By the time you read this, I’ll be in London, no doubt bleary eyed after a night on the sleeper, on my way to Spring Conference in Brighton. I’ve been thinking about how we are as we gather at the seaside. It’s been an eventful six months but has the good outweighed the bad?
Things to smile about
Since we met in Brighton, our ministers in the Coalition Government have done some excellent things. Here’s just a selection:
- Plans for shared parental leave announced;
- Equal (ish) marriage Bill unveiled;
- Stopping the Tories capping Child Benefit at 2 children and taking Housing Benefit off under 25s;
- Putting mental health on a par with physical health in NHS mandate;
- Boundary Review killed off after Tories reneged on House of Lords reform;
- Mike Moore delivering the Edinburgh Agreement setting out Independence Referendum process and being hailed as James Bond, among other good things, in the press;
- Jo Swinson tackling payday lenders:
- Lynne Featherstone’s work on education for women and girls and tackling violence against them at home and abroad.
- Pensions rise by 2.5% thanks to Steve Webb’s triple lock;
- 23 million basic rate tax payers get further tax cut – by April, they’ll have gained £600 per year.
We also have a shiny new MP to make a fuss of. I am sure he and Nick Clegg will express their appreciation of the way party activists put their lives on hold and went to Eastleigh, donated money and phonebanked from around the country.
We’ve also had our leader doing a weekly radio phone-in, which he hasn’t ducked even in torrid times. Call Clegg has been a great feature of the week. As Stephen Tall reported earlier this week, he’s bound to drop himself in it at some point, but the advantages well outweigh the concerns.
This is Ryan Coetzee’s first Conference. Some might say that Nick Clegg’s new Head of Strategy has made more of an impact in 5 months than his predecessor did in 2 years. He has been pivotal in developing the “stronger economy in a fairer society helping people to get on in life” message. I’ve met him several times now and have been very impressed. He definitely feels like a proper Liberal Democrat campaigner, very much one of us.
Things to worry about
- The hardship caused by the Welfare Uprating Bill and the inaccurately dubbed “bedroom tax”;
- Secret Courts, supported by our MPs despite overwhelming opposition from activists;
- The economy isn’t in great shape;
In addition to that, we meet for the first time since the allegations concerning the conduct of Lord Rennard, which he denies, emerged. As I wrote the other day, there’s a lot of very raw emotion about and anyone who talks about it really needs to have their empathy and sensitivity switched on. We have to let the inquiries, both Police and Party, take their course, but there’s no denying this has sent shockwaves through the Party which wasn’t helped by the vicious and inaccurate reporting in some quarters of the press. We know that the Party had considerable notice that this was bound to break, and their initial response was, to say the least, lacking.
Things to look forward to
Debates on Corporate Tax Avoidance, manufacturing to strengthen the economy, the rural economy and access to social security tribunals. I did my pick of the Conference agenda a few weeks ago.
There’s real controversy on Saturday morning when a constitutional amendment to allow Conference to trigger a leadership ballot is debated. One point I’d make on that. The fact that we’re in Government means that journalists read our Conference papers. We’ve had coverage for consultation papers on MPs job-sharing and tax in the press. If 10 people with a gripe, justified or not, were able to stick a motion calling for a leadership ballot on an agenda published weeks in advance, what do you think the media would be talking about? And it wouldn’t just be a paragraph in passing on page 23. There is already a procedure which allows the grassroots to call a leadership ballot which requires a broad base of support from around the country. Should we not just leave it at that?
Also expect at least one motion on secret courts on the emergency motions ballot. There have been submissions from Liberal Democrats against Secret Courts and Mark Thompson. My view is that the party must be given the chance to discuss something of paramount importance to activists and members around the country.
And did I mention we have Paddy giving a speech
Don’t forget it’s our Silver Jubilee
We’re pretty good at nostalgia at the best of times, but we’re celebrating our 25th anniversary as a party, so expect reminiscences about the time we were an asterisk in the opinion polls, our by-election triumphs in the 1990s, Great Debates We Have Had and all sorts.
To mark the anniversary and also as an exercise in focusing our minds on positive things, Alex Wilcock from Love and Liberty, my often co-conspirator on the Golden Dozen, has launched a challenge for people to come up with a brief statement of what the Liberal Democrats stand for today. Eight people, including me, have so far taken him up on it. Here’s his Round-Up of contributions received so far. He’s perfectly happy to publish more, so you can all consider yourselves tagged in this meme.
Liberal Democrats will gather with mixed emotions this weekend but will debate, learn and enjoy the fringes and the exhibitions with their usual enthusiasm.
* Caron Lindsay is Editor of Liberal Democrat Voice and blogs at Caron's Musings
3 Comments
Great article.
Reasons to be cheerful for me:
First – Lord Ashcroft recently went to see Labour big wigs to discuss election strategy. Think about that for a minute. The man who is going to stand up, this weekend, with Theresa May, to say how the Tories can win the next election, went to see Labour, to apparently help them win the election too. It begs the obvious question; why would he possibly want to help Labour? Are the Lib Dems that much of a threat now that he needs to get in bed with supposedly sworn socialist enemies? Do his complicated analyses and surveys suggest something we don’t know? Are the Tories and Labour planning a coalition next time round because they are that desperate to stop a Lib Dem surge? Unlikely of course, but what else is it therefore, because it makes little sense?
Second – In a world of self interest and spin, the Lib Dems genuinely try to just do what’s best. We are the good guys therefore. Never forget that. No matter how much crap they chuck against us.
My interpretation of Ashcrofts move is that he wants to suggest to Labour ways they can hurt us in 2015, he realises that Labour & Tories are two halves of the Establishment & we are the enemy. Tories like to say that they would love to see Libdems relacing Labour but in fact the idea terrifies them.
“Are the Tories and Labour planning a coalition next time round because they are that desperate to stop a Lib Dem surge? Unlikely of course, but what else is it therefore, because it makes little sense?”
A Tory Labour alliance would suggest one party politics,ie a dictatorship.The LibDems are not strong enough for a opposition.In fact,post 2015 I am guessing LibDem seats around the 20 mark.Not the total oblivion that some in the press state,but a hard blow.
Ashcroft has stated he will not back the Conservatives financially in 2015.I think this means he knows they are done for.Like all political backers,he is no doubt offering Labour help in return for services rendered.Don’t all backers do it for this.He cannot be offered a Lordship now can he.
I reckon a Labour majority in 2015 is more and more likely.People do not like the sound of a “Bedroom Tax.”If it affects them or not,it smacks of unfairness.Much like the Secret Courts and other such things the coalition have pushed through.
Vince Cable is saying we need another plan other than Osborne plan A.Which has really hurt a lot of poor people in this country.You may say,the poor don’t vote.But now you have given them many reasons to vote.