3rd French victim of London attacks confirmed

COLWYN BAY, Wales: Britain’s main opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn leaves after addressing supporters at a campaign visit in north Wales yesterday on the eve of the general election. — AFP

LONDON: Britain yesterday hit the final day of campaigning for a general election darkened by jihadist attacks in two cities, leaving forecasters struggling to predict an outcome on polling day. Eight people are now confirmed to have died in Saturday's attack in London, after police announced a body had been recovered from the River Thames in the search for a missing Frenchman. A 30-year-old man was arrested in east London earlier yesterday in connection with the attack, which also left 48 people injured.

Conservative Prime Minister Theresa May and main opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn were criss-crossing the country on Wednesday, targeting urban areas whose votes could be crucial. May aimed at the high-population English Midlands in her final dash, while Corbyn was to attend six rallies in England, Scotland and Wales, stretching from Glasgow to London, in a gruelling last-day marathon.

The prime minister had stunned Britain on April 18 when she announced a snap election, hoping to transform a massive opinion-poll lead into an equally huge majority in the House of Commons where she holds a slim 17-seat advantage in the 650-member legislature. But the political ground began to shift under her feet, moving from EU membership - May's strongest card - to domestic policy and her own record on security, both of them favoring Corbyn.

Opinion polls - hampered by a poor reputation for reliability - predict a May win. But depending on polling methodology, victory could range from around 50 seats, to a loss of seats and even no majority at all. May is fighting to revive her message that she is a "strong and stable" leader compared with Corbyn, able to fight Britain's corner in Brussels, where formal Brexit talks are due to start on June 19. "Get those negotiations wrong and the consequences will be dire," May said yesterday.

Corbyn, a veteran socialist, made an eve-of-voting pitch on the National Health Service (NHS), a beloved institution. "The Conservatives have spent the last seven years running down our NHS, our proudest national institution. Our NHS cannot afford five more years of underfunding, understaffing and privatization," he said.

Corbyn gains?

Despite being seen as an unlikely leader - one who has faced off a rebellion by his own MPs - Corbyn has gained momentum during the election campaign and regularly attracts big crowds to his rallies. Labour gained a boost following the May 18 release of the Conservatives' manifesto, outlining elderly care costs which the tabloids dubbed the "dementia tax". The pledge hit the party's core supporters and May was forced to backtrack on capping the costs, prompting further criticism that she was unreliable.

Corbyn then found a valuable seam in attacking May on security, an area where the Conservatives traditionally are far stronger than Labour in voters' minds. A string of terror attacks have occurred since May became prime minister last July, and she was interior minister for six years before she rose to the top job. Corbyn attacked her for slashing police numbers during her ministerial spell, and vowed to hire more police for neighborhood patrols, a tactic that he said would provide a grassroots shield against jihadism.

"The expectations of the opinion polls are extremely divergent," said John Curtice, a professor of politics at Strathclyde University in Scotland. He said the outcome could hinge on the turnout among young voters, believed to be overwhelmingly pro-Labour. University of London professor Eric Kaufmann agreed, but noted that traditionally turnout among young people in British elections was low. "There's no obvious reason why that would rebound," he said. "I'm sort of with the general polls which suggest that the Tories will increase their majority by around 25 seats... a good majority, not as much as it looked it could have been at one point, but I think it's pretty solid." That would bring May's majority up to around 40.

Security questions

Questions are also being raised about the vaunted image of Britain's security services. Three terror attacks have taken place since March, leaving 34 dead and around 200 injured, and all involved assailants who were known to the authorities. In the most recent attack, eight people were killed on Saturday when three men aboard a hired van ploughed into pedestrians on London Bridge and went on a stabbing spree before being shot by police.

French President Emmanuel Macron confirmed yesterday that a third citizen had died in the attack. London police said they had recovered a body from the Thames, but did not immediately confirm it was Xavier Thomas, a missing 45-year-old Frenchman. Attacker Khuram Shazad Butt was known to British intelligence services, while an Italian prosecutor said Britain was notified that one of his accomplices, Youssef Zaghba, was a "possible suspect" back in March 2016.

Their rampage followed a similar attack next to the British parliament in March, in which assailant Khalid Masood was shot after killing five people. In the most deadly attack, Salman Abedi killed 22 people at a Manchester concert venue on May 22 when he detonated a suicide bomb. Police forces around Britain have reviewed security arrangements for election day. London's Metropolitan Police said there would be a "specialist and highly flexible operation in place that can deploy and respond as needed". - AFP