Author Archives: Richard Huzzey

How will Chandila, Lembit and Ros improve Lib Dem membership?

Lib Dem Voice has invited party presidential hopefuls Chandila Fernando, Lembit Opik and Ros Scott to make their pitches for how they’d improve Lib Dem membership. In a series of articles, they will set out their ambitions and how they would deliver on them.

You can find out more about how to vote in the election for party president here.

Elsewhere on this site, Mark Pack has recently argued why fears of decline in membership for all political parties may have been over-hyped.

Posted in Party Presidency | Tagged | 9 Comments

Opinion: First they came for the Icelanders

Gordon Brown, earlier this month, used anti-terrorism legislation to freeze Icelandic assets in Britain, in response to their government failing to guarantee British deposits in their faltering banks. My links with Iceland begin and end with the purchase of frozen foods from that nation’s commercial namesake. But it still troubles me deeply. We should be profoundly concerned at the use of anti-terrorist legislation for political and economic ends. This is at the heart of fears about the extent of the powers the state has claimed since the attacks of 11 September 2001.

The British government has demonstrated precisely why civil liberties campaigners have been so concerned at the demands of Labour to trade our liberties for the promise of greater security. New terrorist legislation has – rightly – been considered in the post-9/11 world. Yet anxieties that counter-terrorist legislation should be given checks-and-balances, and justified as a necessary trade of liberty for security, are dismissed in a cavalier fashion by New Labour. A casual use of anti-terrorism powers for completely different ends is the most obvious symptom of that attitude.

A minister, Geoff Hoon, recently told Lib Dem MP Julia Goldsworthy that “the biggest civil liberty of all is not to be killed by a terrorist”, when she spoke out against a new database of all British citizens’ communications records. He is, of course, right in suggesting that we should contemplate and weigh up any options that would significantly reduce the chance of a terrorist attrocity. However, deciding where the balance lies between the likelihood of thwarting a terrorist, and surrendering the very way of life those terrorists seek to undermine, is a question he should treat with greater respect.

The rights and wrongs of Icelandic financial institutions are irrelevant to the fact that Brown abused legislation intended for very different purposes. This should profoundly worry anybody who cares about good governance. By using anti-terrorist legislation as a convenient way to respond to the global banking crisis, the British government have demonstrated why we should fear their cowboy attitude to checks-and-balances, and to the careful drafting of specific powers for specific purposes.

Anti-terrorist legislation should be used against terrorists. This seems a pretty reasonable assertion. Iain Dale has highlighted an Icelandic petition against this perverted contortion of the Terrorism Act, which spurred me to write on the topic. What worries me the most is that this ‘thin end of the wedge’ can be (and is being) replicated in the state’s use of other terrorist legislation. For example, new terrorist laws provide police with the powers to stop and search individuals, even if they actually do so for reasons unrelated to suspicion of terrorist offenses. Local councils have also been exposed using counter-terrorist powers to intrude into Britons’ privacy, to investigate matters wholly unrelated to acts of terror.

If we want to give our government the power to freeze Icelandic assets, or to give our police officers those powers in other criminal matters that they have been given in terrorist matters, then let’s debate and consider laws in parliament that openly permit those ends.

Posted in Big mad database and Op-eds | Tagged and | 6 Comments

Give holocaust-deniers ridicule, not martyrdom – Huhne

Lib Dem Shadow Home Secretary Chris Huhne yesterday penned a piece for The Independent setting out his views on the use of a European Arrest Warrant to detain the extremist Frederick Toben for prosecution in Germany for holocaust denial.

Dr Toben’s views about the Holocaust are offensive, ugly and wrong. But freedom of speech is the cornerstone of liberal democracy without which all the other freedoms flounder. We restrict that freedom at our peril and only in extreme circumstances (such as incitement to racial hatred and violence).

You can read it in full here. Do LDV readers agree with …

Posted in News | 11 Comments

Would President Obama call Paddy Ashdown to serve?

