In days of yore, 6 months ago, if the Liberal Democrat leader made a keynote speech on the economy, the journos would be there in force. While there was a bit of coverage on the Guardian and BBC, it was nowhere like it used to be. So, I guess that means it’s up to us, and by us I mean all Liberal Democrats, to get the word out. The first section of this piece has some commentary on the speech and the full text is at the bottom.
The trails sent out last night in my opinion missed out the best bits of the speech. The whole thing covered a huge amount of ground from entrepreneurship to mass migration to climate change to inter-generational fairness to massive investment in infrastructure to housing. There were also some key elements that weren’t there quite as strongly as I’d have liked, for example on the living wage and tackling poverty and inequality. He spoke of these things in his Beveridge Lecture to the Social Liberal Forum two years ago.
He cast the Liberal Democrats as the party of small business, innovation and creativity, while the Conservatives were the party of corporatism:
The fact is that the Tories aren’t really pro-free market capitalism at all. They are pro-corporate capitalism.
They are there to fight not for entrepreneurs, not for innovators who oil the wheels of the market, but for the status quo.
In recent years, a common criticism of the Liberal Democrats is that we have been way too establishment. Tim Farron sets out that we are no such thing, likening us to entrepreneurs as the insurgents:
So I say “let the Tories be the Party of huge complacent corporations”
The Liberal Democrats will be the Party of Small Business, the party of wealth creators, the insurgents, the entrepreneurs.
And there’s a good section about challenging power, government or corporate:
We are in politics for precisely the opposite reasons to the Tories: to challenge orthodoxy and challenge those with power, while they support orthodoxy and established power – in business, just as in politics.
Because here is the truth – it doesn’t matter if it is big government or big business, the fact remains, too much power in the hands of too few people means a bad deal for everyone else.