Category Archives: Conference

Anything relating to the spring or autumn conferences

Opinion: Homes for All, starting now

Everywhere you look, housing, that most basic of necessities, is in crisis. Having a safe and stable home is crucial for a child’s development and the welfare of any person, of any age. Yet in the world’s fourth largest economy, after 10 years of a Labour government, there are 95,000 homeless families and the number waiting for their own home on the social housing register has risen by 60%!

Liberal Democrats believe that every family should live in an affordable home. Meeting these current and future housing needs will mean building far more affordable houses each year than the Government has …

Also posted in Op-eds | 7 Comments

Liverpool Drinks?

In Autumn conferences past, bloggers have met together for a special “Liberal Drinks” during the conference week.

A few of us on the LDV team have been wondering whether to organise a get-together at Liverpool’s Spring conference.  It is always a little trickier to manage at Spring because conference is shorter and so many events are packed into less time.

Still, we’re wondering about running the usual, informal gathering at a good pub with nice beer, probably on the Friday night.  It could be a chance to meet up with old friends and new, and put faces to URLs.

There are a few …

Also posted in Events | 17 Comments

Can you give 5 minutes of your time to improve discussion within the Liberal Democrats?

One of the things we’re most proud of as a party is that it is representatives of our local parties across the country, who make our policy at conference. It’s one of the many things that makes us stand out from the other major parties.

But away from Conference, how much discussion of the key political and policy questions facing us, does go on around the party?

Anecdotal evidence suggests that in recent years the number of “Pizza and Politics”-style events run by local parties has increased – as a quick glance at the excellent Flock Together website shows. And …

Also posted in Online politics | 6 Comments

Liverpool conference

The party’s UK-wide spring conference is fast approaching – the first we’ve ever held in a major city run by the Liberal Democrats, and, indeed, the first party conference ever held in Liverpool.

The agenda is available on the party website and printed copies should be arriving during the coming week for those who’ve registered.

The main debate will of course be on the Federal Policy Committee’s policy paper on health, Empowerment, Fairness and Quality in Health Care (also available on the website), kicking off first thing on the Saturday afternoon. It contains several new developments of party policy which we will think will generate controversy; note that the deadline for amendments to the motion accompanying the paper is 12 noon Tuesday 4th March.

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Can you help us write our policy?

The Liberal Democrats’ Federal Policy Committee is inviting members to put themselves forward to sit on the policy working groups which draft policy for consideration by FPC and then Conference.

Party members have been asked to send in their names by 28th January – so this is your last chance to do it by then!

FPC is currently putting together groups to look at education, and non-climate change environmental issues, so if you’d like to be considered for them then you need to get your application by the deadline.

However if you are mainly interested in other …

7 Comments

Linda Jack reviews manifesto conference: Building Cohesive Communities

One of the attractions for me of Saturday’s Lib Dem Manifesto Group One-Day Conference was the opportunity to informally debate a range of issues and their implications for policy. It is a rare opportunity and one that I think we should consider using more, both at party conferences and beyond.

So, in the morning I attended the session on Community Cohesion, organised by the perhaps unlikely bedfellows of the Liberal Democrat Christian Forum (LDCF), Ethnic Minority Liberal Democrats (EMLD), and Liberal Democrat Humanists and Secularists (LDHS).

The session kicked off with three short speeches from Paul Holmes, Meral Ece and Simon Hughes.

Paul, representing LDHS, focused on education, calling for an end to selection and questioning who might be the “suitable bodies” to run schools. He referred to the fact that most people consider that religion does more harm than good, and raised some of the key concerns he had about faith schools. For example, Catholic schools that teach sex is only permissible in marriage, that exclude particular books and will not support charities that go against fundamental Catholic beliefs, (eg, not participating in Red Nose Day). He was concerned about other examples, like the Exclusive Brethren Church, who dismissed a female head because of their belief that a woman should not be in a position of authority. He had concerns that we were in danger of creating a “mini-America” and needed to consider carefully before handing over control to some of these bodies.

Meral expressed her view that we needed to debate the issues. She referred to the commission on community cohesion, chaired by Ted Cantell, and the importance of recognising that faith is a social network. There was no commonality of understanding about what it means to be a citizen in our multi-faith, multi-racial society. The inequalities that existed had lead to some young people turning to their background for some value, but that sometimes those values had been hijacked by a few individuals. She questioned the notion of enforced secularism, and referred to Turkey, a wholly secular system, where faith and state are completely separate.

