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	<title>Liberal Democrat Voice &#187; keynes forum</title>
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		<title>DLT: Liberal Summer School (now Keynes Forum)</title>
		<link>http://www.libdemvoice.org/dlt-liberal-summer-school-now-keynes-forum-8062.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.libdemvoice.org/dlt-liberal-summer-school-now-keynes-forum-8062.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 09 Mar 2009 11:19:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Dictionary of Liberal Thought</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Dictionary of Liberal Thought]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[asquith]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[c p scott]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[david lloyd george]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dennis robertson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ernest simon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hubert henderson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[keynes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[keynes forum]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[keynesianism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[liberal summer school]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[rowntree]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[walter layton]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[william beveridge]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[For the past year, Duncan Brack and Ed Randall, authors of the Dictionary of Liberal Thought, have kindly agreed to let us publish extracts on Lib Dem Voice. Last month&#8217;s instalment was Keynesianism, following on John Maynard Keynes; this month, the Liberal Summer School. You can read previous chapters on LDV here. The entire book is available [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>For the past year, Duncan Brack and Ed Randall, authors of the Dictionary of Liberal Thought, have kindly agreed to let us publish extracts on Lib Dem Voice. Last month&#8217;s instalment was <a href="http://www.libdemvoice.org/dlt-keynesianism-8057.html">Keynesianism</a>, following on <a href="http://www.libdemvoice.org/john-maynard-keynes-8033.html">John Maynard Keynes</a>; this month, the Liberal Summer School. You can read previous chapters on <a href="http://www.libdemvoice.org/category/dictionary-of-liberal-thought">LDV here</a>. The entire book is available on Amazon <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1842751670/?tag=libdemvoice-21">here</a> and can also be bought at the Westminster Bookshop.</p>
<p><strong>Liberal Summer School (now Keynes Forum)</strong></p>
<p><em>Founded in 1921 as an annual week-long residential school to develop innovative Liberal policies, domestic and international, for the post-war world, the Liberal Summer Schools were the source of the Liberal ‘Yellow Book’ and helped to develop the thinking behind Beveridge’s proposals for the reform of welfare provision. The School now survives as an annual one-day seminar, in 2004 renamed the Keynes Forum, and run by CentreForum.</em></p>
<p>The Liberal Summer Schools movement in the 1920s originated in the apparently disparate strands of Nonconformist (q.v.) Manchester liberalism, as represented by Ernest Simon (q.v.) and C. P Scott (1846–1932), social and industrial reformers from Toynbee Hall and the LSE (including William Beveridge (q.v.) and Seebohm Rowntree (1871–1954)); and John Maynard Keynes’s (q.v.) Cambridge- and Bloomsbury-based circle of young economists (including Hubert Henderson (1890–1952), Walter Layton (q.v.) and Dennis Robertson (1890-–1963)).</p>
<p>In 1920 Liberals were simultaneously faced with a world that seemed both dangerously disintegrated and full of exciting promise, and with the disastrous Asquith–Lloyd George (q.v.) split. Recognising the urgent need for positive Liberal polices to fill this vacuum, the powerful Manchester Liberal Federation under Ernest Simon and the chief national party agent, Thomas Tweed, initiated the movement which ‘recruited intellectuals to the Liberal Party, and provided a forum at which experts could float their ideas about contemporary economic, social, and industrial questions’.</p>
<p>The first Summer School was held at Grasmere in 1921, on the lines of the Fabian Summer Schools. The founders included the historians Ramsay Muir (q.v.) and Philip Guedalla (1889–1944), and the economists Keynes, Henderson and Layton, supported by Simon’s friend and Lloyd George loyalist, C. P. Scott of the<em> Manchester Guardian</em>. Eleanor Rathbone (1872–1946), herself from a Manchester Nonconformist Liberal dynasty, spoke on ‘Women and the Family’. ‘What a party!’ Simon noted in his diary at about this time: ‘No leaders. No organisation. No policy. Only a Summer School!’</p>
