LONDON, (Reuters) – A third senior minister quit the British government yesterday, calling on Prime Minister Gordon Brown to quit to improve his party’s chances at a general election due within a year.
James Purnell’s resignation, announced in a letter printed by The Times newspaper, is a direct attack on Brown’s authority and increases the possibility of a challenge to his leadership of the ruling Labour Party.
Purnell, work and pensions secretary, a rising star in the Labour Party, is the third cabinet minister this week to resign. He said he was not seeking the party leadership but his dramatic intervention could embolden a challenger to emerge.
News of the letter broke as polls were closing in local and European elections in which Labour, in power for 12 years, was expected to suffer heavy losses at the hands of the centre-right opposition Conservatives.
Brown only found out about Purnell’s resignation at about the same time that he went public with the news, according to Brown’s spokesman.
The spokesman said Brown was disappointed by the news but would focus on restructuring the government to guide the economy through the downturn and rebuild trust in parliament, which has been tarnished by a scandal over politicians’ perks.
Brown is expected to reshuffle his government soon after Thursday’s elections.
Purnell’s spokesman could not be reached for comment.
The opposition Conservatives stepped up their calls for an immediate national election. “It’s clear that we have a completely paralysed government at the moment,” Conservative economics spokesman George Osborne told Sky News.
Labour has slumped in the opinion polls as the government struggles to counter a severe recession. In recent weeks, Labour and the other main parties have all been damaged by reports of members of parliament abusing their expense accounts.