Tom Arms’ World Review

Japan

The Japanese economy is in trouble. Not huge trouble. Its growth rate is a mere 0.5 percent. Inflation looks good at 2.2 percent but the country has an ageing population and low birth rate.

It is unsteady enough that a major setback could have big consequences for the world’s third largest economy. And Trump’s tariffs have created a setback for the country’s car industry. So much so that this week industry leaders took the unusual step of warning of tough times ahead.

Japan is heavily dependent on car exports. According to the International Trade Centre, 20 percent of Japanese exports are cars and car exports account for 28.3 percent of all Japanese exports to the US.

Trump’s tariffs, warned Japanese car manufacturers, will cost the country billions in lost profits and that the industry will be faced to tighten its belt for “the foreseeable future.”

Under the terms of a US-Japan trade agreement negotiated two months ago, across-the-board US tariffs on Japanese goods were reduced to 15 percent in return to a $550 billion Japanese investment in the US.

The problem is that Japan is already the biggest foreign direct investor in the US. At the end of 2024 it had $819.2 billion invested in the US. Much of it was in the car industry. In fact, 70 percent of the Japanese-brand cars sold in the US are manufactured in America.

Honda Motor announced last Friday that it expected the tariffs to cut its profits by approximately $2.5 billion. The previous day, Nissan Motors said it would have broken even this year if not for the tariffs. Instead, it projected a $1.8 billion loss.

Japan’s largest carmaker, Toyota Motors, said earlier this week that it expected tariffs to cost the company about $9.4 billion this year, an upward revision from its August forecast of $9.1 billion. The company said the levies were hitting not only its own exports but also its worldwide network of suppliers.

During his recent trip to Japan, Donald Trump, Mr. Trump said Toyota would sell American-made vehicles in Japan and would spend $10 billion constructing auto plants “throughout the United States.”

As usual, Trump’s hyperbolic comments required clarification. They came from Kenta Ton, Toyota’s chief financial officer who said that the company had made no “formal $10 billion commitment and selling American cars in Japan “was a possibility that Toyota would consider.”

Hungary

Trump faced a diplomatic dilemma as this blog went to press on Friday. Does his relations with a close foreign political ally outweigh the American national interest and, possibly, has chances of winning next year’s Nobel Peace Prize?

Normally any meeting between Donald Trump and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban is a glowing session of the mutual admiration society. Orban is seen by many in the administration and the wider MAGA movement as the European precursor for populist conservatism in America.

During Trump’s wilderness years, Orban continued to sing his praises and even visited him at his Mar-a-Lago Florida estate. The fact that Orban’s government was in bad odour with the Biden Administration has also helped him with Trump.

Many have pointed Orban’s crackdown on the media, immigration, courts and academia as a model for Trump’s own actions. And Deputy Secretary of State John Landau recently praised the Hungarian leader for his “unstinting defense of Western Christian values.”

But beside that is the recent sanctions that Trump imposed on Russia’s two biggest oil companies as a sign of the frustration that Trump feels at Putin’s refusal to compromise his positions on Ukraine.

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Why does the UK handle budgets like this?

Another budget, and another set of parliamentary debates – and newspaper comments – that will generate much heat but very little light about the choices Britain faces in raising state revenue and funding public services.  Since Margaret Thatcher used revenues from North Sea oil and receipts from privatization to fund current spending through asset sales rather than higher taxes, Britain has been stuck with a false self-image that we can be a country of both lower taxes than our continental counterparts and comparably generous public services.  Brexit of course, with its consequences in in depressing economic growth, has made the choices more difficult.  But we still have politicians calling for tax cuts without suggesting what impact on public spending they will have.  How do they get away with it?

I’ve just been reading a paper a novice Liberal Democrat MP wrote 25 years ago on how badly the British Parliament handles budgetary scrutiny and debates on spending and taxation.  He notes that the British Parliament has one of the weakest systems for parliamentary influence over government expenditure in the world.  He condemns the way in which taxation and spending are discussed separately rather than as unavoidably linked, with changes in the tax structure sprung from the Chancellor’s budget statement rather than carefully examined for their impact on the economy – which has led to the UK now having one of the most complex and untidy systems of taxation in the developed world.  He decries the false divide between ‘policy’ and ‘finance’ – the first the province of ministers, the second the responsibility of permanent secretaries who answer to the Public Accounts Committee for how funds have been spent. ‘It matters how a country takes its decisions on the budget. It may be less exciting, but process matters’, Ed Davey argued.  He therefore made a series of proposals to strengthen the role of MPs in discussing financial choices and in later scrutinising how well funds have been spent.

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Observations of an Expat: Court with a Backbone

It has been a bad week for President Donald J. Trump. He was overwhelmingly trounced in every election held this week. The Democrats exceeded all expectations.

Then Pope Leo criticised his human rights record. A former chief prosecutor for the International Criminal Court said that his missile attacks on Venezuelan boats were a “crime against humanity”. The government shutdown entered a record week and Transport Secretary Sean Duffy warned that he would have to start cancelling flights.

But perhaps the most impactful event occurred not at the polling stations but in the dusty and cerebral corridors of the US Supreme Court. It was there that the nine Justices appeared to find their collective backbone and do the job for which they were intended—preventing over-reach by the executive branch of the US government.

Before the court was the issue of Trump’s tariffs. And the court was faced with two main questions: Did the president abuse his power by imposing tariffs without congressional approval and is there an economic emergency that justifies him in using his powers?