<p>The format, retained for many years, was a residential ‘school’ where Liberals and sympathisers met in a university setting to hear and discuss lectures on topical issues, domestic and international. The ‘school’ structure remained through the 1920s and ’30s; the programme was described as a ‘Syllabus’, with the emphasis on discussion rather than received wisdom, and a recommended reading list. The week included cultural excursions, concerts, a dance, a garden party and sometimes a satirical revue by School members.<span id="more-8062"></span></p>
<p>From 1922 to 1939 the Schools were held annually, alternately at Oxford and Cambridge. They were a uniquely Liberal combination of distinguished speakers and rank-and-file party members and supporters, meeting and debating on equal terms in a relaxed setting. The lectures, the discussions, and the interaction within the influential group behind the Schools, developed and influenced Liberal Party thinking throughout the 1920s and ’30s, and disseminated ideas through the other parties, both in Britain and the US.</p>
<p>The pre-war Summer Schools were supported by a powerful press network, finally ending with the death of the <em>News Chronicle</em> in 1960. Keynes augmented the <em>Manchester Guardian</em> connection by buying the weekly <em>Nation &amp; Athenaeum</em> in 1923, appointing Henderson as editor. The Cadbury-owned <em>Daily News</em>, which merged with the <em>News Chronicle</em>, the <em>New Statesman</em> (which later absorbed the Nation), <em>Tribune</em>, <em>The Economist</em>, the <em>Westminster Newsletter</em> and <em>The Liberal Magazine</em> all had active Summer School connections. Wilson Harris, editor of the <em>Spectator</em>, was on its ruling council.</p>
<p>Facing political eclipse in the 1920s, Lloyd George used the Schools for his ‘crusade’ to galvanise Liberal policies with new, radical solutions. His research department, at 41 Parliament St., SW1, operated through the Summer School organisation to produce a series of ‘coloured books’ on industrial and social issues. The most famous was the ‘Yellow Book’ (Britain’s Industrial Future), whose principal contributors – Keynes, Beveridge, Henderson, Layton, Jules Menken, Ernest Simon and Sir Herbert Samuel MP (q.v.) – were Summer School members.</p>
<p>The ‘coloured books’, especially the Yellow Book, supplemented by Keynes’s and Henderson’s pamphlet Can Lloyd George Do It?, offered a novel and dynamic programme for the 1929 election. However the Liberals were defeated by the electoral system – a 2½m rise in votes only increased the number of MPs from forty to fifty-nine – and the Liberals’ adventurous policies did not suit Baldwin’s ‘safety first’ approach.</p>
<p>Beveridge was a member of the Summer Schools Council and its executive committee from 1924 to 1935, and his long association with Keynes and Seebohm Rowntree (a Summer School Council member until 1939) arguably influenced his subsequent proposals for overcoming the ‘five giants of want, disease, ignorance, squalor and idleness’. His 1942 and 1944 Reports show his move from belief in a self-regulating free market towards Keynesian-style (q.v.) fiscal regulation and state support for ‘all social contingencies from the cradle to the grave’.</p>
<p>The Schools’ approach to internal politics was broad-church. In spite of their strong Lloyd George connection, Herbert Asquith (1852–1928) addressed Schools in the 1920s; his son-in-law Sir Maurice Bonham Carter (1880–1960) was on the council, as was his wife Lady Violet (later Lady Asquith, 1887–1969), before and after the Second War. Runciman and Sir John (later Viscount) Simon (1873–1954) attended regularly until the political and economic crises of the Labour government of 1929–31 opened up the possibility of a revival in Simon’s career, and he and Runciman left to form the Liberal National Party (q.v.).</p>
<p>Sir Herbert (later Lord) Samuel, former Home Secretary and a social reformer – vilified by Lloyd George for his attempts to hold the party together in the 1930s (though Samuel had stuck with the official Liberal Party during the divisions of 1931) – nevertheless attended Summer Schools regularly until well into his eighties.</p>
<p>The 1939 School was held in Cambridge from 3–8 August, under the shadow of war. Some Czecho-Slovaks had attended the 1938 School – ‘to join with us in upholding the dignity and ideals of free Democracy’, as the secretary wrote. ‘This year these friends will not be with us. We do not know how dearly they may be paying for the beliefs which we and they have voiced in common….’ But, memorably, the School was addressed by ex-President Beneš. Before the School met again after the war, he was to have been murdered by the Communist regime.</p>
