Category Archives: Conference

Anything relating to the spring or autumn conferences

More future conference venues revealed

While we were off-air over the weekend, we learned from the unlikely source of Politics and the City that we are due an Autumn conference in Liverpool.

Autumn in Liverpool was mooted when we first had Spring conference this time last year. We asked delegates at the conference there what they thought about the prospect of returning to the city for a longer conference – and you can hear what people had to say here.

This makes our expected venue timetable over the coming years:

2009
Harrogate – on Friday!
Bournemouth – 19th-23rd September

2010
Birmingham – Spring
Liverpool – Autumn

2011
??? – Spring
Birmingham – Autumn

2 Comments

The Elephant Interviews… The President

Hello again, fluffy friends!

So a new President has been elected, scoring a stunning victory based on a grass roots campaign and famous badges! Tragically Baroness Ros ISN’T in the White House, but the GOOD NEWS for us is that that means she will be coming to Spring Conference and has made time in her packed diary for a Bloggers’ Interview at 3pm on Saturday 7th March. Yes We Can!

President Ros was elected on a pledge to be a link between the members and the leadership, so this is your opportunity to try that out! Ms Ros also has a strong …

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Exciting news about Lib Dem Conference

Well, firstly we have Howard Dean coming to talk to us in Harrogate next month, at 12.15 on the Saturday.  We’ve already covered this here, and Lynne Featherstone got excited too. Expect the hall to be packed – so take your seat early and listen to the adult education policy debate we’re having immediately before it.

Queuing for conference

Don’t miss Lib Dem Voice’s first fringe meeting!

Secondly, Lib Dem Voice have organised our own fringe meeting at 8pm on Saturday evening in the main conference centre. We’ll take as …

7 Comments

Labour, Lewisham and the BNP

As previously featured on LDV, Duwayne Brooks was running to be a Liberal Democrat councillor in one of yesterday’s by-elections. Duwayne, along with fellow candidate Jenni Clutten, won. Congratulations to them both.

Labour’s campaign was at times, shall we say, unusual, with a heavy emphasis in their leaflets of a plan of their to have the Union Jack* flying over Lewisham Town Hall. As Dave Hill has written over on The Guardian:

How does that work for you? It made me a little queasy. Shouldn’t Labour concentrate on exposing the BNP for what it is rather than pandering to the nationalism

Also posted in Leadership Election and News | Tagged , , and | 8 Comments

Opinion: Why we should be learning lessons from Howard Dean

Howard Dean is coming to town! Barack Obama certainly has two up on him in the Presidential election stakes – Obama got the nomination and got the Presidency – but for many interested in the question of how best to engage with the public and with active supporters in the internet age, Howard Dean is the real inspiration.

What Obama did last year was truly impressive – but impressive in quality and scale and eloquence rather than in innovation. When it came to breaking new ground in picking technologies to use and structuring a campaign around involving people rather than ordering …

Also posted in Online politics | Tagged , , and | 1 Comment

Howard Dean to speak at Liberal Democrat Spring Conference

Governor Howard DeanGovernor Howard Dean, chairman of the Democratic National Committee from 2005 to 2009, will be the guest speaker at the Liberal Democrat Spring Conference in Harrogate, 6-8 March 2009.

Howard Dean was a frontrunner for the Democratic Presidential nomination in 2004 when he spoke out against the Iraq war.

Howard set up Democracy for America which focuses on grassroots fundraising and training for local members.

As chairman of the Democrats Howard set up and executed the 50 State Strategy which targeted voters across the US, rather than …

Also posted in LDVUSA | 6 Comments

March 18th: the London Conference is a must!

The place for all London Liberal Democrats to be on the evening of March 18th is at the Polish Centre in King Street, Hammersmith! All party members are welcome to be a part of determining – and helping us take forward – what the Liberal Democrats will be doing throughout London over the coming months. With a General Election, Local Elections and European Elections all within the next year and a half there is a lot at stake for us – and for all Londoners too!

