Tag Archives: david laws

LibLink: Mark Pack – Why do we demand such high standards of politicians?

Over at The Independent, Lib Dem Voice Co-Editor Mark Pack takes a look at the Telegraph’s pursuit of David Laws and Danny Alexander.

On David, Mark notes:

… for me, the dividing line between reprimand and resignation in matters of personal financial affairs should be whether or not you have personally gained from a breach of the rules. … in this ironic situation where a politician gets into trouble for claiming less money than he could have done, I regret that he has decided to resign.

And on Danny, he writes:

It’s an odd form of morality to criticise someone for paying no

Posted in LibLink | Also tagged , , and | 22 Comments

David Laws: should I stay as an MP?

Last night David Laws issues the following statement to the local media in his constituency (source):

The last few days have been the toughest of my life, and I would like to thank all those friends, family and local residents who have sent me messages of support.

It has been a very emotional experience to find so many people willing to stand by me at this difficult time.

My problems have been caused by my unwillingness to be open about my sexuality, and not by any intention to exploit the MPs expenses system.

James Lundie and I were aware that we could have …

Posted in News | 76 Comments

Media attacks are in full flow – what do we do now?

A couple of weeks ago I wrote that Lib Dems should get used to constant attacks and scrutiny. Everyone used to it now?

Enoch Powell may not have said a great deal I agree with, but he certainly had a point with his oft-repeated quote that:

For a politician to complain about the press is like a ship’s captain complaining about the sea

This is what the press do. We can point out the errors when they’re particularly egregious or complain to the rather-toothless PCC.

Parliament might even want to take one of its occasional looks at changing the law.  …

Posted in Op-eds | Also tagged and | 41 Comments

Trying to find a bright spot among the depression of David Laws’ downfall

Well that was a depressing 24 hours, depressing in so many different ways.

I don’t think I’d describe David Laws’s forced resignation as either right, or wrong: it was quite simply inevitable. There was no way he personally, nor the coalition politically, could withstand the clamour for his head. Eventually he would have been dragged down by the explosion of self-righteousness that the right-wing press and Labour tribalists have let rip over the past two days. I find that depressing.

It is one of the ironies of coalition government that, as it brings together two different, competing parties – two parties …

Posted in Op-eds | Also tagged , and | 75 Comments

David Laws: the view of party members – 59% say he should have stayed put

Lib Dem Voice polled party members registered on our members’ forum today asking them whether David Laws should resign following the Telegraph’s allegations over his expenses. Over 350 members responded, and here’s what you told us …

LDV asked: In the light of allegations made against Lib Dem chief secretary to the treasury David Laws and his expenses claims, what do you think should happen next?

Here’s what you told us:

  • 59% – He should stay put in his job
  • 29% – He should step down temporarily pending the findings of the Parliamentary Standards Commissioner
  • 12% – He should resign immediately
  • (Excluding Don’t know / No opinion = 6%)

    Here’s a selection of party members’ comments:

    Posted in LDV Members poll and News | 61 Comments

    +++ David Laws resigns, Danny Alexander takes over as Chief Secretary

    The BBC reports:

    Liberal Democrat David Laws has resigned as Chief Secretary to the Treasury after admitting he claimed expenses to pay rent to his partner.

    Mr Laws said he would be standing down with immediate effect in a statement given at the Treasury.

    He had earlier apologised and said he would pay back the money which the Daily Telegraph said totalled £40,000.

    The Yeovil MP said he wanted to keep his relationship with James Lundie private.

    Mr Laws said he had informed both David Cameron and Nick Clegg, but it had been “his decision alone”.

    Explaining his decision, he said: “I do not see

    Posted in News | Also tagged | 69 Comments

    Innocent or guilty, there is no case for Laws to resign

    I’ve read, and listened to, a great deal of comment about David Laws today. Rumours are currently circulating that Laws has resigned from the Government. If so, I think it’s a great shame, a great injustice and a great disservice that’s been done to the British people.

    Let’s take the absolute worst case scenario: that Laws knowingly broke the rules, saw himself and James Lundie as partners, chose not to admit it and took the money.

