Here is the full text of Tim Farron’s speech to Conference being delivered at the moment:
Liberal Democrats are good at lots of things. But the thing it seems that we’re best at, is confounding expectations.
We were expected to shy away from taking power, but we stepped up and we made a difference.
We were expected to disappear after the 2015 election, but we bounced back, we are almost twice the size we were then, we’ve gained more council seats than every other party in this country put together.
And I’ve being doing a bit of confounding expectations myself. You see, I am a white, northern, working class, middle aged bloke. According to polling experts, I should have voted Leave.
May I assure you that I didn’t.
But mates of mine did. People in my family did. Some of them even admitted it to me. And some of them didn’t. But you told my sister didn’t you, and somehow thought it wouldn’t get back to me. You know who you are.
I have spent most of my adult life, worked and raised a family in Westmorland. I’m proud to call it my home.
But I grew up a few miles south, in Preston in Lancashire.
Preston is where I learnt my values, it’s where I was raised in a loving family where there wasn’t much money around and at a time when, it appeared to me, the Thatcher government seemed utterly determined to put every adult I knew out of work and on the scrapheap.
But our people and our community were not for breaking.
The great city of Preston is a no nonsense place, proud of its history, ambitious about its future.
It is the birthplace of the industrial revolution;
It is the place where Cromwell won the most important battle in the English Civil War. The complacent establishment stuffed by the outsiders.
Which links rather neatly to the referendum. Preston voted 53% to leave. There were some places in Lancashire where two-thirds of people voted out.
And I respect those people.
If you’ll forgive me, they are my people.
And if they’ll forgive me, I’m still utterly convinced that Britain should remain in Europe.
I was on the 23rd June, I am today, I will continue to be.
Not because I’m some starry-eyed pro-European with Ode to Joy as my ring tone – we all know what I have as my ring tone – but because I am a patriot and believe it’s in our national interest to be in.
For more jobs, for lower prices, to fight climate change, to stop terrorism, catch criminals, to have influence, to be a good neighbour, to stand tall, to stand proud, to matter.
And, above all, because I believe that Britain is an open, tolerant and united country – the opposite of the bleak vision of Nigel Farage and Boris Johnson.
Britain did not become Great Britain on fear, isolation and division – and there is no country called Little Britain.
There is nothing so dangerous and narrow as nationalism and cheap identity politics.
But there is nothing wrong with identity. I am very proud of mine.
I am a Lancastrian, I am a Northerner, I am English, I am British, I am European. I am all those things, none of them contradict another and no campaign of lies, hate and fear will rob me of who I am.
But we lost didn’t we?
Now – I was born and raised in Preston but the football-mad half of my family is from Blackburn, so I’m a Rovers fan. Defeat and disappointment is in my blood.
So those who say I’m a bad loser are quite wrong.
I am a great loser.
I have had loads of practice.
But the referendum result to me was like a bereavement. I was devastated by it.
We Liberal Democrats worked harder than anyone else in that campaign, we put blood, sweat and tears
into it.
We put the positive case for Europe, while Cameron and Osborne churned out dry statistics, fear mongering and shallow platitudes.