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Labour party launches last-gasp attempt to boost British election hopes

December 11, 2019

Ag AFP

Britain’s opposition Labour party sought to heap pressure on the ruling Conservatives on Tuesday over healthcare, in a bid to exploit government weaknesses and divert attention from its own mixed message on Brexit two days before Britons head to the polls.

But its hopes of staging a late comeback before Thursday’s general election were hobbled by a leaked recording in which Labour’s health spokesman called his party’s prospects "dire". "It’s abysmal out there," Jonathan Ashworth said in a recording published by a right-wing website and later tweeted by Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

"They can’t stand Corbyn and they think Labour’s blocked Brexit," he added, referring to the party leader Jeremy Corbyn. Ashworth later told the BBC the tape was real but he was speaking in jest.

Opinion polls show the Conservatives, led by Prime Minister Boris Johnson, enjoying a comfortable lead in an election he has called the "most important in a generation". Johnson’s minority government hopes to secure a majority that would let him pull Britain out of the European Union by the end of next month.

Yet pollsters were almost unanimously wrong about the outcome of Britain’s last election in 2017 after a later surge by Corbyn, who is most at home campaigning on the stump. A ruling party memo published by the pro-Conservative Daily Telegraph newspaper warned that just 40,000 votes in 12 constituencies could see Corbyn become Britain’s next leader.

Corbyn himself believes he could reach those voters by focusing on the taxpayer-backed National Health Service (NHS). Labour claimed on Tuesday that nearly 4,700 deaths between October 2018 and November 2019 could be attributed to "patient safety incidents" caused by NHS staffing constraints.

"There’s a very large number of hospitals where patients are at risk because of staff shortages," Corbyn told BBC television. "It is a serious issue." Labour further accused Johnson of abandoning the principle of free treatment for all by opening up the NHS to pharmaceutical giants in a new trade deal with US President Donald Trump. Both Johnson and Trump deny the claims. The fate of the NHS is the second-most important issue for voters, behind Brexit, according to studies.

Johnson, in power since July, has campaigned on his government’s determination to "get Brexit done" and honour the result of the 2016 referendum on European Union membership. Analysts suggested Labour’s ability to keep the focus on health and their other key issues could be vital for the result.

"This kind of last-minute thing, that really does ram home Labour’s core message, at this point could nudge a few people in certain vital constituencies to vote Labour," University of Nottingham Professor Steven Fielding told AFP.

"At this point in time, it could be the difference between a majority Conservative government and a hung parliament." Britain’s partisan media has assumed a dominant role in the final stretch of a manic five-week campaign that has seen Corbyn and Johnson spend most of their time on the road.

The Labour-supporting Daily Mirror newspaper devoted its first seven pages on Tuesday to the state of the NHS. "Another day, anther heartbreaking image of a sick child that shames the Tories of starving the NHS of cash," the newspaper wrote next to a photo of a sick baby resting in an armchair because of a lack of beds.

That followed its publication on Monday of a picture of a boy sleeping on a hospital floor while he waited to be treated. Johnson drew criticism on Monday when he was confronted on camera and asked to comment on the photograph of the boy on a journalist’s phone. He initially refused, grabbed the reporter’s phone and put it in his pocket, before handing the phone back saying it was a "terrible, terrible photo".