    If that were the case – and Laws says it isn’t – the public purse will have been no worse off as a result …

    Posted in Op-eds | Also tagged | 68 Comments

    David Laws: what should happen next?

    Last night, Lib Dem Voice covered the Telegraph’s story that David Laws, the chief secretary to the treasury, has referred himself to the Parliamentary Standards Commissioner because it is alleged his second home expenses claims breached the rules which state rent cannot be paid to an MP’s spouse.

    The story is dominating today’s news agenda, presenting the coalition government with its first real test. There are, as I see it, three options:

    1) Tough it out. David has referred himself to the Commissioner, maintaining that he has done nothing for personal gain, even if he has broken the rules. Many …

    Posted in News | 80 Comments

    David Laws issues statement on his expenses and sexuality

    David Laws has apologised, promised to pay back up to £40,000, and referred himself to the Parliamentary Standards Commissioner after the Telegraph published expenses claims showing he rented a room from his partner.

    The paper’s story shows that David:

    • David claimed between £700 and £950 a month between 2004 and 2007 to sub-let a room in a flat in Kennington, south London, owned by his partner who was also registered as living at the property;
    • from 2007, David then began claiming of £920 a month to rent the second bedroom from a new house bought by his partner,

    Posted in News | Also tagged | 221 Comments

    LDVideo: David Laws special edition

    Suddenly the British political chatterati are catching up with a fact that’s been known by Lib Dems for years: David Laws is a deeply impressive politician.

    David’s pivotal role in the Lib Dem negotiating team, combined with his unshowy economic and intellectual self-confidence, has quickly marked him out as an early star of the cabinet, earning an excellent profile in today’s Guardian by Allegra Stratton. It’s well worth reading in full, but here’s a fascinating snippet:

    Laws is one of Ashdown’s friends from “the winter days, not the summer days”. He joined the party at the same time as Nick Clegg and Jeremy Browne under Ashdown’s leadership, when the Tory party was illiberal and even more Eurosceptic than most. Laws has told Tory colleagues recently that he would have been one of them were it not for their party’s policy on section 28, the controversial law banning the “promotion” of homosexuality in schools. Evan Harris, one of Laws’s former colleagues before he lost his seat at the last election, agrees. He said: “Compared to Vince he is fully socially liberal on equality, abortion and faith schools and on religion and the state. Also he’s very sensible on the discrimination issues and sex education. Whereas someone like Vince is more of a social conservative, he’s not at all. He’s probably much more pro-choice than Vince.”

    Some Conservatives (indeed, a handful of Lib Dems) appear still to harbour the misapprehension that he’s actually one of them: but just because he can add up doesn’t make him a Tory. However, there’s no doubt the glances of envy in the Lib Dems’ direction that it’s our party which has provided the biggest economic talents sitting at the cabinet table: ConservativeHome admires his talent for culling pot-plant expenditure, while Iain Martin whispers “the words ‘potential future prime minister’ don’t sound entirely silly.”

    You can watch David in action in three videos, below …

    First up, is his virtuoso performance in the Commons this week which has grabbed the sketchwriters’ headlines:

    Posted in YouTube | 11 Comments

    Daily View 2×2: 28 May 2010

    As Big Ben chimes seven, it’s time to celebrate the day 151 years ago, that the famous bell was drawn on a carriage pulled by 16 horses from Whitechapel Bell Foundry to the Palace of Westminster.

    To show that cuts in Westminster are nothing new, the cost of the bell was reduced by recycling the metal from the previous, faulty bell:

    George Mears, then the master bellfounder and owner of the Whitechapel Bell Foundry, undertook the casting. According to foundry records, Mears originally quoted a price of £2401 for casting the bell, but this was offset to the sum of £1829 by the metal he was able to reclaim from the first bell so that the actual invoice tendered, on 28th May 1858, was in the sum of £572.

    If you’d like to know what Big Ben itself has to say today, you can follow it on Twitter: @big_ben_clock.