As Obama heads towards the election in a fortnight’s time, some commentators are turning to discussion of what his cabinet would look like. The Spectator’s Daniel Korski has posted his predictions/suggestions, including…

Bill Richardson (Secretary of State)
Chuck Hagel (Secretary of Defence)
Paul Krugman (Chairman, Council of Economic Advisers)
Richard Holbrooke (Director of National Intelligence)
General Colin Powell (Secretary of Education)
Max Cleland (Secretary of Veterans Affairs)
Arnold Schwarzenegger (Secretary of Environment and Energy, a new position)

He also tips Greg Craig as Chief of Staff and General David Petraeus as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs. And Hilary, of course, …

Posted in LDVUSA and News | Tagged | 4 Comments

That Colin Powell Endorsement

The biggest weekend shake-up of the US Presidential race is surely Gen. Colin Powell’s endorsement of Barack Obama. In addition to slamming McCain’s performance on economic issues, and his choice of Sarah Palin, Powell attacked Republicans’ Islamophobic attitudes in the campaign:

Is there something wrong with some seven-year-old Muslim American kid believing he or she could be President?

Powell said his outrage on this issue was stirred by a magazine photo-essay that showed an American mother grieving her muslim son, who died fighting for the USA in Iraq. While he was eager to emphasise Obama was a Christian, the former Secretary of State suggested some Republicans should be ashamed for implying Muslims could not legitimately serve their country.

Posted in LDVUSA | 3 Comments

Is Libertarianism bankrupt after the banking crisis?

Slate.com’s Jacob Weisberg thinks so.

I suspect Lib Dem Voice readers’ answers will depend on how sympathetic they are to economic libertarianism.

Posted in News | 71 Comments

The Barack and John Show

In an interlude that feels like an off-beat West Wing episode, the two US Presidential candidates have both spoken at the Alfred E Smith memorial dinner, where they were required to do a stand-up comedy routine. Both, I thought, were pretty good, although McCain’s clip shows more gags than Obama’s. (I’m not sure how much these clips are edited, but Obama’s inspiring rhetoric at the end feels odd after the stand-up routine).

Posted in LDVUSA | 1 Comment

When Barack met Jed

Ever dreamt what The West Wing’s Jed Bartlet would say to Barack Obama? That TV show’s scribe, Aaron Sorkin, has.

(Linked to by James Graham and Gavin Whenman too).

Posted in LDVUSA | Leave a comment

Profile on Patrick: BBC piece on Lib Dem PPC and councillor

One element of the BBC’s conference coverage you might have missed is a feature by the BBC’s Daily Politics, following Patrick Murray at conference (and in a profile piece, beforehand). He is PPC for Reading West and a councillor in Oxford (and a friend of Stephen Tall and myself).

At the risk of embarrassing him, I thought I’d point you at the piece. One of the segment’s features is Patrick speaking in the conference debate on mental health, about which he talks in the film. You can see his entire speech (and the rest of the debate)

Posted in Conference and News | 2 Comments

Nick Clegg on Jon Stewart’s Daily Show

Following Tony Blair’s appearance on Comedy Central’s Daily Show with Jon Stewart, Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg has made his debut in clips of his successful conference speech. Nick appears 1m 20s into the clip:

(For what it’s worth, the Andrex puppy is the Charmin puppy in America).

Update: For more US TV humour, this time on the Presidential election, see Paul Walter’s Liberal Burblings.

Posted in Humour and LDVUSA | Tagged and | 1 Comment

Lib Dems to drop Tuition Fees pledge?

The Telegraph’s Jonathan Isaby and Iain Dale point to an interview Lib Dem MP Steve Williams gave to the Times Educational Supplement a few days ago.

In it, the Lib Dem Shadow Secretary for Innovation, Universities and Skills was asked about the party’s commitment to abolishing tuition fees. The TES reports:

Stephen Williams, Lib Dem Shadow Secretary of State for Innovation, Universities and Skills, said that the policy was not sustainable… Nick Clegg, the leader of the party, had come to this conclusion after “long internal discussions”.

