That level of deep commitment which Farron obviously has, combined with his organisational skills and northern public persona, has all the ingredients of a successful leadership. I speak as one who sat in a gloomy Commons party of six after the 1970 election debacle, three of us clinging to majorities under 1000. It took time, but we turned that round, and went on both to increase our numbers and form the significant Alliance with the SDP and eventually the new united party, which at elections under Paddy Ashdown, Charles Kennedy and Clegg reached new heights of public support. The same can happen again.
A colleague said to me during this contest: “But isn’t Farron a bit risky?” I responded that that may be so, but what the party needs at this time is a risk-taker, not afraid to revisit more traditional Liberal policies – on Trident, on Europe, on industrial democracy, on land value taxation, on the pursuit of a more just society, and on the need for a federal constitution including a new upper house.
It will be a long and at times painful journey, but with Tim Farron inspiring and leading it I see grounds for real hope and optimism.
Subscribe
-
Follow @libdemvoice.org on Bluesky
-
Like us on Facebook
-
Subscribe to our feed
-
Sign-up for our daily email digest
Most Read
Search
Op-eds
-
Vince Cable writes…Labour and Fiscal Rules (Vince Cable)
-
Josh Babarinde writes…The Lib Dem Summer of Strategy (Josh Babarinde)
-
Mathew on Monday: “We need to be bold” (Mathew Hulbert)
-
As a party we must be better defined for the 2029 general election (Chris Bowers)
-
From national averages to local realities: inequality in our communities (Tom Walker)
-
Martin Wainwright's Guardian obituary of Michael Meadowcroft
-
Evaluating different electoral systems for the House of Commons
-
Chris Isaak: Wicked Game
-
Lib Dem Rutland plans cycle-path from Oakham to Rutland Water
-
Brexit and summer holidays
-
The pine martens of Shropshire
-
The Joy of Six 1530
-
The shame of Liverpool Labour councillors taking their allowances but not turning up to do the work
-
Should Labour reconsider the Brexit red lines?
Recent Comments
Peter Martin
@ Kira, The words you quoted were from Peter Davies'. Not me. I wouldn't agree with raising VAT on energy to 15% right now. I'd leave it as is. The point ...
Peter Martin
“‘why can’t social care and NHS spending be treated as ‘investment’’. Of course, that wont wash”. I'd agree if were talking about re...
Peter Martin
There's really only two fiscal rules that make any sense: 1) If inflation caused by an overheating economy is the main issue, then governments should tax mor...
Peter Davies
@Kira Collins You seem to have missed the bit about raising tax allowances. That primarily helps those on low wages....
David Wright
According to this well-argued article (by Lib Dem councillor Mark Ellis), a simple wealth tax wouldn't work, but tax on TRANSFER of wealth could, if current tax...








