Do you remember your first party conference?

Lib Dem Voice asked the victor of the famous 1962 Orpington by-election, Eric Lubbock (now known as Lord Avebury), what he remembered of his first Liberal Party conference. Here’s what he told us:

It was the Assembly of 1962 in Llandudno, six months after I had been elected that March. Jo Grimond was Leader, and I think Donald Wade might have been Chief Whip, or he might have handed over to Arthur Holt by then. The other MPs were Roddy Bowen, Jeremy Thorpe and Emlyn Hooson, who had been elected at the Montgomeryshire by-election a month or so after me. I moved a resolution on housing policy, based on a policy document which had been produced by a panel I had chaired.

There was a spirit of optimism, and Jo had already begun to transform the Party. Harry Cowie was head of research, Ted Wheeler was Chief Agent, and members felt that we were on an upward trajectory, both in terms of credible policies and success at the polls. For the first time, every by-election was seen as an opportunity, and every local authority was a potential target for local activists. Maybe it has taken a bit longer than we expected, but Llandudno was the turning point when the Liberal comeback began.

What do you remember of your first party conference?

* Lord (Eric) Avebury is the Lib Dems’ sole blogging peer. You can read his eponymous blog here.

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12 Comments

  • nigelashton 8th Sep '07 - 1:30pm

    My first was the Liberal Assembly in Scarborough in 1975 – Jeremy Thorpe’s last conference as Leader. There was a general feeling of disappointment as we had failed to make to make progress in the October 1974 general election (the second of that year) despite fielding an almost full slate of candidates for the first time ever.

    The Young Liberals had a highly organised presence. There was a YL caucus every evening which decided the line to take on the following day’s motions. A YL daily bulletin was then typed up and run off on a duplicator overnight and handed to delegates on their way in.

    I remember there were several major rows that year. The YLs tried to suspend standing orders to allow a representative from the PLO to address the Assembly. When that failed we walked out in protest.

    There was a Parliamentary question and answer session and the YLs wanted to know what the MPs were doing to promote gay rights. It was made clear to us in advance that the platform was not going to take any questions on gay rights so one member asked one anyway which caused uproar when the Chief Whip refused to answer on the grounds that it wasn’t the question that was on the card submitted. The Party has come a long way on gay rights since the 1970s!

    We also caused some embarrassment to the Party by distributing copies of the infamous SIDS leaflet outside the local army recruiting office. Some peace activists had recently been arrested and charged with the obscure offence of ‘incitement to disaffection’ for distributing SIDS (Some Information for Discontented Soldiers) and we wanted to show our solidarity.

    Conference is a lot better organised nowadays and lot larger, but it seems to lack some of the raw political excitement of my early conferences – or maybe it’s just me getting old?

  • Hywel Morgan 8th Sep '07 - 8:04pm

    Mind you being an MP when you attend your first conference has a certain class about it. I wonder if anyone has done that since?

  • Richard Huzzey 9th Sep '07 - 10:42am

    5 – Yes, I remember at 2005’s Autumn conference it was mentioned that one new MP was attending for the first time. I think it was Tim Farron, but could be wrong…

  • Tony Greaves 9th Mar '08 - 5:54pm

    No relation…but my brother got the nickname of Jimmy in the army.

    Claire died on Friday evening after about eight years of a mentally degenerative illness. Very sad. But just like her to die on the eve of a conference.

    Tony Greaves

  • The first Liberal Assembly I attended was in 1961 at Edinburgh. For the first time a vote was held on joining the Common Market, as it was then. As a Free Trader I was one of the five delegates who voted against.

  • Martin Land 9th Mar '08 - 9:32pm

    Nigel Ashton, David Spender and I share the same memory. In 1975, I was a Hull University Politics student, so it was easy enough to come up early and spend a few days at the Scarborough Conference. Like Nigel, I can remember Peter Hain and Simon Hebditch marshalling all us YL and ULS members in an attempt to have the PLO representative speak. I remember walking out as well.
    Other than that, I had the dubious privledge of being hit by Cyril Smith’s mother with her handbag for saying something unfavourable about him in a fringe meeting!
    I went to the Llandudno Conference the following year; and that’s it – 32 years of blissful abstinence!

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