The magazine also reports that Cambridge MP and Shadow Solicitor General David Howarth …

Posted in Conference, News and Party policy and internal matters | Tagged and | 58 Comments

Politicalbetting.com: Watch Paddick

Top punter Mike Smithson is tipping readers of his politicalbetting.com site to watch Brian Paddick in the London mayoral election. With the collapse of support for Ken Livingstone, he now thinks Brian is the only man who can save London from a Boris Johnson mayoralty. You can read Mike’s comments here. The Nick Cohen comments Mike refers to are on his site.

Posted in London | Tagged and | 7 Comments

Shami Chakrabarti is our Liberal Voice of 2007

Liberty Director Shami Chakrabarti was the clear winner of our Liberal Voice 2007 poll, taking 101 votes (a third of all votes cast). Her only serious opposition was Radio 4’s The Now Show, who took the lead for the first day but came second with 72 votes (24%).

The other candidates were: John Bercow with 18 votes (6%), Samuel Brittain 15 (5%), Al Gore 30 (10%), Simon Jenkins 20 (7%), Philippe 10 Legrain (3%), Bob Marshall-Andrews 18 (6%) and Craig Murray 21 (7%).

It’s perhaps no clear surprise that Sharmi won, given the number of nominations we got for her to …

Posted in LDV Awards | 7 Comments

Clegg signs top management guru for Party Reform Commission

Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg, President Simon Hughes and Chief Executive Chris Rennard have announced a party reform commission to undertake a complete review of all the party’s functions.

Nick Clegg said, “the Party Reform Commission is critical in ensuring that we make the best electoral impact over the coming years. I am determined that this root and branch review should take us towards meeting my commitment of at least doubling our number of seats within two elections.”

Chris Bones, Principal of Henley Management College, has been picked to head the review. He is a former director of Cadbury Schweppes …

Posted in News | Tagged , and | 19 Comments

Barcharts ready… vote for Liberal Voice 2007

Voting has topped the 100-ballot-mark in voting for Liberal Voice 2007 (see the sidebar to the right). Radio 4’s The Now Show stormed into an early lead, but is losing momentum as Shami Chakrabarti’s civil libertarian base gets motivated. There could still be time for the second-tier candidates yet, though. Make sure you vote… polls close this Saturday.

Posted in LDV Awards | Leave a comment

Jeremy Clarkson changes gear on privacy

Doyenne of reactionaries and climate change sceptics, Jeremy Clarkson, decided to belittle the concerns of civil libertarians last year. Protesting at the clamour over the government’s loss of a HMRC CD of people’s personal details, he published his Barclay’s bank account details in the Sunday Times, asserting that readers would be able to do nothing but put money in.

Unfortunately, he forgot about direct debits. Mr. Clarkson has unknowingly become a £500-a-month donor to Diabetes UK. I hope he keeps it going.

In typically measured style, he now says:

Contrary to what I said at the time, we must go after

Posted in News | 10 Comments

What does Iowa mean?

With the numbers crunched from the overnight caucus in Iowa, Barack Obama and Mike Huckabee have emerged to win their respective caucuses. Can Hillary still come back to win? How will Huckabee’s win impact the Republican race? The most active discussion of the ramifications is over at Mike Smithson’s Political Betting.

Posted in LDVUSA | Leave a comment

Manchester councillor defects to Tories

A Lib Dem councillor in Manchester has defected to the Conservative party, giving them their first representation on the council since 1996. Faraz Bhatti had been PPC for Stretford and Urmston in 2005.

The Lib Dem leader on Manchester City Council, Simon Ashley, has told the Manchester Evening News that the defection comes after Cllr. Bhatti’s bitterness in a selection matter. The paper credits former Lib Dem MEP Saj Karim with engineering the defection.

