Miliband rallies party support behind Brown

British foreign secretary David Miliband today threw his support behind embattled prime minister Gordon Brown, as leading Labour…

British foreign secretary David Miliband today threw his support behind embattled prime minister Gordon Brown, as leading Labour Party members tried to present a unified front.

Many of the party think Mr Brown needs to resign as leader to give Labour any chance of winning the next election due by May 2010, with the Conservatives well ahead in opinion polls.

But Mr Miliband - tipped as a possible replacement for Mr Brown although he has been careful to emphasise in public this weekend that he does not want a leadership contest - said the prime minister had respect on a world stage.

"You have transformed the political debate about international development in this country in the last 11 years and we should take inspiration from that as we move forward," Mr Miliband told delegates at Labour's conference in Manchester.

He also pointed to Mr Brown's successful intervention in deadlocked talks to ban cluster munitions.

"The deadlock was broken, broken by one man, our prime minister Gordon Brown. That is the sort of difference he makes in the world," he said.

Mr Miliband and Mr Brown smiled and shook hands on stage after the speech as the delegates gave the foreign secretary a standing ovation.

Many delegates and union activists are keen for the party to avoid a damaging battle over who should be in charge and concentrate on helping Britain through the economic downturn and taking the fight to David Cameron's revitalised Conservatives.

But while there may be little evidence in Manchester of groundswell support for those MPs who have called for a leadership contest, many see a future leader in Mr Miliband.

"I think he's definitely one for the future, he's tremendously talented and intelligent," said Dean Carlin, a member of Young Labour from Edinburgh.

"The government needs to be bold to show it's not about the past 10 years but the next 10 years."

Earlier, Chancellor Alistair Darling - who received rousing applause - told delegates Mr Brown was the "right prime minister" to deal with an economic downturn.

Reuters