Simon started by saying he was an Evangelical Christian, and referred to the fact that at the last census 75% of the population had a faith. He expressed frustration that the statistics were hopeless, and what we needed was an annual count and 5-yearly census. He was in favour of disestablishment of the Church of England, and was pleased that the Prime Minister would no longer have a say in appointing bishops. On faith schools, he said that if we were starting from here we would not have them; but we are where we are, and can’t realistically abolish them. He was against selection and believed that teaching about faith should take place outside school. He also felt people should be allowed to wear signs of their faith. He was in favour of the repeal of the blasphemy law, and paid tribute to Evan Harris for the work he had done on this. Finally, he referred to the importance of housing policy, and the use of the voluntary sector to support families and communities.

9 Comments

One day conference

An email arrives at the Voice from Danny Alexander MP reminding us that a one-day conference is imminent.

Danny helpfully reminds us that registration forms and an agenda for the day are available on the party website.

The purpose of the day is help set our next manifesto. Sessions are set aside to discuss all manner of things – but if you want to attend you will need to hurry with registration.

4 Comments

Help set the Lib Dem agenda

Setting the Agenda: Liberal Democrat One Day Manifesto Conference
London School of Economics, 12 January 2008 (10.00-18.00)

The Liberal Democrat Manifesto Group is organising a special one day conference to give party members an opportunity to contribute to the development of the party’s next general election manifesto. It will involve leading figures in the party and invited guest speakers and will be modelled on the successful 2006 ‘Meeting the Challenge’ Conference.

This conference will include:
* an opening keynote speech by the new leader;
* a major debate on the political challenges presented by the other parties, and the political opportunities for …

4 Comments

Lib Dem Spring Conference (Liverpool), 7-9 March, 2008 – Motions Deadline Alert

The deadline for Policy Papers and for Constitutional and Standing Orders amendments is Wednesday 21st November (noon). All motions should be sent to the Policy Projects Team on [email protected], or at 4 Cowley Street, London SW1P 3NB.

Any queries, please contact the Policy Projects Team on 020 7219 2576

(The deadline for policy and business motions is 9 January.)

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Leadership contenders go head-to-head

Nick Clegg and Chris Huhne will go head-to-head at the South Central Regional Conference in Newbury, Berkshire today.

I’m sure it will be carried on News24, so if anyone can enlighten us in the comments as to when the hustings is due to start (for some reason News Online systematically deny their readers information like this) then we’d be very grateful!

Also posted in Leadership Election and News | 9 Comments

Opinion: Where for Land Value Tax after conference vote?

A week after the Lib Dem Conference debate on “Green Tax Switch Mark 2”, how does our tax policy look from an ALTERnate perspective (i.e. not Chris Rennard’s)? Well, I’ve almost sold out of my book’s first printing (would someone like to post a review on Amazon?) and most LVT supporters who were there agree that having Vince Cable claim membership of ALTER and fulsome support for its aims in his summating speech was worth more than any show of hands in the conference hall.

Even Arnie Gibbons, who until recently used to move away – or mutter most foul – on hearing any discussion at Conference about Land Tax, was quite nice about us. We are accepted in polite circles – well Liberal ones anyway.

Also posted in Op-eds | 2 Comments

Neil Fawcett: my first conference memories

I joined the Liberal Party during the 1987 general election having been signed up by local Lib Dem councillor Stan Wilson. This led to my first canvassing experience on behalf of Glyn Nightingale in the ward held by Lib Dem blogger Chris Abbot and, after the election, much encouragement that I should go to conference.

So, 20 years ago this week, I was given a lift to Harrogate not having the first clue what to expect and pitched my tent in a small campsite just outside town (yes, really!). Luckily I found myself pitched next to a family of Lib …

Also posted in News | 3 Comments

LDV – the “establishment candidate”, apparently

The Guardian Backbencher has been distributing her Lib Dem conference awards, including:

Best Blog
Postings have been rather fewer than the Backbencher would have liked – though it may be down to a laudable reluctance to drink’n’blog. So the winner has to be the establishment candidate, Lib Dem Voice, for its interviews with Ming. Special commendations to James Graham of Quauequam Blog! for his firm treatment of mayoral contender Fiyaz Mughal, and Don Liberali for a nice dissection of the Huhne v Clegg saga.

Always nice to receive a plug (a link would be even nicer), but some mixed …

Also posted in News | 2 Comments

What the pundits say

Ming can breath a sigh of relief. It’s not just the Lib Dem conference delegates and blogosphere which have lauded his speech – even the media, which has delighted in reporting a conference taking place in an alternative parallel universe all week, has been forced to admit his speech was pretty damn good:

… the moment he stalked onto the stage, dropped the niceties and got stuck in to the state of Britain under Labour, the Lib Dem leader reminded his party why they had chosen him 18 months ago, and why they would be mad to drop him now.

