Wednesday, 29 December 2010

Clegg aims to calm Lib Dem fears


How many of us in the Labour Party remember the good old days when we continued to fight among ourselves while we were in opposition and in government. While on the other the Tories had there fair share they were in opposition for 13 yrs and yes they too have their fair share with in house fighting too when they were deciding who they wanted for their leader of the party. What do we all have in common the is most the leaders of the three main political parties are fairly new leaders they all have to go through what Blair, Cameron, and Clegg all had to learn the lessons.

Now some of us may agree or disagree the fact is two of the main three political parties have been voted by the Citizens of the United Kingdom whilst the third the Lib Dem's have come in third. Now we have learnt that that the Lib Dems have turned their backs on the students most of them who publicly signed a Student Pledge that they will not support the rise of tuition fees.

Give credit where it is due the leader of the Student Union did nothing wrong by holding those who signed the pledge to account publicly and because he he condemed the few went out of their way to smash the Troy HQ for this his leadership is on the line. I know which side I will be.

Now here comes the most interesting part of this story which the media has not been quite honest about Nick Clegg in current opinion polls may be bad for the Liberal Democrats - however some specific polling has emerged today that suggests the electoral impact of the coalition agreement could be even worse for the Lib Dems than the headline figures suggest. Polling on behalf of former Tory deputy chairman Lord Ashcroft, published today on ConservativeHome, suggests that there has been a 17.5% swing from the Lib Dems to Labour in Nick Clegg's Sheffield Hallam constituency. Labour have now moved ahead of the Tories into second place in the seat, and are only two points behind Clegg on current polling - making the seat a potential three-way marginal (33/31/28).

Hence Nick Clegg says his party has faced "testing times" in a message aimed at calming grassroots Lib Dem concerns. In his New Year message to members, the deputy prime minister pledged to start 2011 with action on social mobility, civil liberties and the environment.

He also launched a renewed defence of the decision to break a pledge to oppose rises in student tuition fees.

And he insists he had delivered on "every single one and more" of the party's general election priorities.

In the message, sent from Spain, where he is celebrating Christmas with his wife Miriam's family, he told the Liberal Democrat membership: "Well, what a year! A white-knuckle election; a new coalition government; Liberals in power for the first time in 70 years.

"Just eight months ago we were campaigning on our four big manifesto priorities - fairer taxes; extra money for disadvantaged children in schools; a green, rebalanced economy; a new, open politics. And now we are delivering on every single one, and more."

'Difficult decisions'

He went on: "I don't want to pretend it has all been easy. These are testing times for the country and for our party too. Action to tackle the deficit, and the need to reform higher education, have forced us to take some incredibly difficult decisions.

"But that is government. And when we promised people that we were ready to govern, that is the commitment we made. I genuinely believe that the choices we are making will stand the test of time."

He says the decision to almost treble tuition fees, which saw the party break a pre-election pledge, was needed to retain "world-class" universities and protect poorer students.

And he says backing the Conservatives' package of public spending cuts would "make sure future generations are not saddled with the burden of our debt".

"And by showing people that [the] coalition can work, we can prove that plural, liberal politics is best for Britain," he told them.

He says he will start the year by concentrating on "three big changes" in addition to campaigning for a "yes" vote in May's referendum on changing the Westminster voting system to AV - a key concession won in the coalition negotiations.

He set out his priorities for 2011: "Radical reform of our political system and restoring our hard-won civil liberties; boosting social mobility so that no child is held back by the circumstances of his or her birth; and making sure the economic recovery is green and balanced, with opportunities spread across the whole country."

He concluded: "All of us are going to hear some people predict the worst for our party. The same people who have been underestimating the Liberal Democrats for as long as we have existed.

"But we prove them wrong at every single turn. The next 12 months will be no different, because we will continue to build the Liberal, fairer, greener Britain that we all believe in."