Related News
Clegg's popularity tumbles on tuition fee hike
THE popularity of Nick Clegg, the leader of Britain's coalition government's junior partner, has plummeted and supporters are deserting his party over plans to raise university tuition fees, said a poll published yesterday.
Parliament voted last Thursday in favor of government's plans to allow English universities to charge students almost treble the current limit, a policy that has divided Clegg's Liberal Democrat party and led to violent protests in London.
Before May's election Clegg and his party's lawmakers had pledged to vote against any rise, and his decision to renege on that promise has seen his personal standing sink, an Ipsos MORI poll for the News of the World newspaper found.
In April, a poll rated him as the most popular British party leader since World War II Prime Minister Winston Churchill. Now 61 percent of those surveyed thought the deputy prime minister was untrustworthy.
The policy has also damaged his party, with nearly half the voters who supported the center-left Liberal Democrats in May saying they were unlikely to do so in future.
The findings were backed up by another poll for the coalition's senior partner, the Conservative party, published in the Sunday Telegraph which indicated only 54 percent who backed Clegg's party would do so at the next election.
Less than half of the 57 Liberal Democrat lawmakers voted in favor of raising tuition fees, one of the government's moves to erase a record budget gap, and the revolt led some commentators to suggest Clegg's leadership could be in question.
However, analysts say the growing unpopularity of the Liberal Democrats means the party is unlikely to take any action that would jeopardise the coalition.
"I think in coalition governments there's always going to be issues on which there is going to be some disagreement," John Leech, a Lib Dem who voted against the policy, told Sky News.
The MORI poll found two-thirds of Britons opposed the rise in tuition fees and most thought it would deter those from deprived families from going to university.
However, it also found Conservative support had been little affected by anger over the policy and Prime Minister David Cameron's personal ratings were almost unchanged.
Protesters attacked government buildings and attacked a car carrying heir-to-the-throne Prince Charles last Thursday during London's worst riots in years and the fourth violent demonstration in the capital against the plans.
(Reuters)
Parliament voted last Thursday in favor of government's plans to allow English universities to charge students almost treble the current limit, a policy that has divided Clegg's Liberal Democrat party and led to violent protests in London.
Before May's election Clegg and his party's lawmakers had pledged to vote against any rise, and his decision to renege on that promise has seen his personal standing sink, an Ipsos MORI poll for the News of the World newspaper found.
In April, a poll rated him as the most popular British party leader since World War II Prime Minister Winston Churchill. Now 61 percent of those surveyed thought the deputy prime minister was untrustworthy.
The policy has also damaged his party, with nearly half the voters who supported the center-left Liberal Democrats in May saying they were unlikely to do so in future.
The findings were backed up by another poll for the coalition's senior partner, the Conservative party, published in the Sunday Telegraph which indicated only 54 percent who backed Clegg's party would do so at the next election.
Less than half of the 57 Liberal Democrat lawmakers voted in favor of raising tuition fees, one of the government's moves to erase a record budget gap, and the revolt led some commentators to suggest Clegg's leadership could be in question.
However, analysts say the growing unpopularity of the Liberal Democrats means the party is unlikely to take any action that would jeopardise the coalition.
"I think in coalition governments there's always going to be issues on which there is going to be some disagreement," John Leech, a Lib Dem who voted against the policy, told Sky News.
The MORI poll found two-thirds of Britons opposed the rise in tuition fees and most thought it would deter those from deprived families from going to university.
However, it also found Conservative support had been little affected by anger over the policy and Prime Minister David Cameron's personal ratings were almost unchanged.
Protesters attacked government buildings and attacked a car carrying heir-to-the-throne Prince Charles last Thursday during London's worst riots in years and the fourth violent demonstration in the capital against the plans.
(Reuters)
- About Us
- |
- Terms of Use
- |
-
RSS
- |
- Privacy Policy
- |
- Contact Us
- |
- Shanghai Call Center: 962288
- |
- Tip-off hotline: 52920043
- 沪ICP证:沪ICP备05050403号-1
- |
- 互联网新闻信息服务许可证:31120180004
- |
- 网络视听许可证:0909346
- |
- 广播电视节目制作许可证:沪字第354号
- |
- 增值电信业务经营许可证:沪B2-20120012
Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.