You could argue that the 1976 contest set a pattern for later Liberal and Liberal Democrat leadership elections.One candidate (Steel) was orthodox, sensible and just a little dull. The other (Pardoe) was more charismatic, more open to new ideas and just a little unreliable in his judgement.So in later contests Paddy Ashdown was a Pardoe and Alan Beith was a Steel. And Chris Huhne was a Pardoe and Ming Campbell and then Nick Clegg were Steels.
Liberal Democrat Blog of the Year 2014
"Well written, funny and wistful" - Paul Linford; "He is indeed the Lib Dem blogfather" - Stephen Tall
"Jonathan Calder holds his end up well in the competitive world of the blogosphere" - New Statesman
"A prominent Liberal Democrat blogger" - BBC Radio 4 Today; "One of my favourite blogs" - Stumbling
and Mumbling; "Charming and younger than I expected" - Wartime Housewife
Tuesday, June 30, 2020
Ed Davey and Layla Moran: It's déjà vu all over again
The often forgotten tale of the Peaks
Haringey Lib Dems call for Britain's first Indian MP to be celebrated
Sir Dadabhai Naoroji, Liberal MP for Finsbury Central between 1892 and 1895, was the first Indian and non-white person elected to the House of Commons.
"By remembering that Victorian voters were willing to choose an Indian campaigner against the Empire as their MP, we are remembering that whilst racism has a long history, so too does anti-racism."
Monday, June 29, 2020
Six of the Best 939
Leicester schools closed for at least two weeks
Sunday, June 28, 2020
Should we publish daily totals of the number of nominations Lib Dem leadership candidates have amassed?
What do the Liberal Democrats need from the current leadership election?
I’d say it’s, above all, a good debate about the future of the party between candidates who offer clear and contrasting visions for it. We also need to see how those candidates perform in debate and when faced with difficult questions.
Well, we have two candidates with contrasting visions, but
will we have the debate? At present the party is encouraging people to nominate
one of the candidates by publishing
running totals every afternoon.
So, of course, the two camps are doing all they can to encourage
Lib Dem members to nominate their candidate. As both are a long way past the
200 nominations they need, this seems to me unfortunate.
Because it means the campaign will open with a significant percentage
of the electorate already having committed themselves. Of course people can change
their minds, but committing yourself in this way makes it less likely that you
will do so.
Which leaves the danger that the campaign will become more about cheering your candidate on and less about the future of the party.
That may sound too idealistic, but we need to do some hard thinking because it's by no means guaranteed that this party has a future.
But then I always seem to be disappointed by our leadership
elections.
Before the last contest (which turned out to be a
coronation) I wrote a post under the title Forget “the Lib Dem family”: Let’shave proper leadership elections itemising how previous contests, from John
Pardoe’s wig to Tim Farron’s religion, had failed to live up to my hopes and
concluding:
It looks to me as though we Lib
Dems are too scared of rocking the boat to have really informative leadership
elections.
Some like to talk of the “Lib Dem
family,” but in my experience happy families are those that can have lively
discussions, even rows, and make their peace afterwards.
We Lib Dems, by contrast, resemble an unhappy family where everyone is sat around the dining table on their best behaviour and terrified of saying the wrong thing.
Bizarre report of 50 people with suitcases in Ardingly
Joan Armatrading: Me Myself I
A woman singer-songwriter who has enjoyed a 40-year career? That's unusual.A Black British woman singer-songwriter who has enjoyed a 40-year career? That must be unique.Joan Armatrading is one of those artists who has been there for as long as I have been interested in music. And for that reason it is easy to forget what an unusual career she has had.
Saturday, June 27, 2020
Local lockdown for Leicester?
New data on the prevalence of the virus in the area has been delivered to Leicester's mayor Sir Peter Soulsby, according to the LeicesterLive website, and he said his officials were analysing the data over the weekend.
I am told that the data does not yet show that a full lockdown is required.
A senior official said: ‘It would need to be driven by the data and we’re not at that stage right now. We are very actively managing [this] and analysing it at the moment. Time will tell.’
Tory MP for Harborough blocks local Labour Party on Twitter
Friday, June 26, 2020
Six of the Best 938
Article 39 wins right to challenge reduction in protection of children in care
Photo by Kelly Sikkema on Unsplash |
"We know from past tragedies that too often children’s suffering goes hidden until it is too late and the harm has been done."Before the pandemic, at least half of local authorities were struggling to meet their statutory children’s social care duties – as judged by Ofsted – and councils have been saying for years that they are desperate for funds."Ministers should have been focused on ensuring local authorities had the financial support they needed to keep children in care safe and protected, rather than dismantling safeguards."
