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Daily View: Election speculation

Clare Spencer | 09:58 UK time, Monday, 23 November 2009

Nick CleggAn shows a fall in the Conservatives' lead. Commentators are speculating about what this will mean for the next election.

Much talk is about whether a hung Parliament would be a good thing. thinks such a result would be difficult for all, but a terrible blow for David Cameron who she says has been assuming the Tories are returning to power. Meanwhile, is holding out for a hung parliament:

"I think the British people deserves a hung parliament, which would be the best result of the next election. I have been saying for some time that the Conservatives do not have the strength in depth to form a credible government and that the electorate faces the most unappealing choice since 1970."

Nick Clegg has a Liberal dilemma:

"It is ironic indeed that Nick Clegg, the leader of a party that dedicates itself to the destruction of the first-past-the-post system, appears to have mortgaged his political future to it. It also makes the party seem uninterested in principle or policy.
Nick Clegg's strategy."

Labour MP that Liberal Democrat voters need to know whether their leaders would align themselves with Labour or the Conservatives in a hung parliament. She tries to work out Nick Clegg's strategy:

"The other possible interpretations of this are that (a) Nick Clegg thinks the Tories are going to win and is getting cosy with them now in the hope of a decent job in a Tory Cabinet or (b) Nick Clegg is really a Tory at heart, who's just a bit keener on Europe than the rest of them."

In the gambling world, the main effect of talk of a hung parliament is that few punters are ready to change their positions or start risking money on Labour.

The Daily Mail and the First Post disagree who this poll is worst for. the poll shows voters still don't trust Mr Cameron's Tories because "many see him as guilty of the same kind of cynical opportunism and contempt for the public that has turned so many against not just Labour but politicians in general."

And that those who see this poll as good news for Labour are wrong as Gordon Brown is still performing badly in the personality ratings:

"Instead of being a vote of confidence in his leadership, it suggests that if only Brown would step down and allow someone else - either of the Miliband brothers or even Ed Balls - to fight for the crown, Labour would have a real chance of beating Cameron."

The 91Èȱ¬'s Political Editor Nick Robinson Analysed on Radio 4's Today Programme what Nick Clegg's motivations may be:

"I think he's trying to put a marker down now, a marker with the public saying look we're not trying to do some deal in smoke filled rooms when you're not looking."

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