Category Archives: Conference

Anything relating to the spring or autumn conferences

Conference update: Private Finance Initiatives

I shouldn’t be writing this really.

Occasionally I get asked to write a bit for Comment is Free, which is all very fine and splendid because I actually get paid real money for it, and one of those occasions was yesterday. Could I do a little piece on last night’s rally? And about how, you know, whether Clegg seems to be in trouble with the membership over Make it Happen, and how they respond to him? Because, you know, that’s what the talk in all the bars is all about, right?

Sigh. There’s just no way out of a prepared meedja script, is there. The conference rally was actually based around the themes of civil liberties and devolution, rather as you might expect for a party which is, er, liberal and democratic. So while on one level it is tempting to spend 500 words pointing out that a dog remains a dog no matter how often and how loudly journalists insist it is a cat and getting paid to do that, actually I’m going to talk to you about Private Finance Initiatives instead.

The motion moved by Our Vince this morning was essentially to ensure that PFI was only used where it offered better value for money, and ensure this value was monitored by the NAO, plus various measures to make the bidding system more efficient and ensure the expenditure doesn’t slip off government accounts.

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Conference update: David Laws MP

Scrap the curriculum! is the glorious headline this morning on the Beeb in response to David Laws’ speech this morning.

I didn’t catch the speech, but I like the coverage. The curriculum in its current dessicated form is, IMHO, nowt more than an outmoded article of faith among statists, and not something which should detain a liberal:

Ed Balls runs our education system as if it was still one of the great nationalized industries of the last century. But from the poshest Public Schools to the toughest Maintained Schools, there is a new consensus that standardization and centralisation just don’t work.

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Iain Dale interview

Last night, the hotel bar I was in seemed very unthoughtfully to have an unlimited polypins of quite nice real ale.  Tanglefoot, I think. I have vague memories of doing all sorts of things last night, including signing up to nudist sunbathing and promising to write a standing order for some huge amount to some constituency election campaign.

Fortunately no records exist of most of my exploits.

Unfortunately, one of the things I did whilst drunk was interview Iain Dale. No, not that one. The other one.  The one that doesn’t need the links.

He was a guest at our blog

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LDV Media Moron Watch #1

Party members who come to the Lib Dem conference frequently note the disparity between what’s actually happening, and the way in which it is distorted reported by the press (whether through ignorance, prejudice, laziness or carelessness is for you to judge according to your generosity of spirit). So welcome to LDV’s Media Moron Watch, in which we highlight for you some of the most choice examples of the media willfully misrepresenting what’s going on at Bournemouth 2008.

First up (simply because I read it first) is today’s Independent on Sunday, which captions a picture of Chris Huhne with:

Chris Huhne:

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Conference update: Saturday evening

After an extended sojourn in Greece courtesy of a piece of dodgy souvlaki, a fire in the channel tunnel and the bankruptcy of several package holiday tour companies I finally find myself be-fish and chipped in Bournemouth.

Owing to the somewhat frenetic nature of this transfer I am superbly equipped with flip flops, sun cream and a purse full of euros. If you see someone in snorkelling gear in the bar, be sure to come and say hello.

Anyway, to business, and of course the unignorable question on everyone’s lips is… who will be the first

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Vox pop amongst delegates

Whilst waiting for conference to begin this morning, I asked fellow delegates where they were from, what they hoped to gain from conference and what they thought about tax cuts. Four very different answers followed.

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The first vote has happened

Conference has overwhelmingly supported the motion “Giving Citizens a Voice in Parliament.” Conference also voted to remove the provisions for a referendum on policies that attract one million signatures against.

The fact that the first vote has happened means that the vote-by-vote coverage on the party website has also now begun. The text of motions, the text of speeches, where appropriate, are all being hastily typed up and added to the running order, as and when it happens. And there’s a handy link to all this content from the header of every conference post.

Now conference continues with a …

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Update from conference


The conference has definitely now begun, and members of the Voice team are beginning to assemble, although transport difficulties, crashing holiday companies and the channel tunnel fire have all contributed to making today a little fraught.

