The Liberal Democrats and Yesh Atid: a fundamental incompatibility?In 2021, I wrote a Lib Dem Voice article warning that our Party's stance on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is misaligned with that of our 'sister' party in Israel, Yesh Atid. Over four years later, those concerns have not diminished. Yesh Atid continues to pay occasional lip service to a two-state solution. In practice, however, the party has repeatedly aligned itself with the assumptions and priorities of the Israeli nationalist mainstream, while failing to meaningfully challenge, and at times actively enabling, the blatantly illegal actions of the Netanyahu-Smotrich-Ben Gvir government. Lapid's hardline rhetoric on territorial expansion and Palestinian statehood, admonishment of ... (more) |
From commenting to campaigningThe 2026 Senedd elections have come and gone. Labour is out of power, Plaid is seeking to run a minority government, Reform made many gains, and the Greens have made their Senedd debut. While we were hoping for better results, this election cycle will remain especially significant to me forever, as it was the first time I've gotten involved in politics beyond just voting (an important task in itself). I volunteered to work on Sam Bennett's team in Gwyr Abertawe, where we faced strong opposition from Labour, the Tories, the Greens, Reform, and Plaid Cymru. From my very first day, ... (more) |
The Joy of Six 1517"In 2026 our vote share in inner London boroughs was the worst since 1978. We aren't running any inner London boroughs. We are only even the main opposition party in one, Brent. This isn't just a London, or a city, problem though. Our 2026 local election vote share of 14 per cent is worse than in the coalition year of 2011 - and our lowest in 8 years."Rob Blackie argues that if the Lib Dems are again to appeal to young voters we must march towards the sound of gunfire. Jason Cobb says the Starmer project was born in Lambeth ... (more) |
We need to talk about Gorton and DentonAlthough the party consolidated our voter base in areas such as Surrey, Hertfordshire and Cambridgeshire at the local elections, something which stuck out to me was the way that despite the best efforts of all our amazing hard-working volunteers, the party lost ground in Labour-facing urban areas such as Manchester and Sheffield as a result of being leapfrogged by the Green Party and I think part of the reason for this leads back to the Gorton and Denton by-election. At a Q&A back in March, current Lib Dem leader Ed Davey was asked about the by-election, "wasn't it the sort ... (more) |
First thoughts on the Lib Dem results (LDN#210)Liberal Democrat Newswire #210 came out at the weekend and you can now also read it in full below. But if you'd like to get future editions emailed direct to you as soon as they are published, sign up now: Welcome to Lib Dem Newswire #210, which focuses on first thoughts for what this month's elections mean for the Liberal Democrats. But first, a huge thank you to everyone involved in the Liberal Democrat campaigning, especially those for whom there aren't victories in their patch this time to take the edge off the exhaustion. We'll have much to examine as ... (more) |
Muller corner yoghurts used to block Powys public toiletIn awarding Headline of the Day to the Oswestry & Border Counties Advertizer, the judges were at pains to remind us that most "funny" headlines aren't funny at all if you think about them for even a moment. Some poor sod had to clean this mess up. (more) |
Re-electedOn Friday last week, the election counts for Gateshead were held. I am pleased to report that I was re-elected alongside my two Lib Dem colleagues Marilynn Ord and Jonathan Mohammed. Marilynn topped the poll with 1711 votes, I was second with 1692 votes and Jonathan M was third with 1572 votes. So there were fewer than 150 votes between the three of us, indicating that most people voted for the (more) |
The biggest risk is playing it safeIt's a few years into a Labour government, who are making unpopular decisions. And in the London elections – we surge to power as the biggest party, or main opposition party, in Lambeth, Southwark, Brent, Camden, Islington and many other London boroughs. 2002 was a great year for us in London, and other cities where we fought Labour. We leapt forward as progressive voters switched from Labour to us. By contrast in 2026 our vote share in inner London boroughs was the worst since 1978. We aren't running any inner London boroughs. We are only even the main opposition party ... (more) |
Network Rail takes Chain Saw to environment on line through South Liverpool CommunitiesNetwork Rail is a Government Quango disguised as a Trading Company. The tell is that the company is wholly owned by the Department of Transport which is its one shareholder. This matters because many of our South Liverpool Neighbourhoods have been ruined by the high-handed actions of this quango. I have written to the Chair and Chief Executive of Network Rail to complain about they have done which is damaging not only to the greenery of the area but the health and biodiversity as well, I have written not only on my own behalf but also my colleagues Cllr Andrew ... (more) |
Welsh Labour in denialThey say that the five stages of grief are denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance and it seems that the Secretary of State for Wales is still at stage one. Nation Cymru reports that Jo Stevens has been strongly criticised for refusing to admit that the unpopularity of Keir Starmer was a major factor in Welsh Labour's Senedd election defeat. Instead, she used an article published in WalesOnline to put the blame for the defeat on the outgoing Welsh Labour government: Echoing campaign positions taken by Reform UK, Ms Stevens criticised policies like the 20mph default speed limit in urban ... (more) |