Brown in record poll slide!
LONDON, England - April 13, 2008
- Gordon Brown's personal popularity
ratings have plunged further and faster than any other British prime minister
since polling began in the 1930s, a poll revealed on Sunday.
Brown is facing a rough ride as the
global lending squeeze tightens its grip on the economy and the housing market
could head into a sharp downturn.
Although he does not have to call a
national election until 2010, Brown also faces a tough parliamentary battle
against rebels in his own Labour party over his plans to extend the time
terrorism suspects are held from 28 to 42 days.
The latest YouGov poll in the
Sunday Times showed the resurgent Conservatives on 44 percent with Labour on 28
percent and the centrist Liberal Democrats on 17 percent.
But the biggest blow was delivered
on Brown's personal ratings, which have fallen from plus 48 last August to
minus 37, on a zero midpoint scale.
"The collapse is the most
dramatic of any modern-day prime minister, worse even than Neville Chamberlain
who in 1940 dropped from plus 21 to minus 27 after Hitler's invasion of
Norway," the paper said.
Brown, hailed as a steady hand on
the economic tiller in his decade as finance minister, took over as prime
minister in June last year from Tony Blair.
His reputation for economic competence crumbled when
the country's fifth largest mortgage lender collapsed in the credit crunch.
Housing prices have just recorded their biggest monthly fall since 1992.