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Britain’s candidates agree: Race is wide open

Divided over the country's ballooning debt, the economy and immigration, the three front-runners in Britain's general election can still agree on one thing: This race is anyone's to win.
Image: Britain's Conservative Party leader Cameron, Liberal Democrat leader Clegg and PM Brown take part in the third and final televised party leaders' debate in Birmingham
Britain's Conservative Party leader David Cameron, left, Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg, center, and Labour Prime Minister Gordon Brown take part in the third and final televised party leaders' debate in Birmingham on Thursday.BBC via Reuters
/ Source: The Associated Press

Divided over the country's ballooning debt, the economy and the contentious issue of immigration, the three front-runners in Britain's general election can still agree on one thing: This race is anyone's to win.

Conservative challenger David Cameron, fresh off what observers said was his best live televised debate performance to date, told BBC radio that next week's national election was "still far from won."

Nick Clegg, still riding higher in the polls than most political observers had ever expected, said the campaign was "wide open."

Even Britain's ever-optimistic former Prime Minister Tony Blair, who hit the campaign trail Friday in support of his successor, Gordon Brown, could only say that their governing Labour Party "has every chance of succeeding."

An ICM/Populus poll, published Friday by The Guardian, showed the gap between each party within the margin of error. Statistically, the three-way contest involving Cameron, Clegg and Brown has become a dead heat.

Those figures are disappointing for Cameron, whose Tories at one point enjoyed a double-digit lead over Labour, which has run the country since Blair was elected in 1997.

But Labour managed to whittle away Cameron's advantage as the election drew closer, and both parties have been caught off-guard by Clegg, whose affable and straightforward style in the nation's first U.S.-style TV debate on April 15 led to a surge in support for his opposition Liberal Democrats.

Spoiling the party?
Andrew Gamble, the head of the department of politics at Cambridge University, said Cameron "should be winning this election by a mile."

"The fact that they're not is deeply troubling for the Conservatives," he said. "Clegg is spoiling the party for them."

Political observers said Cameron did well in Thursday's debate, watched by some 8 million people, although Clegg also held his own. Brown placed a distant third in a performance that politics expert John Curtice described as overly defensive, the observers said.

But none of the candidates provided detailed economic recovery plans in a nation that faces major economic troubles and one of the largest deficits in Europe — both of which will require harsh cuts in public spending after the election.

Labour had more bad luck Friday, when a car crashed into a bus shelter as the prime minister and several members of his Cabinet launched a new poster campaign nearby. No one was hurt in the incident, but headline writers had a field day: Even the left-leaning Guardian quoted a minister denying the incident was a metaphor for Labour's election campaign.

But with the election on May 6, Brown's opponents aren't taking anything for granted.

Addressing a crowd in northern England, Clegg said he was "certainly not going to rest one millisecond, one minute until this campaign ends — right up to the moment when people decide how to vote."

"There are lots of people who haven't decided how they are going to vote," he said. "I think many people now see this campaign is wide open. It's one of the most exciting campaigns in a generation and that we can do something different."

'Fight for every vote'
In his interview Friday, Cameron said his party would "have to fight for every vote and every seat."

Brown, too, has pledged to take his fight down to the wire.

"The time for debates is finished, the time for decision has begun," he told supporters. "We will continue to fight for the future of this country until the very last second of this election campaign."

Gamble suggested that those very last seconds could still be crucial.

"In this last week a lot of voters will be making up their minds," he said.