    2 Must-Read Blog Posts

    What are other Liberal Democrat bloggers saying? Here are two posts that caught my eye from the Liberal Democrat Blogs aggregator:

    Spotted any other great posts in the last day from blogs that aren’t on the aggregator? Do post up a comment sharing them with us all.

    2 Big Stories

    Posted in Daily View | Also tagged , , , , , , , and | 3 Comments

    Daily View 2×2: 27 May 2010

    Detail of the art deco crown of the Chrysler Building, New YorkGood morning, and welcome to Daily View on the day which sees New York’s Chrysler Building celebrate its 80th birthday. Completed in 1930, it was the tallest building in the world for all of 11 months, before being replaced by the Empire State Building. After 9/11, it is once again the second tallest building in New York.

    Also celebrating birthdays today are the chef Jamie Oliver (who is currently applying for planning permission to build a restaurant in Nottingham I will probably never be able to afford to eat in); West Wing actor Richard Schiff and the Lib Dem MP for Westmorland and Lonsdale Tim Farron. Some have speculated he might be in the running to replace Vince Cable as Deputy Leader of the Liberal Democrats; he tweeted last night that as Vince Cable’s PPS, he got to hear the “Stalin to Mr Bean” gag in rehearsal. Tim is 40 today.

    2 Big Stories

    Coalition government sets out radical welfare reforms

    So says the Guardian headline, anyway, but the article is light on detail if heavy on mood music. A lot of people will be watching anxiously for the detail.

    Duncan Smith says he is to propose to the Treasury a radical scheme that includes simplification of the complex benefits system designed to make it financially worthwhile for unemployed people to work, including in part-time jobs.

    Posted in Daily View | Also tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , and | 1 Comment

    The coalition agreement: defence and deficit reduction

    Welcome to the sixth in a series of posts going through the full coalition agreement section by section. You can read the full coalition document here.

    Despite the importance of the two areas, these are two of the shortest sections in the agreement, reflecting how there are a small number of dominating issues.

    For defence there is the Trident compromise – it will be replaced unless there is a better value for money alternative. What the wording leaves unclear is the extent to which any alternative has to meet Trident like-for-like in terms of destructive power and constant instant availability. Whether …

    Posted in News | Also tagged , , , and | 2 Comments

    David Laws: “Whilst the decisions ahead will be tough I will always put social justice at their heart”

    David Laws, the Lib Dem chief secretary to the treasury, and the guy tasked with finding the public spending cuts in the years ahead, has just emailed Lib Dem supporters to outline his apporach to the task which awaits the new coalition government:

    Dear Friend,

    My Labour predecessor, Liam Byrne, left me a note saying ‘Dear Chief Secretary, There’s no money left.’ He may claim this is joke, but sadly it is all too true.

    Labour have left the nation’s finances in an utterly ruinous state and we face a colossal task ahead of us. That is why today the Chancellor and I

    Posted in News | 22 Comments

    Dear Benedict Brogan…

    Hi Benedict,

    Saw that you just wrote: “The snap polls gave the debate to Mr Cameron.”

    That seems a bit odd given the actual poll results are:

    YouGov and Populus – Cameron winner
    ComRes, Angus Reid and ICM – Clegg winner

    I can’t quite see how that tallies up with your statement?

    Best wishes,

    Mark

    As if by magic (well, actually email) back comes a note that the post is being amended 🙂

    Posted in General Election | Also tagged , and | 9 Comments

    LibLink: David Laws – Five things I have learned

    Over at the BBC News website, Lib Dem shadow schools spokesman David Laws “reveals the most important things he has learned in his life.” Here’s one of them …

    5. Sometimes it is easier to achieve your goals in a roundabout way than by a full-frontal assault.

    When I was in the City you were taught to be very blunt, straight forward and direct. There was a premium on clarity of thought and expression, whereas sometimes in politics to achieve your goals or to persuade other people, you need to be less direct than you might otherwise want to be.

