenever
he chooses.
Brown promised to listen to the public and said there would be
no backtracking on Blair's public service reforms that have angered
parts of Labor.
"If people think we will achieve our goals in the future by
retreating to failed approaches of the past, then they have not
learned the lessons I have learned from the last 10 years," he
said.
Harriet Harman, an experienced member of parliament for an
inner-city London area, was named deputy Labor leader at the
gathering after a closely fought six-week election.
"You want unity and you want discipline and you also want
debate," Harman said, in a nod to Labor members who have grown
disenchanted after a decade of Blair and years of sniping between
the Blair and Brown camps.
There was no sign of the acrimony that has marred the
relationship between the two most powerful men in British politics.
Blair praised Brown and warmly shook his hand and Brown thanked him
for his ten years as prime minister.
On the economy, Brown promised to take long-term decisions that
would ensure stability. He said health care would be his top
priority.
On Iraq, he said there would be no rapid withdrawal of British
troops, as many in Labor are calling for, and vowed to build "the
strongest multilateral approach" to security challenges.
"We will meet our international obligations, we will learn
lessons that need to be learned," he said.
Public disillusionment after a decade of Blair and anger over
the Iraq War have meant Labor has lagged the opposition
Conservative Party - revived under youthful leader David Cameron,
40 - in polls since last October.
Political analysts saw the Conservatives on track to at least
force a hung parliament in the next election.
But a new poll yesterday, in The Observer newspaper,
put support for Labor at 39 percent and the Conservatives at 36
percent, giving Brown a welcome but expected boost.
Aides hope Brown's more serious manner and focus on substance
will woo back voters who had grown tired of what one Labor lawmaker
called Blair's "glitz and razzmattazz", his closeness to celebrity
and his courting of millionaire donors.
Forty percent of voters believed Brown would make a more capable
prime minister, compared to just 22 percent who prefer Cameron, the
poll said.
(China Daily via agencies June 25, 2007)