Boris Johnson offers a devastating analysis of Boris Johnson
You can’t rule it out pic.twitter.com/IsdV2WN3zX
— Josh Berry (@JoshBerryComedy) June 25, 2020
Thursday, June 25, 2020
Michael Mullaney on fighting for a Liberal Midlands
Wednesday, June 24, 2020
London's hidden hamlet of Snaresbrook
A walk through the lost Hamlet of Snaresbrook on the edge of Epping Forest, now a part of the parish of Wanstead in the London Borough of Redbridge. We cross Leyton Flats to the Eagle Pond and look at the Eagle Pub. Here we see a section of the Sayers Brook or Sayes Brook that gives Snaresbrook its name. We also see Snaresbrook Crown Court which was built in 1841 as the Infant Orphan Asylum.
From here we walk along Woodford Road to look at the modernist wonder of Hermitage Court before walking down Eagle Lane to Falcon Close. I ponder upon the idea of Hauntology, a term first used by Jacques Derrida but popularised by Mark Fisher particularly in relation to music culture. Fisher spoke of "the failure of the 21st Century to really arrive" and how in the 21st Century "culture floating free from time" . I wonder whether the modernist architecture of Hermitage Court is another example of a "lost future".
From Falcon Way we look at the Merchant Seaman's Orphan Asylum on Hermon Hill built in 1861, then walk down Cranbourne Avenue to Elmcroft Avenue where we enter the Roding Valley Park. We explore the wonderful parkland beside the North Circular Road and River Roding as far as Charlie Brown's Roundabout and then turn up Chigwell Road to Hermon Hill. Our walk ends at Holy Trinity Church, South Woodford.
Sherlock Holmes on the dangers of the countryside
"Do you know, Watson," said he, "that it is one of the curses of a mind with a turn like mine that I must look at everything with reference to my own special subject. You look at these scattered houses, and you are impressed by their beauty. I look at them, and the only thought which comes to me is a feeling of their isolation and of the impunity with which crime may be committed there.""Good heavens!” I cried. “Who would associate crime with these dear old homesteads?""They always fill me with a certain horror. It is my belief, Watson, founded upon my experience, that the lowest and vilest alleys in London do not present a more dreadful record of sin than does the smiling and beautiful countryside.""You horrify me!""But the reason is very obvious. The pressure of public opinion can do in the town what the law cannot accomplish. There is no lane so vile that the scream of a tortured child, or the thud of a drunkard’s blow, does not beget sympathy and indignation among the neighbours, and then the whole machinery of justice is ever so close that a word of complaint can set it going, and there is but a step between the crime and the dock. But look at these lonely houses, each in its own fields, filled for the most part with poor ignorant folk who know little of the law. Think of the deeds of hellish cruelty, the hidden wickedness which may go on, year in, year out, in such places, and none the wiser."
Tuesday, June 23, 2020
A snapshot of forgotten post-war railway history
Six of the Best 937
Wera Hobhouse drops out of Lib Dem leadership race and backs Layla Moran
Wera Hobhouse has ended her campaign for the Liberal Democrat leadership and has thrown her weight behind Layla Moran, cementing the Oxford West and Abingdon MP’s status as the candidate to beat.In a statement to her supporters, the Bath MP said that “we must accept that we are no longer the best vehicle” to deliver her aims of “pulling our party firmly to the centre-left, rebuilding our local government base, securing a progressive alliance, and moving effort and resources to our regions”.In a coded rebuke to Ed Davey, the party’s deputy leader, MP for Kingston, and Moran’s sole rival for the leadership, Hobhouse warned against becoming a "London-centric" party. Moran described herself as "delighted" to have received Hobhouse’s endorsement.
Monday, June 22, 2020
Sapperton Tunnel on the Thames and Severn Canal
The restoration of Sapperton Tunnel is entirely feasible from an engineering standpoint. As might be expected though, this will be the most complex and expensive single element of the Thames and Severn Canal restoration.
Write a guest post for Liberal England
As you can see from this list of the 10 most recent guests posts, I am happy to consider a wide range of subjects beyond the Lib Dems
If you would like to write a guest post for this blog, please send me an email so we can discuss your idea.