    It’s probably

    Posted in LibLink | 5 Comments

    IFS on Tories’ pupil premium policy: one in 10 schools could suffer 10%+ budget cuts

    The ‘pupil premium’ – the Lib Dem proposal to invest an extra £2.5bn in schools which could be used to cut class sizes, offer one-on-one tuition and provide catch-up classes – is a policy which Nick Clegg has passionately advocated for over seven years. It is now one of the party’s four key policies emphasising fairness – in this case, A fair start for every child – for the coming general election.

    This week, the Institute for Fiscal Studies – the independent financial research institute often quoted by the party to validate its economic policies – published an

    Posted in News | Also tagged , , and | Leave a comment

    By the way, the word you’re looking for is, “Whoops”

    Or there’s the alternative headline the Voice decided not to use: The six Lib Dem MPs who were in favour of devolution before they were aginst it …. The BBC reports:

    Liberal Democrats say an “error” led to several of their MPs supporting an attempt to block new powers for the Welsh assembly. Six signed an amendment to a new law that would have stopped the assembly acquiring powers over home education.

    The Lib Dems are in favour of more devolution, and their Welsh education spokeswoman Jenny Randerson said her colleagues had signed in error. They will now remove their names

    Posted in News | Also tagged , , and | 4 Comments

    Daily View 2×2: 15 February 2010

    Happy Monday morning! And as it’s the fifth anniversary of YouTube, find out why Paddy chose to appear with a couple of puppets back in 1997. But first, the news and blogs.

    2 Must-Read Blog Posts

    What are other Liberal Democrat bloggers saying? Here’s are two posts that have caught the eye from the Liberal Democrat Blogs aggregator:

    • The difference between Lord Ashcroft and Lord Paul on Rob Parsons‘ A comfortable place blog:

      These episodes demonstrate the character of the Conservative Party – people who make all sorts of promises in order to get what they want with the firm intention of weaselling out of them.

    • Who will be the next Labour PM? on Mark Thompson‘s Mark Reckons blog.

      … don’t be surprised if the next Labour PM is someone that you won’t have heard of even several years from now.

    Have you donated yet?

    Lib Dem Voice is asking our readers to consider making a donation to help five candidates in the imminent general election. The first to be featured is Willie Rennie, victor in the 2006 Dunfermline by-election. Click here to read more. Click here to donate to Willie’s campaign.

    2 Lib Dem Stories

    David Laws on Tory ‘free school’ plans: “deeply flawed”

    David Laws has criticised the Tories’ plans to set up Swedish-style ‘free schools’, saying:

    The Tories’ schools plans are deeply flawed both in terms of money and on the curriculum. Michael Gove’s plan to cut the education budget means his ability to establish new schools will inevitably depend on raiding the budgets of existing schools.

    “On the curriculum, Conservative plans are in even more of an incoherent muddle. Michael Gove plans to impose an absurdly detailed curriculum on most state-funded schools, while allowing free schools to adopt a pick-and-mix curriculum – even if this means dropping core subjects such as British history and modern languages.

    “It is impossible to justify in any logical way a system which imposes such centralized uniformity on 23,500 schools while allowing a small minority to teach whatever they like at the taxpayers’ expense.”


    Lib Dem voters more likely to have a sex toy

    Well, according to a poll quoted in The Sun anyway:

    Lib Dem voters are more likely to have a sex toy than Labour or Tory supporters, a poll reveals. Thirty per cent own one, compared to 24 per cent for Labour and 22 per cent of Tories.

    The party that gives you good vibrations. Hmmm, I admit the slogan needs some work, but, hey, it might just work.

    Celebrating 5 years of YouTube

    Because 5 years ago, clips like the below were just forgotten bits of old news archive seen by no-one:

    Posted in Daily View | Also tagged , and | Leave a comment

    Cameron: he was against paternity pay before he was in favour of it. What will his view be next month?

    ‘Dads will be able to take up to six months’ paternity leave while their child’s mother returns to work, under government plans announced today,’ reports The Guardian.

    The Lib Dems’ shadow children, schools and families secretary, David Laws, is deeply unimpressed with Labour’s approach:

    The Government fails to understand that all families are different and need far more flexibility when it comes to parental leave. Labour seems to think it knows best when it comes to how families should arrange their lives.
     