Our keynote conference speakers will include leading Liberal Democrats in London: Vince Cable MP, …

Tagged and | 3 Comments

Clegg on Harry

Repsonding to the news of Prince Harry’s race row video – in which he refers to two army friends as a ‘Paki’ and ‘raghead’ – Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg has made clear his dismay:

Mr Clegg added his voice to those criticising Prince Harry’s remarks, saying he would have sacked a member of his team for saying such things. Asked about Prince Harry’s comments, he said: “He should not have used those words, it would have cause considerable offence.” And asked if he would have had to sack a member of his team for using such language, he added:

Also posted in News | 9 Comments

Brian Coleman and his taxi bills

Conservative GLA member Brian Coleman has been in the news a bit today, criticising Lynne Featherstone for calling out the Fire Brigade when she feared that her boiler might be about to explode after it started making loud noises and shaking the house. Personally, that’s exactly what I’d do in the same circumstances, and indeed that’s what the Fire Brigade has said people should do.

But what really intrigues me about Brian Coleman’s attempt to score a political point (and he really should know better than rubbishing the Fire Brigade’s own advice, what with being chairman of the Fire Authority) is …

Also posted in News | Tagged , and | 19 Comments

London Lib Dems: Talk to your neighbours!

It’s always valuable to meet with campaigners from neighbouring areas, to share ideas (and helpers!)

In a change to the printed guide which has been sent out to London Region Liberal Democrats, this Saturday’s Autumn Conference now features a campaigning pick-me-up.

Campaign Surgery, a fringe event at 11.45, is great for development parties. Here’s the idea:

Are you trying to win your first council seats or to strengthen a small group on the Council? If so, come along to this two-way surgery session where you can chat informally with some of our Regional team and staff.

Come and let us know

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London Liberal Democrats Autumn Conference – still time to register

It’s London Region’s turn to have their Autumn Conference and AGM.

Come to: Haverstock School, 24 Haverstock Hill, London NW3 2BQ (Nearest tube: Chalk Farm)

On: Saturday 15 November, from 9.30am to 5.30pm.

There’s a packed agenda, useful training and fringe events, and guest speakers – including Chris Huhne MP, Graham Watson MEP, Tom Brake MP and Baroness Sarah Ludford MEP.
Members of the London Assembly and London Regional Executive will also be there.

Advance Registration (before noon on Thurs 13th November) is £20 waged, £10 concessions (on the door £25 waged, £12 concessions). Call Flick Rea …

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LDV post-conference members’ survey (5): did the Lib Dem conference strengthen or weaken Nick Clegg’s leadership?

Last weekend, Lib Dem Voice emailed the members of our private forum (open to all Lib Dem members) inviting them to take part in a survey, conducted via Liberty Research, asking a number of questions arising from last week’s party conference in Bournemouth. Many thanks to the 187 of you who completed it; we’ve publishing the results all this week on LDV.

In today’s final instalment we look at what impact you think the party conference had on Nick Clegg’s leadership. LDV asked: Nick Clegg’s leadership of the party has come in for some criticism from some sections of the media. Do you think his performance over the past week has strengthened or weakened his position as leader?

Here’s what you said:

> Strengthened it – 77.%%
> Weakened it – 10.7%
> Don’t know / No opinion – 11.8%

A resounding result, and one with which Nick has reason to feel pretty pleased. That doesn’t mean there was no criticism, though, not least of his pensions gaffe (one which Nick has fully ‘fessed up to). Here’s a sample of your comments:

Also posted in LDV Members poll | 1 Comment

LDV post-conference members’ survey (4): what you thought of Make It Happen’s tax-cuts

Over the weekend, Lib Dem Voice emailed the members of our private forum (open to all Lib Dem members) inviting them to take part in a survey, conducted via Liberty Research, asking a number of questions arising from last week’s party conference in Bournemouth. Many thanks to the 187 of you who completed it; we’re publishing the results this week on LDV.