Over in the main hall, Annette Brooke MP is formally opening the conference and kicking off the day’s business, so that gives me a chance to update you on the decisions of the Conf Ctte about how conference will be run.

The Urgent Issues will be

  1. Polar Ice Caps: Acceleration of Climate Change
  2. Recession and Rising Energy and Food Prices: Impact on Poverty

There will be a separate vote …

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Nick Clegg on vision and tax

Two major new pieces from Nick Clegg in the media. First, in the New Statesman on his liberal vision:

Because of our commitment to freedom, openness and tolerance we are the only party that uses its conference to let the members decide the policies. The debate isn’t confined to the conference hall. It starts over breakfast and – as anyone who has ever visited the conference hotel bar will know – goes on well into the night. You hear it in the streets and up and down the beach, and at fringe events on subjects that

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Two ways to follow the Lib Dem conference (apart from on LDV, of course)

Those of you who can’t make it to Bournemouth will still be able to follow proceedings as they happen, rather than as the media decides to report them, in two ways:

BBC Parliament – there will be full conference coverage for you to watch: click here to find out more.

BBC2’s The Daily Politics – if you’re happy enough with highlights, Andrew Neill’s show is back on air after the summer break on Monday with the Lib Dem conference. Highlights, the producers tell us, include:

* On Monday we launch Andrew Neil’s Daily Politics Blog and morning email. You can sign up

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Conference policy motion: Cutting crime by catching criminals

It has been impossible to have a grown-up debate on crime since Tony Blair became Shadow Home Secretary in 1992 and declared that Labour would be “tough on crime, tough on the causes of crime.” Since then, Labour’s policy has been to out-tough the Tories. The result has been a sentencing arms race as Labour and the Tories appeal to the most punitive parts of public and tabloid opinion.

We desperately need to shift the debate to what works to cut crime. That is why the Justice and Home Affairs Team have produced the Cutting Crime by Catching Criminals paper for …

Also posted in News | 7 Comments

Conference twittering

Here’s another interesting way of making the technology go a little bit further.

The Twitter user @PartyConference has suggested a hashtag taxonomy to bring together a variety of twitterers in a common purpose.  If you’re twittering from Lib Dem party conference, why not add the text #LibDem08 to your message?

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Paul Holmes writes… ‘No’ to Make It Happen’s public spending cuts

It would appear that Liberal Democrat policy has changed to one of cutting public expenditure to fund tax cuts rather than switching wasteful or less desirable New Labour expenditure to fund needed investment in accord with Liberal Democrat policies. This has been announced at various press conferences and interviews since the 17th July – but has neither been discussed by the Parliamentary Party or passed by Conference.

Given that – as the Times, Independent, Telegraph and Financial Times have all pointed out – this is a major shift in our policy, it is strange that it is not even mentioned in …

Also posted in Op-eds and Party policy and internal matters | Tagged and | 73 Comments

Shameless plug alert: Blog awards ceremony

As the judges finalise the winners of the Liberal Democrats/Liberal Democrat Voice Blog of the Year AwardsTM, I thought I’d take the opportunity for one final shameless plug of the awards ceremony. It’s in Old Harry’s Bar at the Highcliff Marriott Hotel on Saturday night from 9.45pm. Do come along if you’re in Bournemouth, meet Liberal Democrat bloggers and help us celebrate some excellent blogs.

Big thanks to our sponsors, ALDC and the LGA Liberal Democrats Group. Because of their generosity, we’re able to provide some free refreshments on arrival (although there’ll also be a cash bar if those don’t …

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Conference policy motion: let the cameras into court

Since 1925 and the dawn of public broadcasting, with the exception of a short pilot experiment in the Court of Appeal, Britain’s court doors have been firmly shut to cameras, TV and radio. That is why newspaper court reports carry those sketches by court sketch artists which depict judges, lawyers and witnesses in action, but in a thoroughly artificial way. Even Paul McCartney’s solicitor getting her hair wet at the hand of Heather Mills was covered in this archaic fashion.

Now we have nothing against Court sketch artists, but there can be no justification in the television age …

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Diana Wallis MEP writes… Time for the Liberal Democrats to let the people in!