Posted in News | 12 Comments

LDVUSA: All eyes on Iowa

It’s become a cliche for journalists writing about the contest to succeed George Bush that this is the longest Presidential race in history. Some of the politicians aspiring to win their party’s candidacy for the November general election have been fighting, literally, for years. As they seek the support of delegates in selection meetings across the 50 states, the 2008 hopefuls are held to a tighter and earlier calendar than ever before. States have begun competing to move their contests forward, all hoping to increase their national influence. This is the first article in our LDVUSA series – covering the American contest – and will hopefully be a bit of an introduction for those who’ve not followed a presidential race before.

In two days, we’ll have the first real vote of the race. I say vote – but the fascinating thing about the caucuses in Iowa is the fact that they’re not votes in any traditional sense. The selection meetings, held in each county in small halls or people’s homes, are very much live action events. To begin with, you have to arrive at the venue exactly between 6.30pm and 7pm. Any later, and you can’t participate. People then actually stand in a corner to support a particular candidate; it’s a very public affair. There’s no secret ballots, and no postal voting. If you don’t make it on time, you don’t get a voice. Here’s Joe Trippi (Howard Dean’s 2004 manager and a consultant to John Edwards this time) describing the first caucus he witnessed, when working for Ted Kennedy’s insurgent challenge to Jimmy Carter:

The night of my first caucus, in January 1980, I went to Jimmy Hogan’s house at 6.30pm, and watched his neighbours pull up in their pickup trucks and American sedans. Jimmy’s living room was packed. When it came time to call for the vote, the two sides began moving to opposite corners of the room, an old flickering chandalier demarking the line between them. I watched the people move to their corners, doing the math in my head. It was close; a few votes either way could turn it. And just as they were about to start counting

Posted in LDVUSA and Op-eds | 10 Comments

Guardian joins Clegg in savaging ID scheme

The Grauniad’s leader column is inspired by Nick Clegg’s New Year message to launch an eloquent polemic against ‘a pernicious piece of plastic’. They say:

Mr Brown previously let it be known that he saw big problems with Tony Blair’s pet ID card project. But when he moved into No 10, polls showing strong support for the scheme deterred an immediate change of course. That support has now slipped thanks to concern about lost data; it will slip further as the costs become stark. After a battering few months, Mr Brown must use the new year to define his government

Posted in News | Tagged and | 1 Comment

Top of the Blogs: The Golden Dozen #45

For the 45th time, we indulge in a round-up of the Lib Dem blogosphere, featuring the seven most popular stories according to click-throughs from the Aggregator (23rd-29th December), together with a hand-picked quintet you might otherwise have missed.

In the last full week of 2007, these were the best-read posts:

Posted in Best of the blogs | 3 Comments

Merry Christmas – and let us know your Liberal Voice nominations

A very merry Christmas from the Lib Dem Voice collective to all readers, contributors and comment-makers.

Christmas is a time of peace, joy, and the perfect opportunity to nominate your Liberal Voice of 2007. Suggestions so far include Mitch Benn, Simon Jenkins and Al Gore. Have your say this Christmas day.

Posted in News | 4 Comments

Who’s your liberal voice of 2007?

Lib Dem Voice want to find out, and we’ll be running a New Year poll to find the liberal voice in British politics which has most inspired you in the last year. But as a little twist, we want to look outside the Liberal Democrat party – and find the greatest liberal who’s not a member of our party.

So, who would you pick? It could be a member of another party or one of the majority of Britons who belong to no party. It could even be someone who isn’t British themselves, but has had a big impact on liberalism …

Posted in LDV Awards and Polls | Tagged | 70 Comments

Craig Brown’s Lib Dem 2008

Satirist Craig Brown has been sharing his premonitions for 2008 with readers of the Telegraph. It turns out the second-half of the year will feature positive revelations on a major new pool of Liberal Democrat support:

Marine biologists who have spent years studying the click-and-whistle sounds made by dolphins have at last cracked the code, and can now reveal what these fascinating creatures are saying to one another… Scientists working on the project admit that, up until a few months ago, they had “no idea” that dolphins were such committed Liberal Democrats.