The big issue of this year’s Bournemouth conference was undoubtedly the party’s Make It Happen policy document, and specifically it’s tax-cutting message. So LDV asked: The party conference voted by a wide margin to endorse Make it Happen, including the line: “If there’s money to spare , we won’t simply spend it. We’re looking for ways to cut Britain’s overall tax burden, so ordinary families have more of their money to help themselves.” This was opposed by some in the party, who said the Lib Dems should not place tax cuts ahead of public spending. Did you agree with the conference decision to endorse Make it Happen’s tax-cutting approach?

Here’s what you said:

> Yes – 61.9%
> No – 29.1%
> Don’t know / no opinion – 4.2%
> Other (please state) – 4.8%

A convincing vote, then, in favour of the leadership’s tax-cutting position, though a little less overwhelmingly so than the actual party conference vote (which was nearer to 3:1). Comments, as you might expect, divided into three categories: those passionately in favour of the new emphasis on tax-cuts those passionately against; and those either inbetween, or who thought the differences between the two positions had been rather exaggerated. Here’s a handful:

“Yes, public services cost money. But Labour’s doubled taxes in the last ten years, and everyone knows a lot of what they’ve done’s a fuck-up. If we can’t be at least 3% different to Labour, what are we all in politics for?”
“In fact, I don’t think there was a lot of difference between the two positions, a mere £5bn a year. It was the symbolism that was important.”
“I was quite happy with the fifty pence rate in 2005, but I think that the changes proposed are also a good way to deliver our objectives.”
“Old fashioned radical Liberal, not happy with the economic liberal slant”
“Your gloss is incorrect. We were concerned about the loss of help specifically to those who are too poor to pay income tax. Can two ex-Directors of Policy (Duncan Brack and Richard Grayson) really be wrong?”
“sensible, Liberal and popular (rare that any policy can tick all 3 of those boxes!)”
“Wrong policy, and defintely wrong time. Dosen’t add up either numerically or intellectually.”
“The best reasons to vote Lib Dem at the moment”

Part of the controversy of Make It Happen’s tax-cuts has been generated by the fact that the party does not, as yet, have firm, public proposals detailing how the £20 billion reduction in public spending to fund policy commitments and tax-cuts will be found. So the LDV survey next asked: As yet, the party has not spelled out the precise measures which will enable the party to cut public expenditure by £20 billion, and this has attracted some criticism within the Lib Dems and among sections of the media. Which of these statements comes closest to your view:

Here’s what you told us:

> It is not necessary or possible up to 18 months before a general election to spell out how this £20bn will be cut. It is therefore perfectly responsible for the party to state clearly its direction of travel – that it will reduce taxes and cut public expenditure – and to publish details before an election. – 47.6%

> The party needs to spell out far more precisely how it intends to find £20bn of spending cuts. If it does not the Lib Dems cannot expect to be taken seriously by the media or by the voters, and will deserve to be attacked as irresponsible by our political opponents. – 47.6%

> Don’t know / no opinion – 4.8%

That’s right – an exact tie! Here’s a little of what you said:

Also posted in LDV Members poll | Tagged | 11 Comments

LDV post-conference members’ survey (2): what you thought of the media coverage of the Lib Dem conference

Over the weekend, Lib Dem Voice emailed the members of our private forum (open to all Lib Dem members) inviting them to take part in a survey, conducted via Liberty Research, asking a number of questions arising from last week’s party conference in Bournemouth. Many thanks to the 187 of you who completed it; we’re be publishing the results this week on LDV.

Today we look at how the media did its job. LDV asked: It is a common complaint of those who attend party conferences that the media distorts – if it covers at all – what is happening there. The media respond that it is their job to see past how party members view proceedings, and that public interest in conferences is minimal. How accurate and balanced do you think media coverage of the Lib Dem conference has been in general?

Here’s what you told us:

* Accurate and balanced – the media has done its job well and given over about the right amount of space – 3%
* Okay – there was reasonable coverage and it was generally accurate – 49%
* Inaccurate and unbalanced – the media largely ignored what was happening, and distorted much of what they did report – 34%
* Don’t know / no opinion – 14%

So, although a significant minority of you were unhappy with the quality of coverage – regarding it as “inaccurate and unbalanced” – a majority of you (52%) thought the media did an okay job, or better. I think the media will (insofar as they care) view that as a pretty good result, coming as it does from party members and activists.

