Labour MPs say Ed Miliband is costing them votes and must stand down while Gordon Brown's former spin doctor says the 'mood is pretty black'
Ed Miliband has been forced to deny he will resign after facing open calls from his own MPs to stand down amid growing concerns that he will cost his party the General Election.
At least two MPs are understood to have told David Watts, the chairman of the Parliamentary Labour Party, that they believe it is time for Mr Miliband to go.
However, Mr Miliband said: "This is nonsense, I don't accept that this matter arises. I believe that what the party wants to focus on is the country."
One of the MPs told The Telegraph : "We are down to 29 per cent in the polls and that could go down further. He is less popular than Nick Clegg and he will cost us votes at the General Election.
"We are hearing it on the doorstep. People are saying 'you are doing an alright job but we don't like your leader'. He is costing me votes."
Mr Watts has reportedly told the MPs that they are not the first to raise concerns about Mr Miliband's leadership with him, but said that there is no alternative candidate for the leadership. Mr Watts declined to comment when contacted by The Telegraph.
It came as Damian McBride, Gordon Brown's former spin doctor, said that Labour is "whistling in the wind" if it thinks that it can win round voters to "the real Ed".
He told BBC One's Daily Politics: "He can't do much about the fact he comes from Hampstead but he can do something about the fact that he's constantly acting as though life revolves around what goes on in Hampstead and that there's no sense of getting out there and understanding what ordinary people are feeling, including about himself, and trying to address that personal problem he's got."
Asked if he gave credence to claims about a letter being circulated among backbenchers, he replied: "I don't know and it's difficult to know because the paranoia that comes out of the Miliband camp is so rank that they will invent plots even when there are none.
"But I think the mood is pretty black in Labour, and certainly since the conference. Since party conference the mood has got blacker and these are wild times."