Posted in Humour | Leave a comment

Vince snubs Cameron courtship

David Cameron has made a cheeky bid for warmer relations with the Liberal Democrats and the Green party, in a posting on his blog. Vince Cable has already snubbed this cheap publicity stunt. He says:

The Liberal Democrats will continue to work with other parties on issues where we have common ground and can work together in the national interest. However, this is not a serious proposal and David Cameron clearly lives in cloud cuckoo land.

Posted in News | 16 Comments

Introducing LDVUSA

As the 2008 Presidential election approaches, Lib Dem Voice is looking to expand its coverage of American politics and the coming contest.

We’re particular looking to offer analysis and insight from a Lib Dem perspective. For example, will “states rights” (i.e. decentralisation) always be seen as a Republican issue? We know which party is more “liberal” in U.S. language, but which is more liberal by our standards?

If you’re a Lib Dem member living in America and following the 2008 race, we’d like to hear from you about writing for LDVUSA, our new series looking at the race. Please drop …

Posted in LDVUSA | 22 Comments

“Beyond Rennardism”: Responses to Chris R’s Lib Dem News article

The latest issue of Lib Dem News featured an editorial column by the party’s Chief Executive, Chris Rennard, responding to comments he’d heard about the party needing to go “Beyond Rennard”. In doing so, Chris is himself kick-starting a debate about how our campaigning should evolve.

There have been a number of thoughtful responses on Lib Dem blogs where such a debate should lead us which are worth looking at:

The Canard of Rennard on James Graham’s Quaequam blog

Rennard’s Challenge on Andy Mayer’s blog

Beyond Rennard – Dangerous talk costs seats on Pete Dunphy’s Party Political PLC

We’re not going

Posted in News | Tagged | 1 Comment

The Leadership Contest comes to Lib Dem Voice

In the next few weeks, we’re delighted to welcome both Nick Clegg and Chris Huhne to Lib Dem Voice as twice-weekly guest contributors. Both Nick and Chris will be given a blank page of 500 words (or multimedia we can handle!) to address party members reading this site.

The first contributions will be today, with regular doses every Tuesday and each weekend. Good luck to both candidates!

Posted in Leadership Election | 6 Comments

Top of the Blogs: The Golden Dozen #35

Welcome to the 35th of our weekly round-ups from the Lib Dem blogosphere, featuring the seven most popular stories according to click-throughs from the Aggregator (14th-10th October), together with a hand-picked quintet you might otherwise have missed. And we are of course unexpectedly in the midst of a leadership campaign, which it’s fair to say virtually noone expected so soon! But without ado:

1. Shock candidate for Lib Dem leader on Jonathan Calder’s Liberal England
Pity those of you who clicked eagerly, unaware that the good Mr. Calder is apt to leg-pulling!

Posted in Best of the blogs and News | 1 Comment

Make sure you can vote in the leadership election!

Join the Lib Dems today to have a say in our next leader. You can sign on here!

Posted in News | 14 Comments
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  • Katharine Pindar
    Competence and hard work do certainly win us council seats, I suppose, David Evans, and I would suggest 'stability' and 'reliability' as partner virtues we can ...
  • paul barker
    @David Evans In London we ran on Competence & Hard Work, we made gains in places where we already ran The Council, everywhere else we went backward or went...
  • Peter Hirst
    Entering a race implies usually a commitment to win it. The idea should be not to win a hyporthetical AI race but to find the best compromise between using it w...
  • Peter Hirst
    You might get more volunteers if it was clearer that they have influence over who is approved and selected for Westminster seats compared with the Westminster o...
  • Peter Hirst
    You don't mention our so called independent nuclear deterrent. There is no reason why we can't merge it with France's. Why on earth do you need two nuclear dete...