The scandal over his tax dealings and a steel sector crisis have badly bruised Prime Minister David Cameron just three months ahead of a crucial referendum on Britain's EU membership, experts said.
Cameron and his Downing Street office issued four comments regarding the Panama Papers before the British leader on Thursday finally admitted he had held shares in his late father's Bahamas-based offshore investment fund.
Cameron's popularity has slipped in recent weeks, with only 34 percent of respondents saying they thought he was doing well and 58 percent that he was doing badly, according to a YouGov poll released on Friday.
His previous popularity rating in a similar poll in February was 39 percent and 53 percent.
Labour opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn instead has seen his popularity rise from 25 to 30 percent, while those who think he is doing badly fell from 59 to 52 percent.
Labour has accused Cameron of "hypocrisy", pointing to his crusading stance on tax evasion and avoidance and his promise of enacting change at an anti-corruption conference in London next month.
"The prime minister has lost the trust of the British people," Corbyn said.
Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon joined the criticism, saying the scandal "leaves his credibility in tatters and completely betrays public trust".
Ian Bond from the Centre for European Reform think tank said: "His ability to lecture the others at the anti-corruption summit is going to be damaged."
But he added: "Most of these political scandals pass quickly."
"It's not great news for him but we are weeks away from the referendum so he still has the chance to get back," he said.
- 'Sixth sense' gone? -
Ramon Pacheco Pardo, a lecturer at King's College London, said: "When his government for example is asking companies to pay their fair share of tax, when he's asking individuals to pay their taxes in full, obviously his political capital is really diminished."
There has been criticism from within Cameron's own camp too.
"His politician's sixth sense seems to have deserted him," Paul Goodman, a former Conservative MP, wrote on the Conservative Home political blog.
"The prime minister doesn't always manage to keep his temper... and his original instinct may have been, when confronted with claims about a father that he loved, to tell the media to take a running jump.
"The EU referendum is sapping his and Downing Street's energy, focus and judgement -- just as it did over Port Talbot last week, the threat to the future of which clearly caught the government machine on the hop."
Cameron has been put under pressure by Tata Steel's announcement that it intended to sell some or all of its British operations including Port Talbot in Wales, putting 15,000 jobs at risk.
The government was accused of putting close trade relations with China, which has been exporting steel at cheap prices, over protecting steel jobs.
- 'Euroscepticism rising' -
There was more bad news this week when the Dutch voted against an EU-Ukraine trade deal -- a referendum seen as reflecting eurosceptic sentiment.
Brexit supporters cheered the result and said it was a good sign for their own campaign for Britons to vote to leave the European Union in a referendum on June 23, while Cameron played down the significance.
Bond said the Dutch vote would likely have "no direct impact on the Brexit vote" but was the result of "euroscepticism rising across Europe."
Cameron has staked his political future on the EU referendum and the latest polling shows the "Leave" and "Remain" camps neck and neck.
The British leader holds weekly public events to try to win over sceptical Britons but is on the defensive in the campaign too over a taxpayer-funded pro-EU leaflet to be sent to all British households.
Brexit campaigners cried foul over the government mailshot -- costing £9.3 million (11.5 million euros, $13.1 million) -- and an online petition calling for the government to stop campaigning with public money has gained more than 100,000 signatures.
AFP
Sat Apr 09 2016
Cameron's popularity has slipped in recent weeks, with only 34 percent of respondents saying they thought he was doing well and 58 percent that he was doing badly. - AFP photo / POOL
Pemasangan 'feeder pillar' baharu di Jalan Kepong-Kuala Selangor bermula Jun ini
Pemasangan feeder pillar melibatkan peruntukan sebanyak RM500,000 itu akan ditempatkan di kawasan terang dan terdedah kepada orang awam.
Ditembak lima das, PM Slovakia, Robert Fico kini sedang “bertarung nyawa”
Pembedahan selama tiga setengah jam ke atas Robert Fico sangat kompleks, kata Menteri Pertahanan Robert Kalik.
Pihak berkaitan perlu martabatkan tenunan Melayu yang kurang dapat perhatian - Tuanku Zara
Usaha komprehensif perlu dilaksanakan agar manfaat penyelidikan dan keistimewaan tenunan Melayu dapat diketengahkan kepada lebih ramai lagi.