It may sound like a strange assertion but our British model of democracy is in danger of becoming, if it is not already, less democratic and accessible than the much-criticised European Union; indeed this would definitely be the case if the Lisbon Reform Treaty came into force.

During the period of the non-debate on the Lisbon Treaty in this country, I was the only one of my Lib Dem colleagues in the European Parliament who constantly held and, perhaps, quietly tried to argue that we too should have had a referendum. People will know that I take that stand as a …

Also posted in Europe / International | 6 Comments

LDV conference events flyer

I think we may have mentioned once or twice already that we have the odd event or two at conference.

Just to help you keep us in your mind, LDV’s resident PagePlus Monkey has now produced a handy flyer for you to print out and put with your conference papers before heading down to Bournemouth on Friday night or Saturday morning – or even making a special trip just to drink with us on Monday evening.

The flyer even includes a helpful map showing the venue of our chosen pub in relation to the conference centre, thanks to our friends …

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Conference policy motion: “Respect, Consent and Personal Data”

The policy motion “Respect, Consent and Personal Data” is the culmination of many months’ work from Sue Miller, Tim Razzall and a number of other Lib Dem Lords including myself to address the increasing intrusion by government, public and private organisations into our privacy. At the core of Liberal Democrat philosophy is a fundamental belief in the freedom of the individual, and the importance of strengthening and upholding fundamental rights. In recent years we’ve protested as the government introduced more and more measures to collect and store more and more information about individuals, such as the extending the remit of …

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Democracy Dragons’ Den: What’s your one big idea to improve democracy in this country?

ERS logoDo you have a big idea that you think could improve democracy in the UK?

This opportunity to shine is open to any Liberal Democrat party member attending the party’s autumn conference. Give your proposal a title of not more than eight words, and summarise it in fewer than 30. (You can provide more detail if you wish, but we won’t be able to fit it on the ballot paper to select the ideas that get pitched to the panel).

Then submit your idea either here in the comments field, or by …

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Events on Facebook

As you may remember, we’re running a few events at conference – we first blogged about them here.

Well now, thanks to the miracle of Facebook, you can let us know whether you’re coming. Two of our events, Liberal Drinks and the Blog Award Ceremony now have funky event pages on Facebook, all neatly populated with hundreds of non-attending invitees, fancy pictures nicked from Stock Exchange.

Conference itself has a Facebook event too, and many individual associations are setting up events for their fringes, like this Delga AGM.

If you’d like to highlight an event at …

Also posted in Events | Tagged | 2 Comments

Bournemouth conference – for those who aren’t going

There’s still time to register for federal conference in Bournemouth – but if you really can’t go, you can still participate in some of the sessions. For the four Q&A sessions, featuring party spokespeople and outside commentators, questions are welcome from any party member:

Sunday 14th September, 14.50 – 15.35: Q&A session with Nick Clegg, Leader of the Liberal Democrats.

Monday 15th September, 16.20 – 17.20: Q&A session on environmental policy, with a panel comprising Steve Webb MP (Shadow Secretary of State for the Environment), Chris Davies MEP (Environment spokesperson, European Parliament), Dorothy Thornhill (Mayor of Watford) and Jonathon Porritt (Chair, UK, …

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LDV Events at conference

There will be three opportunities to come and meet the Lib Dem Voice team and chat with fellow readers and contributors at conference.

Saturday, 21.45
Harry’s Bar, Highcliffe
Liberal Democrat Blog of the Year Awards Ceremony

Monday, 1300
Dorchester 1, Highcliffe
Democracy Dragon’s Den
Winning party members get to pitch their ideas on democracy to an expert panel. Speakers: Julia Goldsworthy MP, Dr Ken Ritchie, Electoral Reform Society, and our own Commissioning Editor, Stephen Tall

Monday, 2000
The Goat and Tricycle
Liberal Drinks at Conference.

Only one of these events is in the printed Conference agenda, so best put them in your diary now!

You will normally need a conference badge …

Tagged | 2 Comments

Conference policy motion: “Giving citizens a voice in parliament”

I was a local government reporter in Oxford in the dark days of the 1980s. No public question time. No scrutiny. No appeals of any kind.