- Political parties must be rooted in their communities once again - Mike Gayler
- Why am I a Liberal Democrat - Simon Beard
- How the Revoke policy harmed Lib Dem chances - Michael Mullaney
- Unionism is making the Scottish Lib Dems irrelevant - Mark Stephens
- With Valour and Distinction: The 2nd Battalion Leicestershire Regiment in the First World War - Nigel Atter
- Belloc, Chesterton and the Distributist League - David Boyle
- Liberal Democrats for the Heart of England - Michael Mullaney
- Time for the Lib Dems to learn from social democracy - George Kendall
- What one Lib Dem councillor has done under lockdown - Sebastian Field
- A lifetime among the Liberals - Paddy Briggs
Sunday, June 21, 2020
Witchfinder General was partly set in Market Harborough
Rickie Lee Jones: Chuck E.'s in Love
Forty years ago, in the spring of 1979, her self-titled debut made a splash: a best new artist Grammy along with a handful of other nominations, No. 3 on the Billboard 200 albums chart and top 10 on the Hot 100 for the single "Chuck E.’s in Love," and the cover of Rolling Stone magazine.
"Pirates," the 1981 follow-up, did well too (both were reissued on vinyl this year). But Jones followed her ear and wound up in and out of critical and market favor as she chased new information: electronic experiments, pop and jazz covers, spiritual folk, building an eclectic catalog that has, over 20-odd albums and 40 years, never failed to keep people guessing.
Saturday, June 20, 2020
A Shropshire signpost
Friday, June 19, 2020
George Sanders and John Cleese: The Best House in London
Six of the Best 936
Thursday, June 18, 2020
Can cats help tackle loneliness?
- a pilot of cat ownership and interaction within a social prescribing context
- improvements to the evidence base
- enabling renters to own or foster a cat more easily
- provision of information and advice about responsible cat ownership and its benefits
- cats to be incorporated into health assessments and personalised care plans
Layla Moran publishes Build Back Better
The Liberal Democrats could take a decisive shift to the centre left, shedding the final legacies from the party’s period in coalition, under a new review of policy ideas overseen by leadership hopeful Layla Moran.A new booklet, Build Back Better, edited by the MP, is billed as a modern equivalent to the Orange Book, a 2004 collection of essays from Lib Dem figures – including the former leaders Nick Clegg and Vince Cable, and former cabinet minister David Laws – which pushed the party towards a centre-right, markets-based stance.In contrast, Build Back Better, with contributions from more than 40 Lib Dem MPs, members and supporters, includes essays advocating ideas such as a universal basic income, free broadband, and commandeering private health resources to clear a backlog of NHS operations caused by coronavirus.
Wednesday, June 17, 2020
Rails to Wick and Thurso in 1964
So farewell then Willie Thorne
Tuesday, June 16, 2020
A tour of Pre-Roman Leicester and Leicestershire
Layla Moran calls for fund to protect UK music venues
"We need to have recognition that arts in this country is one of our most important exports, it binds us together as a country but we take it for granted. It needs money and support and unless we’re really careful, we’re going to lose venues and it won’t just be the small guys."
Six of the Best 935
Monday, June 15, 2020
Marriott Edgar on the continuing importance of Magna Carta
Sunday, June 14, 2020
Wallace Lawler arrives at Westminster
Calls for Sir Peter Soulsby to resign as Leicester's mayor
There have been calls for Sir Peter Soulsby to resign as Leicester's mayor after he apparently breached coronavirus rules by making visits to his partner’s house during lockdown.The Leicester Mayor has been photographed visiting his partner’s house in the evenings by her neighbours.Sir Peter and his partner live separately - him in the city, and her in the village of Groby some five miles away.
"He’s been coming three or four nights a week throughout lockdown.
"He wears a baseball cap pulled down and tries to keep a low profile but people know who he is and that he is our neighbour’s partner."We have all seen him telling everyone about the importance of sticking to the lockdown rules and he’s not been doing it himself."
The Divine Comedy: Becoming More Like Alfie
"I watched Alfie a long time ago and thought, 'what a horrible character', as in the way he was referring to women as 'it's a nice little thing', a complete dehumanising of the opposite sex."But when I saw it again recently, I saw a lot of my own tendencies in it - which sparked the song. It is also a dig at the laddishness in Britpop at the moment. A lot of what comes out of the Gallagher twins' mouths, for example, is absolutely obscene. But many critics missed the irony and the fact that I'm criticising that kind of behaviour, in myself as much as in others."