    “Instead of more rigid and complex reforms, the Liberal Democrats would introduce fully flexible parental leave which

    Posted in News | Also tagged , , and | 1 Comment

    Home schooling: what is the liberal approach?

    It’s an issue that arouses passions on either side. For some, home schooling is an absolute right, for parents to be able to educate their children in the manner of their choosing without interference from the state. For others, the concern is to ensure that children whose parents are not suitable to home school do not suffer for the rest of their lives as a result.

    Where, as liberals, do we draw the line between the rights of parents to know better than the state; and the rights of children to achieve the best possible education?

    Lynne Featherstone wrote about home …

    Posted in News | Also tagged , and | 43 Comments

    What the papers say…

    Tories claim Labour is using taxpayers’ money to fund election advertising campaign – Telegraph, 15.1.10

    “The Conservatives accused Labour of “raiding” taxpayers’ money to fund their election campaign. New figures uncovered by the Conservatives show that spending on advertising has increased to £232 million, which is a 39 per cent increase on the previous year.”

    A tenth of schools fail to meet GCSE targets – The Guardian, 14.1.10

    “One in 10 secondary schools in England failed to meet basic targets for GCSEs last summer and academies were disproportionately represented among the failing institutions, government statistics published today reveal.

    “David Laws, the Liberal Democrats’ education …

    Posted in General Election and News | Also tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , and | 2 Comments

    BBC Question Time – LDV open thread, 24 September 2009 #bbcqt

    It’s Thursday, it’s 10.35 pm … it’s BBC1’s Question Time.

    The series opens tonight in Bournemouth, setting of this week’s Lib Dem conference. The party’s representative is David Laws, the MP for Yeovil who succeeded Paddy Ashdown. A leading light of the ‘Orange Bookers’, who aroused the hostility of may Lib Dem activists for proposing a social insurance model for healthcare in the lead-up to the 2005 general election, he has gained growing respect even among his critics for his forensic approach to education policy as the Lib Dems’ shadow secretary of state for children, schools and families.

    Joining David on …

    Posted in Lib Dem TV | Also tagged | Leave a comment

    Media news from Bournemouth – and our media at its very best

    A round-up of more media coverage from conference here in Bournemouth:

    And finally, something to file in the “It makes you proud to have media like that in our country” corner. The Times runs a serious piece in education in this country and what we might be able to learn from Sweden. …

    Posted in News | Also tagged , , and | Leave a comment

    Labour teaches kids the new 3 Rs: Remand, Raw, and Recession

    Three stories today – see if you can spot the blatant connection.

    First up, the first R: Remand. Lib Dem research today revealed that over a million kids have been convicted of a criminal offence over the last decade, with a further million cautioned since Labour came to power in 1997. Here’s the breakdown of figures as revealed in an answer to a Lib Dem parliamentary question:

    * 1,033,454 children aged between 10 and 17 have been convicted of a criminal offence since 1997. This includes almost 30,000 10 to 12 year olds.

    Posted in News | Also tagged , , , , and | 2 Comments

    Laws: “Government’s truancy strategies are not working”

    Here’s a new one to add grist to I Hate Ryanair‘s mill – truancy rates are on the rise as more parents pull children out of school to take advantage of cheap holidays, reports the Telegraph:

    Almost 68,000 pupils in England are missing classes every day, an increase of 7,000 compared with the same period last year, it was disclosed. The rise was fuelled by term-time holidays, suggesting more parents are looking for cut-price deals in the economic downturn. According to official figures, family breaks accounted for the largest number of school absences after illness.

    David Laws, the Lib Dems’ …

    Posted in News | Also tagged | 4 Comments

    Sats results: Record fall in English results

    Figures published today show that fewer 11 year olds have reached Level 4 in English, the standard expected for their age group. A fifth of 11 year olds did not achieve this level, in the tests taken in May.

    The drop in results is the first since Sats tests were introduced in 1995.