I even remember one definitely old Labour councillor telling me that he screwed up and threw away letters from his constituents, without reading them, if they had the temerity to send them to his home address. Or, worse – address him in ways that seemed not to reflect the dignity of his position.

Liberals and SDP councillors around the country were then introducing the right of members of the public to address council meetings, or ask

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Conference policy motion: “Extention of the remit of the International Criminal Court”

This motion is being moved at conference by North Somerset, North Wiltshire and Westminster Liberal Democrats. The mover, Brian Mathew, explains.

Our policy motion, entitled “The Extension of the Remit of the International Criminal Court”, was conceived a year ago, following a long consideration of the plight of populations persecuted by their own governments. We want to celebrate the role the International Criminal Court has had in bringing some rogue ex-heads of state to justice, while bemoaning the fact that not all nations (including the US) are signatories, and until the recent attempt at bringing Sudan’s President

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Bournemouth Conference update

All the documents for the party conference in Bournemouth in September are now available on the party website – including the Agenda & Directory, Fringe Guide, Training Directory, Reports, four policy papers and three consultation papers.

This includes two policy papers which are still open to amendment – ‘Make it Happen’, the party’s new ‘vision and values’ paper, and ‘Shaping our World through a Strong Europe’, the European policy paper. The deadline for amendments to the motions which accompany them is as noon on Tuesday 9 September – and this is also the …

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Conference policy motion: “Safe standing at football matches”

Introducing the first in our quick gen-up series of policy motions to be debated in Bournemouth. And we kick off (hehehe, geddit?) with the Safe Standing at Football Matches motion (F20) outlined for us by Peter Jones, who will be summing up at the debate.

What is the motion trying to achieve?

Allow folk to stand up to watch football matches.

Er…is that all?

Yes.

So what’s the problem?

Where seats are provided, for instance in most top-flight grounds that are ‘all-seater’, people aren’t allowed to stand up. Many people prefer to

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Conference: win* a secondment to Lib Dem Voice!

No sooner do I provide a link to the preliminary agenda than the Real Thing hits the web. No smooth behind-the-scenes information-gathering on my watch, I say!

Speaking of information-gathering: Lib Dem Voice, being as we all know cobbled together with eggboxes and bits of string a thriving liberal hub with big plans for the future, will be covering all the major debates and as many other of the 150-odd scheduled events as possible during conference, and by god we need help we have a few select positions for freelance reporters to

Also posted in News | 10 Comments

Conference: curtain up!

Wilkommen, bienvenu, welcome…

In just under one calendar month’s time, folks, many of you and all of me will be struggling down to Bournemouth on the Friday night trains for what promises to be a fascinating conference. Over the next month, we will bring you sneak previews of the policy motion debates, straight from the teeming brains of the people who drafted them, and for a conference count-down fix while we wait for the main thing I can but recommend the preliminary agenda with its rather fetching picture of Bournemouth-at-dusk.

…im Konferenz, a la conférence,

Also posted in News | Tagged and | 8 Comments

Have you signed up for the Lib Dem conference yet?

An email arrives at LDV Towers reminding party members that:

For those of you who have yet to register for the federal party conference in Bournemouth, please note the next price increase is fast approaching. Sign up before 31st July for the advance booker rate of £89. The late booker and on site registration rate will be £117, so make sure you catch this last-chance discount.

The agenda timetable will soon be on the website at www.libdems.org.uk/conference. Items not to be missed include:

o the ‘Make it Happen’ pre-manifesto debate
o the Leader’s Q&A hosted by Steve Richards of the Independent and
o the

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Bournemouth Conference – preliminary agenda published

The Preliminary Agenda for the federal conference in Bournemouth in September is now available on the party website.

All the policy and business motions included, including those accompanying the two policy papers (on security policy and on transport), are open to amendment; the deadline is 12 noon on Wednesday 9 July.

This is also the deadline for topical motions, which must be either on events happening after the 21 May deadline for motions, or related to any of the following topics: child care; crime and policing; health; housing; work and pensions.

I hope you’ll submit plenty of amendments and topical motions, …

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