The individual comments we received broke down into three camps: those who lamented the fact that the Lib Dem conference co-incided with turmoil in the financial markets and the Labour leadership; those who blamed the media four-square for belittling the party; and those (only a handful of you) who felt the party got all it deserved. Here’s a selection:

Also posted in LDV Members poll | Leave a comment

LDV post-conference members’ survey (1): why you did – and didn’t – attend the Lib Dem conference

Over the weekend, Lib Dem Voice emailed the members of our private forum (open to all Lib Dem members) inviting them to take part in a survey, conducted via Liberty Research, asking a number of questions arising from last week’s party conference in Bournemouth. Many thanks to the 187 of you who completed it; we’ll be publishing the results this week on LDV.

First up, we asked how many of you had actually attended conference. LDV forum members are more likely than most, of course, to be party activists – so it was little surprise that 60% of …

Also posted in LDV Members poll | 5 Comments

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)

Also posted in News | 2 Comments

Conference catchup

We wrote some 80 posts covering conference last week – if for some reason you missed some of them, here’s a handy cut-out-and-keep reference to the best of blogging at LDV.

Before conference even began we had a major debate, with hundreds of comments, about Making it Happen

Whilst at conference, Stephen Tall liveblogged the Make it Happen debate – and well over 100 of you joined in from home and/or the conference floor.  Ultimately, it ended up a very good debate.
We covered other key debates:

Also posted in A weekly catchup | 3 Comments

Hashtag taxonomies: the last word in Tweeting?

Wait, come back! It’s me, Helen, and I’m not going to blind you with science – just give you a guide to the craze that swept this year’s Liberal Democrat Conference. Or at least among its Twitter users. By the final day of Conference it had gained national media coverage. Because I slipped it into an interview on BBC Radio 5 Live!

It’s pretty simple: Twitter is a micro-blogging service which lets users send each other text-message-length updates. This can be done by sending an SMS to Twitter, or by logging on to www.twitter.com and posting there. Then your friends can follow them on the website, and in some countries (but no longer in the UK) receive a text containing your latest offering.

These short posts are known as ‘tweets’ and the overall effect is like being surrounded by birdsong; various voices calling back and forth. Bursts of communication that let others know, ‘I’m here.’

Also posted in Online politics | Tagged | Leave a comment

Photos from conference

Looking for a photograph from Bournemouth conference for your local newsletters, leaflets or website? Look no further then than the party’s Flickr photogallery, which contains many photographs not only from conference but also from Nick Clegg’s regular campaign visits and public meetings around the country.

Many of the photographs are from Alex Folkes, who prospective candidates and local parties can hire for a day to help them build up a strong image bank for their campaigning as well as to provide advice on how to get the best action images (07984 644 138 / [email protected]).

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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 …

Also posted in News and Party policy and internal matters | Tagged and | 58 Comments

Richard Kemp writes… We can’t go on like this

My comments at the Lib Dem Conference that we need to strike a new balance between the parliamentary and councillor wings of the party has clearly struck a chord with councillors.

The immediate reason for my outburst was the way that the police debate had been approached by the Parliamentary Group – well, to be fair, we should not blame them all too much. This paper was discussed under ‘any other business’ at a shadow cabinet meeting. Most MPs had not seen it until the week before conference. Although conference delegates had seen the resolution when the agenda was published, …

5 Comments

Conference: Liberal Vision and the Free Society

Tuesday lunchtime in Old Harry’s Bar was packed to the rafters with delegates promised something better than food: a list. Don’t we just love lists? Not this time the 10 most influential fluffy bloggers, but a ranking of how liberal the 63 Liberal Democrat MPs are on the basis of Parliamentary votes and Early Day Motion (EDM) support, on issues relating to personal liberty – i.e. drinking and smoking, rather than tax and CCTV. Nobody really believes the methodology behind the list to be sound, but, hey, it’s just a bit of fun, isn’t it?