Friday, June 12, 2020
The Zombies' She's Not There was recorded 56 years ago today
Six of the Best 934
Thursday, June 11, 2020
John Guthrie: The boy who stole the 'Girl Jean'
The missing Arbroath High pupil was “the boy” in the “mystery of the Girl and the boy” that dominated news headlines across the globe.Despite a general election going on at the time, on every street corner and in every house, shop and office in Arbroath in January 1950 the talk was of the boy and the Girl - the Girl Jean, a two-year-old trawler belonging to Joseph Cargill.She also went missing and the people of Arbroath believed the boy and the Girl were together, as the teenager was known to have sea fever badly.
The incident brought John a stiff penalty as he was sent to an approved school for three-and-a-half years after an appearance at a juvenile court.His mistake also cost him any chance of the career at sea he so longed for.
Girl Pat was a small fishing trawler, based at the Lincolnshire port of Grimsby, that in 1936 was the subject of a media sensation when its captain took it on an unauthorised transatlantic voyage.
Calder's Seventh Law of Politics
- If all parties are united in support of a measure, it will turn out to be a disaster.
- The more power the state takes to itself, the more arbitrarily that power will be exercised.
- When politicians do something which they think is very clever, it will eventually turn out to have been very stupid.
- The more extreme a person's views, the more certain they will be that the majority of voters share them.
- No argument that involves expressing indignation on behalf of a third party is to be trusted.
- All Liberal Democrat leadership elections are reruns of Steel vs Pardoe.
Two quotations in defence of Baden Powell
Colin always defended the scouts against leftish accusations of incipient fascism and the like. How could be not be loyal when the "prophetic book" was none other than Cousin Roddy's Kim?He describes the ideology of the movement as "the weirdest blend of ritual, non-sectarian religiosity, nature and beast worship, and a passion for peoples (Red Indian, Australian aborigines, African tribesmen) whom Christian imperialism had tried for centuries to destroy."He makes a distinction between militarism - useless to deny, he argues, what it is for which the scout should chiefly "be prepared" - and the para-militarism of the Boys' Brigade. The true military heir to Baden Powell (he writes in 1961) is Dayan. Fascist and Communist countries alike usually end up suppressing the scouts.
When Baden-Powell’s Scouting for Boys was published in serial form groups of boys all over the country set up their own groups before any central organisation had been formed.Leslie Paul recalls how “With an astonishing perception they leapt at Scouting as at something for which they had been waiting, divining that this was a movement which took the side of the natural inquisitive, adventuring boy against the repressive schoolmaster, the moralising parson and the coddling parent.
Before the leaders knew what was happening groups were springing up spontaneously and everywhere bands of boys, with bare knees, and armed with broomsticks, began foraging through the countryside.
Wednesday, June 10, 2020
I dreamt about you last night - fell out of bed twice!
Six of the Best 933
GUEST POST A lifetime among the Liberals
Tuesday, June 09, 2020
A tour of Leicester's Roman and Medieval defensive walls
Call for more trains north of Corby
"We have the infrastructure in place, track and signalling, we just need the political will and of course rolling stock to get this to happen."We have a Derby return service once a day and the Pie Train to Melton Mowbray and back but there's no reason why we shouldn't a better, more frequent service from Corby.
Monday, June 08, 2020
Big cats in High Leicestershire and Rutland
Tory councillor who opposed any change to Bristol statue had a golliwog mascot
Cllr Richard Eddy said someone taking the law into the own hands and ‘unilaterally removing’ the plaque, which recognises Colston’s involvement in the transatlantic slave trade, ‘might be justified’.
"This pathetic bid to mount a secondary revisionist plaque on Colston's Statue is historically-illiterate and a further stunt to try to reinvent Bristol's history.."If it goes through, it will be a further slap-in-the-face for true Bristolians and our city's history delivered by ignorant, left-wing incomers."
Write a guest post for Liberal England
As you can see from this list of the 10 most recent guests posts, I am happy to consider a wide range of subjects beyond the Lib Dems
If you would like to write a guest post for this blog, please send me an email so we can discuss your idea.
- Three unlikely heroes from Grantham suggest a future for smaller towns - Brynley Heaven
- Political parties must be rooted in their communities once again - Mike Gayler
- Why am I a Liberal Democrat - Simon Beard
- How the Revoke policy harmed Lib Dem chances - Michael Mullaney
- Unionism is making the Scottish Lib Dems irrelevant - Mark Stephens
- With Valour and Distinction: The 2nd Battalion Leicestershire Regiment in the First World War - Nigel Atter
- Belloc, Chesterton and the Distributist League - David Boyle
- Liberal Democrats for the Heart of England - Michael Mullaney
- Time for the Lib Dems to learn from social democracy - George Kendall
- What one Lib Dem councillor has done under lockdown - Sebastian Field