10 October 2008
Russia compares NATO meeting in Hungary to a club of sweaty naked men
 ENG   RUS   PT   ITA 
Photo Forum Articles News All news Feedback Advertising
Search the site:
Russian authorities blame Internet for inciting ethnic strife   Longevity in numbers and facts, Russian style   Russian scientists design mechanical nurse
Example: Yushchenko, Putin, Bush

The front page   
 Russia   World   Society   Science   Hotspots and Incidents   Opinion   Business 

Login:
@pravda.ru
Password:
Forgot?
  Register Now!
Photo galleries
Vladimir Putin recieves tiger cub for his birthday
Vladimir Putin recieves tiger cub for his birthday
The eroticism of Natalie Martinez Russian winter comes to ice bar in Orlando

LATEST NEWS
Russia officially closes its embassy in Georgia and recalls ambassador
Kidnapped European tourists released in Egyptian desert
USA's next president to be penny-pinching commander-in-chief
Pirates celebrate Muslim feast of Eid al-Fitr with US warships and helicopters nearby
Afghan president asks Saudi king for help in talks with Taliban
Germany urges USA to deal with its financial crisis
Iraq buys new US-made spy planes
Police raid dairy farms and milk purchasing stations in China
Bush believes bailout cost to be much less than 700 billion dollars
Iran to continue uranium enrichment activity despite new UN resolution


NEWS OF THE WEEK
Alexander Solzhenitsyn dies in Moscow at age 89
Radovan Karadzic to be put on trial at The Hague
Man rapes little girl and films it on video in USA

Article

Liberal Democrats in turmoil over sex scandal

23.01.2006 Source:
Increase font size
  Decrease font size   print version  
Pages:

Plunging poll ratings, alcohol abuse and a salacious sex scandal: the fortunes of Britain's opposition Liberal Democrats have taken a decided turn for the worse. The party's law and order spokesman Mark Oaten quit at the weekend over newspaper allegations he paid for sex with a male prostitute. Only two weeks earlier, party leader Charles Kennedy was forced to resign after acknowledging a drinking problem. Now the party, whose opposition to the Iraq war helped its popularity to soar, is fighting to restore its political credibility. "We have got to get back to putting over the policies we believe in and reassuring people or convincing people anew that we have the capability," said Lord McNally, the Liberal Democrat leader in the House of Lords, on Monday. "It is worth reminding people that we are still the party that stood up against the Iraq war."

BREAKING NEWS
Every U.S. citizen holds 86,000 dollars of national debt
The demise of America
Hypocritical West stands up against Russia
Stunning photos of Russia's Soyuz booster rocket
More...

Since Kennedy took the helm in 1999, the party has enjoyed its best poll ratings in years. The amiable Scotsman steered the left-of-center party through a successful election last year, stealing votes from both Prime Minister Tony Blair's Labour Party and the Conservative Party, which both supported the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. Although failing to overtake the Conservatives as the main opposition, the Liberal Democrats boosted their tally of lawmakers in the 646-seat House of Commons from 55 to 62.

But sections of the party felt Kennedy should have done better, at a time when Blair's own popularity was crippled by the war. The pressure on Kennedy intensified following the appointment last month of David Cameron, 39, as Conservative leader. Young, dynamic and a skilled communicator, Cameron has reinvigorated the party and already boosted its poll ratings.

Kennedy, 46, acknowledged his drinking problem two weeks ago, when confronted with allegations of alcohol abuse by a British television network. He was forced to step down soon after by senior party lawmakers. The impact on the Lib Dems' popularity was immediate, and a Populus poll conducted days after saw its support slip by three points to just 16 percent, a poor showing for a party that averages 22 percent and its lowest rating since 2001. The same poll put Labour on 39 percent and the Conservatives on 36 percent, both up a point.

Oaten's resignation on Saturday is a further blow to the party, which is in the midst of a leadership election. Oaten, 41, quit after the News of the World newspaper confronted him with allegations he had paid for sex with a 23-year-old man. The married father of two released a statement to reporters apologizing for "errors of judgment" and for the embarrassment caused to family and friends.

Acting leader Sir Menzies Campbell has called on the party to unite and not to be distracted by the scandals. "No party is entirely subject to what happens to any one individual. The party is much bigger than that. My task as acting leader is to secure a sense of unity and purpose," he said, reports the AP. N.U.

Join Pravda.ru forum. Registration is free and simple

Digg!
Pages:
print version e-mail


Readers' Top
And let Sarah Palin become POTUS
Anna Kournikova on the cover of a magazine
The pre-planned Financial/Economic 911 of 2008



FUNNY NEWS STORIES :
All news About Pravda.Ru Site map Export news News partners STATISTICS
© 1999-2006. «PRAVDA.Ru». When reproducing our materials in whole or in part, hyperlink to PRAVDA.Ru should be made. The opinions and views of the authors do not always coincide with the point of view of PRAVDA.Ru's editors..
Rambler's Top100 Рейтинг@Mail.ru