I was quite pleased to observe …

Also posted in Op-eds | Tagged and | 4 Comments

Opinion: Doctor Beeching was not to blame for everything!

I caught a fair chunk of the Transport Debate from Conference on Wednesday morning, and generally I found it impressive. But, there are two points I’d like to explore.

First, at least two speakers appeared to claim that government support for the railways has increased a thousand-fold since the days of British Rail. Now, I’m quite happy to accept that there has been a significant increase under privatisation. I also realise that calculating the overall level of support is not easy given the byzantine complexity of the relationship between the various public and private sector entities involved. 

But the estimates I have …

Also posted in Op-eds | 6 Comments

Final speeches from party conference

A final round-up of speeches by Shadow Cabinet members from party conference in Bournemouth. First off, here’s Shadow Chancellor and Deputy Leader Vince Cable:

Also posted in Lib Dem TV | Tagged | Leave a comment

Cable calls for action on short-selling of bank stocks

During party conference, Vince Cable set out his proposals for tackling some of the causes of the current financial crisis:

Short-selling in UK bank stocks should be banned by the City watchdog to stop “aggressive” speculators “betting against the taxpayer”, Vince Cable, Liberal Democrat deputy leader, said …

“The hedge funds are betting against the taxpayer, since they know that if a leading British bank were to collapse, the government would have no alternative but to intervene,” said Mr Cable.

The party’s Treasury team believes a ban on the short trade would halt a cycle of “fear feeding

Also posted in News | 8 Comments

Opinion: a good week for Nick, a good week for the Lib Dems

There’s a paradox about party leaders’ conference speeches (akin to Prime Minister’s Questions): they are dissected by supporters, opponents and journalists, while in reality the ‘real people’ in the country might perhaps catch a 10-second clip on the news. But speeches remain fundamentally important – not only for the morale of members, but also as probably the only time in the year when serious journalists (not always an oxymoron) will listen for any length of time to a politician expressing their ideas.

Let’s be clear about one thing straight away: Nick’s speech was excellent. Every Lib Dem who heard it …

Also posted in Op-eds | Tagged , , and | 56 Comments

Full text of speech now available

The full text of the speech can now be found on NickClegg.com

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Clegg speech

Auspicious start to speech as they bath the stage in, er, blue light. The audience sits enthralled through Clegg’s Greatest Hits at PMQs.

Dark clothed men are removing the robopodium reader for Clegg’s walkabout.

Applause for technical crew as they get stuff off in the nick of time. Audience turning into Proms crowd.

Clapometer moves into positive. BBC Parliament subtitle him as Nick Glegg.

Talking about the future. Kicking off with snaps for Vince to get the audience on side.

Getting serious about the problems facing us all. Namechecking the weird American banks.

Gordon’s crystal ball failure. Labour offers nothing – craven protection of their own jobs, whilst all around them redundant. Living dead – no head, no heart, no soul, stumbling around. Zombie government.

Now onto the Tories: Cameron wants to strip out the offensive parts of the Tory party. But if you take out the offensive bits, there’s nothing left!

Tagged | 29 Comments

Liveblog from Channel 4

Very pleased to see that Channel 4 are buying into the whole hashtag taxonomy thang. They’re also liveblogging the conference speech – including cutting and pasting entire stories from LDV into their posts.

1 Comment

Conference: Glee Club

You’ll be pleased to hear we are able to draw a veil over most of Glee Club because we were, happily, not there.

But one little vignette has come our way. While the crowd were waiting, all agog, for Lembit and his Magic Harmonica, a couple of Ros Scott acolytes began light-heartedly chanting “I’m 4 Ros, I’m 4 Ros.”

Lembit, getting in drinks for everybody, aimed a mock scowl at the audience. “Now, if you keep doing that he’s not going to play,” warned the compere.

Cue entire audience: “I’M 4 ROS! I’M 4 ROS!”

8 Comments
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