Many thanks to the 10,500 visitors who dropped by Lib Dem Voice this week. Here’s our 7 most-read posts…
The Nitty Gritty: Evidence of the #libdemfightback (20 comments) by John B Grout
David Laws on Marr: I want to expose how NHS chief was leant on to encourage debate on NHS funding (20 comments) by Caron Lindsay
David Laws’ “Coalition”: the Coverage (18 comments) by Nick Thornsby
Tom Brake MP writes…Do you support military intervention in Libya? (56 comments) by Tom Brake MP
How are you getting on with Tim Farron’s membership recruitment challenge? (17 comments) by Caron Lindsay)
We already have the Social Liberal Forum, so why do we need a Social Democratic Group? (33 comments) by George Kendall
Disability is nothing to hide, so let’s not act like it is (22 comments) by Henry Foulds
Remember: LibDemVoice is our place to talk. So if you’ve got something you want to say, please join in the debate or start one yourself by writing for us.



6 Comments
So – 3 retrospectives, two about the party, one about disability, and one about Libya.
This week, the Tories moved to turn all our schools over to the commercial sector.
This week, the Tories told us they intended the government to control the BBC Board in future.
Are we still doing politics? Are we interested in freedom and democracy any more?
David
This is just the seven most read articles on the site this week.
The Conservatives Academies plan was covered here:
https://www.libdemvoice.org/the-government-finally-nationalises-all-our-schools-49932.html
David Allen,
My article on Academies has elicited so far 32 responses, admittedly some of them were mine. Why didn’t it feature in the list, or have I missed something?
And the comments on my article on the Referendum have reached 25.
Sorry John, my comment refers to the fact that yours was not one of the seven articles selected above as “most read” – though you’re right, the selection seems to have been wrongly made. I did notice your article and was pleased that you wrote it. My comment was that LDV and the party as a whole hadn’t given this issue, or the BBC issue, the prominence it deserved. I’m pleased to see that John Pugh has now weighed in though.
This list is based on the number of page views recorded at the moment when it was compiled. The number of comments does not necessarily correlate with the number of page views, but that information is included for interest.