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Britain's Anti-Blair Still Trying

Campaign: Despite polls showing he is certain to lose the race for prime minister, Conservative leader William Hague remains indefatigable.

The World

June 06, 2001|MARJORIE MILLER, TIMES STAFF WRITER

ABINGDON, England — As Conservative Party leader William Hague made his way through the flock of the faithful at a lunchtime rally Tuesday and an emcee introduced "the next prime minister of Britain," even many of his supporters let out an involuntary guffaw.

The conservative Times of London newspaper had just thrown its support to the Labor Party for the first time ever, endorsing Prime Minister Tony Blair for a second term. The nation's leading betting house, Ladbrokes, had already closed its book on Thursday's election and said it had begun paying out on a Labor victory.


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Even Hague, after presenting an ambitious plan Monday for his first days in office, had warned of the dangers of a Labor landslide.

"Well, he's trying hard," offered Tory voter Graham Gingell, 62.

Trying to the bitter end in a race he is said to be losing by between 13 and 20 percentage points.

Hague is undaunted, as he has been throughout a campaign in which the bald politician in Savile Row suits is simultaneously mocked as Britain's oldest 40-year-old and portrayed in cartoons as a fetus.

He rattled off a litany of reasons that British voters should turn their backs on Labor after four years and return power to the party of former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher: Labor is all spin, no delivery. It has raised taxes, overwhelmed doctors and teachers with bureaucracy, gone soft on crime and neglected rural Britons, he said, barely drawing a breath. Now, it threatens to turn over more powers to Europeans in Brussels.

"We have two days to make sure we keep the pound," Hague said of the British currency, drawing applause in this Oxfordshire town's market square.

It was a mighty effort in a district of Parliament considered to be a safe Conservative seat until 1997, when Britain's third party, the Liberal Democrats, took it away in the electoral drubbing that ended 18 years of Tory rule.

But clearly it was not enough.

"I hope he knocks the Labor majority back," said Tory voter Peter Dixon, 47. "Realistically, it's too big a hurdle for the Conservatives to get back in. Look at the supporters here, the blue-rinse brigade. . . . My children are more with the Liberal Democrats."

Hague, whose mother gave him a membership in the Conservative Party for his 15th birthday, is an Oxford-educated Yorkshireman who speaks with a nasal, northern accent. He was 36 and a relatively inexperienced politician in 1997 when he assumed the leadership of a party in shambles after voters booted the Tories out of power and gave Labor 418 seats in the 659-member House of Commons. But he was as doggedly optimistic then as he is today.

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