    From the Daily Mail:

    “The depressing figures come despite Labour investing billions over the past decade in literacy and numeracy drives.
    This September alone, around four in ten children – almost 220,000 – are expected to move up to secondary school without sufficient mastery of the three Rs.
    They

    Posted in News | Also tagged and | 3 Comments

    BBC Question Time – LDV open thread, 2 July 2009 #bbcqt

    If this week’s weather hasn’t got you all hot ‘n’ bothered, then what better way of remedying that than by watching tonight’s Question Time (BBC1 and online, 10.35 pm)?

    David Laws, the Lib Dems’ children, schools and families, will be the party’s representative. The QT website gives his impressive pre-Commons bio: “Before his election to Parliament in 1997, he had a career in economics and business, during which he was vice president of JP Morgan, and head of US Dollar and Sterling Treasuries at Barclays de Zoete Wedd. He left in 1994 to take up the role of economic adviser to the Liberal Democrats, and from 1997 to 1999 was the party’s director of policy and research.”

    Joining David on the panel will be Deputy Leader of the Labour Party and Leader of the House of Commons Harriet Harman MP, the former leader of the Tory party Iain Duncan Smith MP, the musician and songwriter Jarvis Cocker, and the journalist and columnist Peter Hitchens.

    As per last week, we’re continuing to trial a new way of contributing to the open thread, via Facebook’s Live Stream Box, below:

    Posted in Lib Dem TV | Also tagged | 3 Comments

    Laws on the Sats’ fiasco: “The issue now is whether ministerial heads should be rolling”

    Ken Boston, former exam chief for England, has not minced his words when giving evidence to a committee of MPs on last summer’s Sats’ marking fiasco. The BBC reports:

    Dr Boston, former head of the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority, described ministers’ version of what happened as “fiction”. The marking of more than a million test papers taken by 11-year-olds was delayed for months when the company contracted to run the marking – ETS Europe – ran into problems. It later lost the contract. Results of the controversial tests are used to draw up the primary school league tables. Last year’s

    Posted in News | Also tagged | Leave a comment

    Opinion: What is an economic liberal?

    As a phrase used in academic circles, it is associated with neo-liberals such as Hayak and Friedman, the pillars of 1980s Thatcherism. Within the Liberal Democrats the term has become popular, but understood in a different way. People like David Laws have tried to combine economic liberalism with social liberalism in order to acheive things in society that Thatcher was either not interested in, or failed to deliver. Economic Liberalism is meant to generate the wealth to make social justice affordable.

    Given the success of Thatcherism in delivering victories for the Conservative party and transforming the Labour party, it would seem churlish to reject the whole ideology as we were prone to do at the time (and personally I am still strongly inclined to do). So what economic liberal values should we champion?

    Maybe ambition is a good thing? Perhaps we should embrace innovation? Kick out the ‘Nanny State’? I like it that my local party is ambitious (albeit constantly thwarted by poor election results, but you can’t have everything). Our PPCs are ambitious. Neighbouring constituencies have candidates that are determined to win, and in the case of Lynne Featherstone, have done so already. It is good to have the drive for success. It is worth encouraging in society, and in our education system in particular.

    But ambition has a dark side. Some people are more ambitious for themselves, rather than any principles that they believe in. You may have even met a few such people within the Liberal Democrats (it has been known). In foreign policy the ambition of “punching above your weight” is considered by new Labour to be a good thing, until we got flattened by Iraq (and Afghanistan will be next).

    Economic liberals have been arguing until recently that the Liberal Democrats should appeal to the ambitious. Instead of appealing to weather-grizzled street protesters – which we happily did in the past – we need more sharp-suited city trader types, who like to bark down two phones at the same time.

    For a while it became fashionable after the last general election to echo the sentiments that encouraged many of these people to join the Tories. We shouldn’t tax the rich more. Taxing them more is to punish them, and we should do the opposite and allow success to be rewarded. Money that goes to the government will be wasted anyway.

    Now we discover the truth. It IS possible to pay people too much, and the Liberal Democrats now want to hunt down those people who were so irresponsible on the money markets. Give markets too much freedom, and you create a moral hazard where people only think about the short term profits of there actions, and neglect the long term consequences.

    Posted in Op-eds | Also tagged and | 87 Comments
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