Luluh hati ibu ketika tatap wajah anak yang maut dalam kemalangan lori simen di Lojing
Rohani Adi tidak menyangka anak keduanya Fauzi Ramli merupakan seorang daripada tiga mangsa yang maut dalam insiden itu.
Industri tanaman durian Johor tunjuk perkembangan positif
Seramai 31,500 orang pengusaha tanaman durian direkodkan pada tahun 2022 dan ia meningkat kepada 34,650 orang pada tahun lepas.
Disleksia bukan penghalang untuk Amer buka perniagaan kafe
Apa yang berlaku ke atas dirinya itu membuatkan dia berasa rendah diri dan sedih kerana tidak dapat menguasai pembelajaran di sekolah.
AI dalam latihan, penyelidikan pupuk tenaga kerja mahir, penciptaan pekerjaan
Penggunaan AI dijangka dapat memupuk tenaga kerja mahir dan merangsang penciptaan pekerjaan dalam sektor teknologi tinggi.
Pemimpin dunia ucap tahniah kepada Lawrence Wong, Perdana Menteri keempat Singapura
Wong menerima pujian dari seluruh dunia, menonjolkan kedudukannya yang terhormat di pentas global.
Wei Chong-Kai Wun akui perlu baiki tahap kekuatan mental
Tahap mental yang kurang mantap dilihat menjadi salah satu punca utama beregu lelaki negara, Man Wei Chong-Tee Kai Wun bergelut dengan prestasi pada tahun ini.
Hampir 40 peratus serangan siber di Malaysia libatkan akaun pembuatan, sektor kerajaan pada 2023
Tiga sektor sasaran utama ialah pembuatan (20 peratus), kerajaan (18.2 peratus) serta teknologi, media dan telekomunikasi (14.5 peratus).
Berita antarabangsa pilihan sepanjang hari ini
Antara pelbagai berita luar negara yang disiarkan di Astro AWANI, berikut adalah antara yang paling menjadi tumpuan sepanjang hari ini.
Charles bangga keberanian Kate dedah rawatan kanser
Charles sangat bangga dengan Kate dan telah terus berhubung rapat dengan menantu kesayangannya itu selama beberapa minggu kebelakangan ini.
Kate Middleton sahkan hidap kanser
Isteri pewaris takhta Putera William itu menyifatkan penemuan kanser itu sebagai "satu kejutan besar".
Raja Charles III terharu terima ribuan kad, titip ucapan dan doa
Istana Buckingham mengeluarkan gambar baginda yang kelihatan terhibur dan terharu membaca nota yang ditulis pada kad-kad ucapan.
Britain, Finland pula tangguh biaya UNRWA susulan dakwaan Israel
Britain dan Finland telah menyertai negara-negara lain dalam menangguhkan pembiayaan kepada UNRWA.
Britain dakwa serangan ke atas Houthi tiada kaitan konflik di Gaza - PM Rishi Sunak
Serangan itu adalah tindakan mempertahankan diri dan disasarkan dengan berhati-hati, kata Rishi Sunak.
Guna AI tentukan umur penonton kandungan lucah di bawah garis panduan baharu UK
Britain mencadangkan garis panduan baharu semakan umur bagi melindungi kanak-kanak daripada mengakses pornografi dalam talian.
China nafi intip Parlimen Britain, gesa henti sebar maklumat palsu
China menafikan dakwaan Britain mengenai kemungkinan kes pengintipan di Parlimen London, lapor Agensi Berita Jerman ( dpa ).
Kelewatan perjalanan udara UK mungkin berterusan beberapa hari
Gangguan sistem kawalan udara United Kingdom (UK) memaksa ribuan penumpang syarikat penerbangan terkandas pada Isnin, dengan potensi gangguan berlanjutan.
Britain: Rishi Sunak umum hukum penjara seumur hidup bagi pembunuh kejam
Pesalah berbahaya yang melakukan pembunuhan paling kejam akan berdepan dengan hukuman penjara seumur hidup tanpa peluang dibebaskan.