<p>The Liberal Summer Schools had a lasting influence on political thinking, domestically and abroad. Exact quantification is impossible, partly because it was achieved through a network of like-minded economists, historians, philosophers, social reformers and politicians, and partly because the party’s parliamentary decline meant the influence had to be Maquisard in nature, stealthily working in the undergrowth of conservative thought. It is widely believed that Keynes, together with his Gordon Square coterie, which included Layton, Beveridge and Arthur Salter (1881–1975) (later known as the ‘Old Dogs’), influenced President Roosevelt’s thinking before and during the Second World War.</p>
<p>The Schools’ heyday lasted from 1922 to 1939. After the war they continued in more or less the same form, though Keynes, Guedalla and Muir had died. By the late 1950s increasing costs of travel and accommodation reduced the Schools to a long weekend, Oxbridge being replaced by provincial venues. Although their influence as a creative source of Liberal political philosophy was reduced, the Schools continued to attract distinguished lecturers, and the participants greatly valued the opportunity for free discussion and debate with the speakers, a ‘High Table’ mentality being discouraged.</p>
<p>In the 1990s, as ‘Summer Schools’ went out of fashion, and costs continued to rise, they could not be financially sustained in their original form. The Liberal Summer School is now run by CentreForum (q.v.) as the Keynes Forum, a one-day autumn seminar with invited speakers on topical political themes.</p>
<p style="text-align: right;"><em> Ann Moore </em></p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><em>The Dictionary of Liberal Thought is one of the many titles available from the Liberal Democrat History Group. Find out more about them on their </em><a href="http://www.liberalhistory.org.uk/"><em>website</em></a><em>.</em></p>
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		<title>Jonathan Fryer&#8217;s Diary of a Euro-candidate</title>
		<link>http://www.libdemvoice.org/jonathan-fryers-diary-of-a-eurocandidate-4-10931.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.libdemvoice.org/jonathan-fryers-diary-of-a-eurocandidate-4-10931.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 03 Feb 2009 10:04:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jonathan Fryer</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[CAABU]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[delga]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[diary]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[european elections]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fiona hall]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gaza]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[keynes forum]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[paul holmes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[reinventing the state]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sharon bowles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tower hamlets]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.libdemvoice.org/?p=10931</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Saturday Most of the day is spent at the Keynes Forum Policy Conference at LSE, at which one of the sessions is specifically about the European elections, or at least the interlinked campaign themes of the economy and the environment. Both Sharon Bowles (South East) and Fiona Hall (North East) are MEPs who know their [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Saturday</strong><br />
Most of the day is spent at the Keynes Forum Policy Conference at LSE, at which one of the sessions is specifically about the European elections, or at least the interlinked campaign themes of the economy and the environment. Both Sharon Bowles (South East) and Fiona Hall (North East) are MEPs who know their briefs intimately, which is reassuring and underlines the value of electing people willing to specialise in specific fields. But through conversations during coffee breaks it becomes clear to me that local activists are really thirsting for simply-worded, bite-sized Euro-items they can just slot into their Focuses. This will have to be a priority for my team over the coming four months</p>
<p><strong>Sunday</strong><br />
Tower Hamlets LibDems has decided to do some petitioning this morning in Brick Lane on Gaza, a subject that most passers-by are keen to express their opinions on, even though the Israelis’ unilateral ceasefire announcement has meant a last-minute change of leaflet wording. I can’t stay long as I have to join DELGA members at their annual conference at Butler’s Wharf on the Thames to take part in a presentation on the specially-targeted London LGBT Euro-campaign. This year’s elections will for the first time see carefully crafted LibDem materials addressing the specific concerns of precise groups, other examples being students and resident EU nationals such as Poles.</p>
