Funding scandal hits Labour's ratings
Scotland Yard has been asked to investigate revelations that property developer David Abrahams had channelled 600,000 pounds to the Labour Party through intermediaries.
The news comes as a survey put the Conservative Party 11 points ahead of Labour, its biggest lead since Margaret Thatcher was at her most popular in the 1980s.
Electoral laws require those making donations on behalf of others to give details of the source of the money and Brown has said that the money from Abrahams had not been lawfully declared and would be returned.
Abrahams says he did not realise that using middlemen to donate to Labour was against the law and that he had merely wanted to avoid publicity.
However, Labour General Secretary Peter Watt resigned on Monday after admitting he knew Abrahams had donated through associates.
On Thursday, the Electoral Commission, parliament's watchdog for political funding, said it had referred the matter to police after discussions with detectives and prosecutors.
Officers will launch their inquiry after receiving their report and Detective Chief Superintendent Nigel Mawer has been put in charge of the inquiry, police said.
A number of senior Labour figures have become embroiled in the row since it erupted.
Deputy Leader Harriet Harman has said she acted in good faith in accepting a 5,000-pound donation from Abrahams through a go-between, a move newspapers said had involved Brown's campaign coordinator.
"I strongly maintain that I complied with the letter and the spirit of the law, and I absolutely think Gordon Brown has done the same," Harman, leader of the House of Commons, told reporters as she arrived for an engagement on Friday.
On Thursday, Work and Pensions Secretary Peter Hain admitted he had failed to register a 5,000-pound donation from Labour's chief fundraiser because of an administrative error.
Opposition parties have leapt on this week's revelations.
"The public knows sleaze when they see it, the people know spin when they hear it and the voters will know what to do when they have their say, said Theresa May, the Conservative Shadow Leader of the House of Commons.
"They will get rid of this sleazy Labour government."
A YouGov poll in the Daily Telegraph indicated the scandal was hitting Brown's popularity, putting the Conservatives on 43 percent and Labour on 32 percent, echoing other recent surveys.
The scandal is the latest in a series of setbacks for Brown who has also presided over the Northern Rock disaster -- the first run on a bank in Britain in more than a century -- and news last week the government has lost computer discs containing the personal details of 25 million people.
Brown had enjoyed a significant advantage over the Tories after taking over from Tony Blair in June and the Telegraph said he had been 11 points ahead in a similar YouGov poll just two months ago.