If the catch-all criticism is that he’s too old, then he was right to declare that he would make a campaigning virtue of his 66 years. That wisdom and experience come with age may be a truism, but the point remains valid. On stage he looked more relaxed and at ease with his party. This time he avoided the awkward change-a-lightbulb waves. The speech was fluid, built of complete sentences, and even if some of passages were hackneyed beyond belief, the overall effect was a powerful answer to the doubters. He remains true to himself, has a plan, a set of liberal beliefs in an illiberal age, and some policies.

Ben Brogan, Daily Mail

Sir Menzies is not a natural tub-thumper, but he is evidently decent and has gained in both experience and confidence. This was a better performance than last year. … Ming is a happy warrior and will go home content. It has not been a bad week after all.

Michael White, The Guardian

Today reminded his party that they picked him not despite his age, but because of his experience and judgement. … spoke today of his energy and determination, of his anger, and his unwillingness to be silenced. His party responded. … he spelt out detailed policies on the environment and taxation, and his commitment to protect civil liberties.

Nick Robinson, BBC

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Ming’s speech: what did you think?

Ming Campbell has just finished his second speech to the Liberal Democrat conference as party leader.

My impressions… Ming seemed far more assured than last year. He opened strongly – no attempt to start with a scripted joke – and gave a defiant definition of his liberalism, and how the Lib Dems will translate that into action under his leadership. This year, too, he seemed confident enough to tear his eyes away from the autocue.

What pleasantly surprised me in particular was his emphasis on liberal values: “the price of freedom is the risk of offence”; “A truly liberal society guarantees the …

Tagged | 10 Comments

Chris Huhne winning the “Ladies” vote

If Nick Clegg felt he was having a bad day, Chris Huhne had his own problems.

A young female journalist confessed to eagerly pursuing the Environment Spokesman down a corridor. Unfortunately, when she sprinted round a corner after him, she slowly realised she had followed him into The Grand’s gents. Huhne’s reaction is not known.

Also posted in News | Leave a comment

Video exclusive: the CK interview

You know how it is. You’re wandering through Brighton’s Grand hotel, and you bump into former Lib Dem leader, Charles Kennedy (okay, it was by arrangement, but no matter). What would you ask him?

Lib Dem Voice put the following four questions to Charles when we met up earlier today:

* What do you think of the current state of the party? Should we be despairing or hopeful?

* What do you think the Lib Dems stand for today?

* Do you support the party’s idea of a referendum on the European Union, in or out?

* Do you want to come back as leader

Also posted in Lib Dem TV | Tagged | 6 Comments

Who wants to play ‘follow the leader’?

The media are having fun. This morning Sir Michael White quipped that Ming’s ‘toilet bowl’ photo must have been behind the poll surge reported by his august organ and friend of Lib Dem Voice, The Grauniad. But their main sport is speculating on who will be the next Lib Dem leader – even though, as most of the mooted contenders point out, there is no vacancy.

At the afternoon press briefing, hacks were keen to veer off the topic of Sir Ming’s speech, and onto the question. Ed Davey was asked for the second time in the day whether he’d stand. …

Also posted in News | Tagged | 1 Comment

Environment Action Now

On the telly this evening you can watch the Liberal Democrats’ party political broadcast for conference week. Liberal Democrat Voice, ahead of the game as always, can give you a sneak preview right now.

It’s themed on climate change, the thread running through this week’s conference in Brighton.

If you’d like to watch it in the traditional, old media way, you’ll find it on BBC Two at 5.55pm, and on BBC One and ITV1 at 6.55pm.

Also posted in Lib Dem TV and News | 4 Comments

Can Ming Campbell break Britain’s ‘cosy consensus’?

Ming Campbell will use tomorrow’s conference speech at the Brighton conference to challenge the ‘cosy consensus’ established by Labour and the Tories. His chief of staff, Ed Davey, told the press this afternoon that “the Liberal Democrats are here to challenge the cosy consensus” and break up the “joint monopoly” held by the other two parties.

Ed described this “cosy consensus” sitting on the authoritarian centre-right, not addressing fairness, climate change and civil liberties issues. He promised the Lib Dems would fight on a liberal, progressive centre ground. Labour and the Tories were pandering to a few individuals in focus groups, …

Also posted in News | 2 Comments

Okay, so here’s some personality politics for you

Let’s not be too po-faced… of course there’s some discussion at conference about who will succeed Ming come the time.

As Chris Huhne told Lib Dem Voice today, “the cat’s out of the bag” that he’d like to be the party’s leader one day – after all, he did come from nowhere to finish as a strongly-placed runner-up last time.