<p><strong>Monday</strong><br />
To the House of Commons for a meeting with the Governors of the three provinces of Iraqi Kurdistan, who are in Britain being briefed on UK political practices. Not that our system is perfect. It is a good opportunity to hear at first hand how things are going in the most stable region of Iraq, which I hope to visit later this year.</p>
<p>Dinner at St Anne’s Church, Soho, with the vicar, executive members of the Soho Society and various community activists. Though I spend much of my time politically and professionally focussing on European and international issues, getting out and about among different groups in the capital for a lively exchange of views about more local matters is an essential part of my role as a London Euro-candidate.</p>
<p><strong>Tuesday</strong><br />
Back at the House of Commons again today for the Executive Board of the Council for the Advancement of Arab British Understanding (CAABU), to which I was elected last year. CAABU does great work sending parliamentary fact-finding missions to Israel/Palestine (London MPs Ed Davey and Sarah Teather are recent visitors to the region) but I am keen that CAABU should also do much more in relation to North Africa, given the effective stalling of the Barcelona Process between the EU and the southern and eastern Mediterranean and the great mass of unemployed young people in the Maghreb. Britain should not allow French President Nicolas Sarkozy to make all the running on this!</p>
<p>The Executive of my local party (Leyton and Wanstead) is nearly over by the time I get there, but we do get a date fixed for a Campaigns group briefing on the European elections, which is what I wanted.</p>
<p><strong>Wednesday</strong><br />
Reinventing the State was the Social Liberals’ riposte to The Orange Book, or at least that is how many people saw it at the time. This evening sees the first in a series of discussion meetings organised by James Graham and other LibDems active in the Westminster village, looking at various issues raised in the book. Paul Holmes, MP for Chesterfield, gives a pithy critique of education policy and in particular secondary schools. This is not something the EU has much direct role in, but there are related issues that are among my hobby-horses, such as the quality (or lack) of citizenship education and language teaching in British classrooms.</p>
<p><strong>Thursday</strong><br />
Catherine Bearder of the ‘In It to Win It’ group of leading Euro-candidates has assembled a stellar cast of party apparatchiks to brief us all at Cowley Street on aspects of the forthcoming campaign. Press work is going to be of vital importance and I’m glad to make contact with the relatively new press supreme, Jamie Hamill, who reminds everyone to keep writing to local newspapers like mad. Media coverage should be helped during the campaign itself by Nick Clegg’s promised presence in every region. We need to get our thinking caps on now about how best we can use him during his two days on the stump in London. I have to leave today’s briefing early, to help out in the polling day operation in the East Wickham (Bexley) by-election.</p>
<p><strong>Friday</strong><br />
Three of the core members of my overwhelmingly young and enthusiastic campaign team come over to the house for a strategy session in the morning, a key theme of today’s discussions being how to liaise with local parties, stimulate street campaigning and get involved in events in universities and colleges across London. Meanwhile, my Campaign PA, James Lillis, has already cranked me up several gears technology-wise. My weekly newsletter is now being launched, people who sign up to the Facebook Group ‘Jonathan Fryer 4 Europe’ can receive regular updates and James has even got me Twittering.</p>
<p>To Stansted airport in the late afternoon for a Ryanair flight to Baden-Baden – the cheapest way of getting to Strasbourg, where the Liberal International (of which I am a Vice-President) is holding its Executive this weekend. Strasbourg is a city I love, both for its architecture and its food, but that won’t stop me continuing to fight to try to get all of the European Parliament’s plenary sessions held in Brussels instead, to end the criminal waste of resources caused by bi-location.</p>
<p><em>Jonathan Fryer is a writer, lecturer and broadcaster, and is second on the party’s list for the European Elections in London in 2009.  His <a href="http://jonathanfryer.wordpress.com/">blog</a> has featured on Lib Dem Voice’s Golden Dozen lists over a dozen times.</em></p>
<p><em>If you’ve had an interesting week, why not write a diary for Lib Dem Voice?  Details for contributers are <a href="http://www.libdemvoice.org/contribute-to-liberal-democrat-voice">here</a>.</em></p>
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