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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Campaigning Brown calls supporter ‘bigoted’

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown speaks to local resident Gillian Duffy, 66, while campaigning in Rochdale, England, on Wednesday.  (Associated Press)
David Stringer Associated Press

LONDON – Britain’s prime minister blundered into the first major gaffe in his country’s short campaign season Wednesday when an open microphone captured him slamming a voter he’d just been trying to win over.

Gordon Brown, apparently forgetting that he’d left a television microphone pinned to his chest, called 66-year-old Gillian Duffy a “bigoted woman” as he was being driven from a public meeting where she had needled him on immigration.

Within minutes the bad-tempered aside had exploded across the British media, and within a couple of hours Brown was rushing back to her home to beg Duffy’s forgiveness and writing to his supporters to make clear he’d apologized.

Duffy, a retired widow and a self-described supporter of Brown’s Labour party, met with the prime minister at a campaign stop in the northern town of Rochdale and questioned him about the influx of Eastern European immigrants who have come to Britain.

Brown brushed the question aside and explained that Britons were also working in Europe, jumping into his prime ministerial Jaguar before complaining to an aide about the awkward encounter.

“That was a disaster, they should never have put me with that woman. Whose idea was that? It’s just ridiculous,” Brown is heard saying.

Asked what Duffy had said to upset him, Brown told the aide: “Everything. She’s just a sort of bigoted woman.”