Nick Clegg played a straight bat at last night’s Observer fringe – interviewed by Andrew Rawnsley, he said he would “probably” stand next time there was a vacancy.

There is also growing speculation that Steve Webb, currently …

Also posted in News | Tagged | 3 Comments

Video exclusive: Chris & Clegg go head-to-head (Part II)

As promised yesterday, here’s the second part of Lib Dem Voice’s interview with top Lib Dem MPs, Chris Huhne and Nick Clegg.

Today you can see how they answered two more key questions:

Are you an Orange Booker? and
Do you want to be Lib Dem leader?

Also posted in Lib Dem TV | 2 Comments

Hate your hotel?

Talk in the conference bar reveals that some delegates have been rather disappointed with the quality of their hotels.

If you have a particular beef with a hotel, why not use one or all of the sites below to let future Brighton visitors know which horrible hovel to avoid.

http://www.tripadvisor.co.uk/
http://www.holidaywatchdog.com/
http://www.travel-library.com/hotels/europe/uk/

1 Comment

Video exclusive: Chris & Clegg go head-to-head (Part I)

Stephen and I have been around conference and – armed with his camera and my brazen cheek – managed to put four quick questions to top Lib Dem MPs, Chris Huhne and Nick Clegg.

At last night’s Independent fringe, Steve Richards chaired a meeting at which the pair were the only speakers. While they have spoken from the same fringe platform before, the crafty Indy hacks had asked only the two of them. (Something they seem to have forgotten to mention to either Nick or Chris when inviting them.) This was therefore billed by the paper as the first-ever live …

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

Book early for Liverpool

A stand in conference helpfully has a hotel booking agency helping delegates find accommodation for next Spring’s conference in the European Capital of Culture.

And they are warning the city will be extremely busy the weekend of the Lib Dem conference, 7-9 March next year.

So busy indeed that the guy I spoke to when I was booking my hotel was warning that the was expecting to have run out of rooms by the end of today.

Liverpool is double-booked with a home game football match running at the same time as Lib Dem conference.

1 Comment

Immigration amnesty plan goes through unamended

The immigration policy motion has passed conference unamended. An attempt to remove the section re-establishing border controls failed, after Simon Hughes and others argued it was needed to protect the vulnerable and trafficked. Notably, former McCann family advisor and Lib Dem 2005 candidate Justine McGuinness argued against the omission on the basis of child protection.

A closer vote was held on removing the 10-year condition of the migranty amnesty. Andrew Hudson in Walthamstow argued that a one-off amnesty would not end problems in the sector anyway, and that the bar was too high. Others thought it was too long and wanted …

Also posted in News | 16 Comments

The Grauniad – pathetic, just pathetic

I expect this kind of thing of downmarket right-wing tabloids like The Times. Naively I hold out slightly higher hopes for The Guardian. Alas.

Yesterday, Ming conducted an hour-long Q&A with Sandi Toksvig – it went down well in the conference hall (I heard several warm compliments from those who have been luke-warm about Ming). But for those outside the conference hall, of course, their verdict will be formed by the media verdict, which was as unkind as it was puerile.

The Grauniad’s Deborah Summers was ‘liveblogging’ the Q&A. Here’s a particularly emetic extract:

Asked about PMQs, Sir Menzies said everyone

Also posted in News | Tagged | 12 Comments

Clegg tackles immigrant amnesty critics

As I type, Nick Clegg has just finished an introduction to the party conference motion on immigration. He’s billing it as a departure from a government approach that has mixed “tub-thumping populism” with incompetence and promises “a much more rational, competent and fair response to this vexed issue”. But there are some seperate votes coming up from delegates who challenge a few of the policy motion’s points.

The headline measure is an amnesty for the estimated 600,000 individuals who exist outside any regular residence arrangements – people the government doesn’t know are here. The idea is to give those who’d been …

Also posted in News | 1 Comment

Conference Video: James Graham, Lib Dem blogger of the year 2007

Last night, was the second annual Lib Dem blog of the year awards, as reported by Lib Dem Voice here, and BBC.co.uk here.

This morning, I caught up with James Graham, whose feisty Quaequam Blog! was named Best Liberal Democrat Blog of the Year – here’s what he had to say:

Also posted in Lib Dem TV and Online politics | 2 Comments

Conference Video: Zero Carbon Britain – the activists’ view

The Lib Dem conference today backed proposals designed to make Britain a zero carbon country by 2050 – more on the party website here, and at The Guardian here.

Our intrepid interviewer Richard Huzzey caught up with some Lib Dem conference delegates after the debate to ask them what they about it all. Here’s what they said:

Also posted in Lib Dem TV and News | Leave a comment
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