56% want Blair to go now as loans-for-peerages inquiry is set to lead to three charges

An ICM survey for the Sunday Express finds that 56% of voters are unwilling to wait for Tony Blair to go in the summer and want him to leave now.  43% of Labour supporters want him to go now.

Mr Blair's diminishing reputation has been further undermined by two more stories this weekend.

First is today's News of the World story that three people are set to be charged in the cash-for-honours enquiry.  They are Lord Levy and the Downing Street head of government relations, Ruth Turner, and also the businessman Sir Christopher Evans who faces a charge under the 1925 Honours (Prevention of Abuse) Act because of his lending to Labour.  Evidence from the Prime Minister's political secretary John McTernan "started the dominos falling," says the News of the World.

Davies_david Meanwhile Welsh Tory MP David Davies is writing to the Prime Minister about yesterday's Daily Mail revelation that Tony Blair has bought a fifth house - meaning likely mortgage debts of £5m when the Blairs' current earnings could only justify borrowings of about £1.3m.  This is what Mr Davies tells The Sunday Telegraph:

"I find it astonishing that the Prime Minister feels the need for another house.  I don't believe he can afford them on the basis of his current salary, and I assume he must have secured the mortgage on the basis of future earnings.  I will be writing to Downing Street to find out what public funds, if any, are being spent on the house."

Blair interviewed by police for the second time

Tony_blair_1The Prime Minister was secretly interviewed by police last Friday, he was first interviewed five weeks ago.

This morning's newspapers were already talking about the end of Tony Blair (The Telegraph called him "an absurdity") due to David Cameron's performance at PMQs. This revelation from today's lobby briefing is a devastating double-whammy and perhaps justifies Cameron's strategy of aiming his sights at Blair rather than Brown.

Deputy Editor

2pm update from PA: Shadow Chancellor George Osborne said he did not want to "prejudge" the police inquiry.  But it's obviously an extremely serious matter when a serving Prime Minister is interviewed twice by the police," he added.  I think that the police need to conduct the inquiry as they see fit and it's certainly not the job of politicians to interfere in that... There's a broader point here which goes to the whole situation we find ourselves in this year, which is that this Government is paralysed and, as David Cameron was saying in the House of Commons yesterday, it's difficult to see why Tony Blair is remaining in office."

Luntz's thirty floaters prefer Reid to Brown... but is Luntz's approach flawed?

It was nearly a year ago that David Cameron's Tory leadership bid was resurrected.  'That speech', an impressive campaign launch and a faltering David Davis all boosted Mr Cameron's fortunes but there was also an important fourth factor - 'the Luntz effect'.

A focus group by US consultant Frank Luntz found a very positive reaction to Mr Cameron from floating voters and it helped power the Cameron surge.

Mr Luntz has now carried out another focus group (for Newsnight) and has this time compared the possible contenders for the Labour leadership.  His conclusions appear in an article for The Times and they're bad news for Gordon Brown.  People found the Chancellor dour, responsible for 'the coup' against Blair and Scottish.  Luntz was surprised at the Scottish thing:

"Almost half the group opposed being led by a Scotsman. I pushed them hard — and they pushed back. “It’s not racist. I want someone who is English running England."

Reid_john_smiling_7 That didn't stop the focus group favouring John Reid overall:

"Only a fraction of our participants could name Mr Reid just from his photograph. But two words immediately came to mind as their familiarity grew: “strong” and “tough”. In the on-air battle between Mr Reid and Jeremy Paxman, half thought Paxman won, but the other half saw in Reid’s refusal to back down a demonstration of backbone and the determination they want in their next leader.  The single most well received language of the evening was Mr Reid’s declaration that “a court judgment that put the human rights of foreign prisoners ahead of the right to safety of UK citizens is wrong. Full stop. No qualifications”. His anti-criminal, pro-victim rhetoric communicated an essential personal attribute that the rest of the Labour leadership is missing — genuine listening. “He’s listening to the people on the streets.”  Mr Reid has two characteristics the voters did not like in Gordon Brown: age and a Scottish ancestry. But they didn’t seem to mind. To them, he is “action, not talk”."

Mr Reid's toughness will certainly be a contrast to Mr Cameron's smoothness and would potentially be a powerful asset if the international security situation deteriorates.

Alan Johnson comes off well but less well than Mr Reid.  There is newspaper speculation this morning about a Johnson-Reid ticket.  Remember where you heard that before?

There we are then or are we?  I have one big question about Luntz's approach.  The thirty members of his focus group all appear to be conventional floating voters... "One third," he reports, "were loyal Labourites. One third were Labour-leaners. And one third were floating voters who cast ballots for the Tories or the Liberal Democrats but would consider switching to Labour if it choose the right leader."  I'd like to know if all of these floaters are pretty determined to vote.  As Stephan Shakespeare has written on this site, David Cameron, the man crowned by Luntz's focus group last year, is perfectly pitched for those floating between the main parties but is not reaching those who are floating between voting and not voting (the floating non-voters) who see all the parties as the same.

Anyhow: My £10 bet on John Reid being the next Labour leader looks a little more promising this morning.

Public would support snap election

If the next Labour leader enjoys a bounce in the opinion polls and considers a snap General Election he will have the support of the general public.  56% of voters (polled by GFK/NOP) want to approve the Labour Party’s choice of successor to Tony Blair – within six months of him being chosen (39% think an election should be immediate).

A few months ago that seemed a possible, even likely, scenario.  Gordon Brown was riding high and Tory MP David Gauke urged our party to be ready for a snap election.  A bloody Labour leadership election now seems more likely and if the Tories are able to maintain or grow the opinion poll lead (currently at 4.8% according to ConservativeHome’s poll of polls) it seems that this will be a five year parliament with Labour hoping for events to transform the political landscape.

9pm update: David Willetts appears to be urging a snap election - ITV.com

Alan Johnson PM?

Johnsonatnumber10 The Daily Express' Chief political commentator, Patrick O'Flynn, has penned an important article today on the potential of Alan Johnson taking the crown from Brown. His main points:

John Major comparison - "Risen without trace", could beat hotly-tipped candidate to succeed PM, self-made London boy.

Union support - As former General Secretary of the Union of Communication Workers, he has enough trade union contacts to give Brown a run for his money for their votes in the election.

Unmistakably English - Unlike Glaswegian John Reid he can go for the English vote, and he has a very different sort of Englishness to "the Four Weddings And A Funeral persona of Mr Cameron".

He has the nerve - Has a record of being cheeky to those higher up the food chain, and Brown has said he wouldn't punish anyone who stood against him (he may already be preparing a bid).

Johnson is said to be greatly underestimated as a moderniser and a nice guy... is he?

Deputy Editor

Related links: Dizzy on the johnson4leader domains saga and Nicholas Boles on 'Alan Johnson is the Labour leader that Cameron’s Conservatives fear'

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