We won’t know for some months—possibly not until June—the court’s ruling on these issues. But on Wednesday we were provided with an inkling of the Justices’ thinking based on the rather pointed the questions that they were asking the president’s legal team.

Amy Coney Barrett, is a Trump-appointed Justice who has supported the president on almost every contentious issue. She asked Solicitor-General John Sauer: “And so it is your contention that every country needed to be tariffed because of threats to the defense and industrial base? I mean, Spain? France? Italy? I could see it with some countries, but explain to me why as many countries needed to be subjected to reciprocal tariffs as are.”

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ALDC By-Election Report 6th November

This week, there were ten by-elections, of which two were on Tuesday. Three by-elections did not have a Liberal Democrat candidate.

Congratulations to Councillor Jan Goffey and the local Liberal Democrat team for gaining a seat in Devon, despite beginning from a standing start. We were able to secure a decisive victory, whilst both the Conservatives and an independent were vying for second place.

West Devon BC, Okehampton South
Liberal Democrats (Jan Goffey): 356 (57.1%, new)
Conservative: 152 (24.4%, -5.9)
Independent: 116 (18.6%, – 17.0)

Liberal Democrat GAIN from Green Party

Turnout: 22%

Congratulations are also due to Councillor Martin Redman and the local team, who were able to gain a seat off the Conservatives in Surrey. Meanwhile, Reform UK were able to secure a convincing second place, well ahead of the Conservatives who finished third.

Tandridge DC, Westway
Liberal Democrats (Martin Redman): 539 (42.3%, -0.6)
Reform UK: 420 (33.0%, new)
Conservative: 202 (15.9%, -13.3)
Labour: 112 (8.8%, -19.1)

Liberal Democrat GAIN from Conservative

Turnout: 25%

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Beyond the picket line: why Liberal Democrats must rebuild bridges with Britain’s workers

In an era when populism erodes democratic norms and insecurity pervades the modern workplace, the defence of liberal democracy must extend beyond parliaments and ballot boxes. It must reach the factory floor, the classroom, and the hospital wards. The right to organise, to be treated fairly, and to have a voice at work are not socialist luxuries. They are the foundations of a free society, and the current situation demands our immediate attention and action.

More than twenty years ago, Charles Kennedy understood this. In 2002, addressing the Trades Union Congress in Blackpool, he declared:

We Liberal Democrats believe in dialogue. We believe in cooperation with both sides of industry and between both sides of industry. And we believe in the language of cooperation. We reject the language of confrontation.

It was a moment of quiet courage; a Liberal Democrat leader standing before a movement that had long looked elsewhere for political allies, and saying that liberalism and organised labour could, and should, speak the same moral language, rooted in our shared history and values.

Kennedy’s message was simple. Trade unions are healthy for society. The market, though a powerful force of prosperity, requires a balance between worker voice and public accountability. He warned against the creeping belief, imported from across the Atlantic, that “the private sector is always better”. That warning rings louder today than ever, and it is a lesson our friends across the pond are slowly learning, as evidenced by Zohran Mamdani’s recent victory in the New York mayoral election.

Two decades later, Britain finds itself at another crossroads. Labour’s Working Rights Bill seeks to ban exploitative zero-hour contracts, end fire-and-rehire practices, expand day-one employment rights and strengthen collective bargaining. The aims are noble: fair pay, stable work and dignity for all. Yet while Labour presses ahead, the Liberal Democrats risk looking like bystanders in the debate that should define us.

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Economics: Thinking about Resources

I’ve noticed here on LibDemVoice that when we have a discussion about the economy and what the Government can afford, it usually descends into a very technical argument about the nature of money: is money a flow, as mainstream economics says, or is it destroyed by tax, as Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) advocates believe?

Wouldn’t it be nice if there were an alternative way to think about expenditure that avoided these arguments and got to the root of what is really going on when we decide whether something is affordable? Well, there is! Instead of counting money, try thinking about the actual resources consumed.

How does that work? Here’s an example:

Most LibDems agree that fixing the crisis in social care should be a priority. That means we need more social care workers. There are currently around 1.8 million people working in social care in the UK (Report for Skills for Care and Development). Let’s say, for the sake of argument, that we decide adequate social care requires 10% more workers. That’s nearly 0.2 million people.

Here is where thinking about resources kicks in. Let’s say you do somehow recruit 0.2 million more social care workers. That doesn’t by itself change the size of the available workforce, so it must mean 0.2 million fewer people doing something else. Some other industry will have to produce fewer goods or services because it will have fewer workers. Which industry? Well, in theory the Government could make that decision by taxing or cutting spending on some specific thing. Or it could let the market choose — which will mean the jobs will be lost in whatever industry is least able to compete for those workers. But either way, we will gain more social care but lose out in some other way.

Another example: junior doctors are about to go on strike. They want more money, which the Government says it can’t afford. How would that work economically? Again, think about resources rather than money: the relevant resource here is all the things that people might buy with their money — food, travel, housing, and so on. The total quantity of available goods and services people can buy (the size of the “cake”) won’t change just because you give junior doctors a salary increase. What would change is that doctors would get a slightly bigger share of that cake. And — guess what — that must mean a smaller share for everyone else, translating into a small loss of standard of living for the rest of us.

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Review of “Ending Wars” co-edited by Lord John Alderdice and Padraig O Malley

Ending Wars is the bold title of a new book co-edited by Lord John Alderdice and Padraig O Malley and published earlier this year by the New England Journal of Public Policy.  Its companion publication entitled The Changing Character of War and Peacemaking (2023) was curated along the same lines as a compilation of articles penned by a wide range of contributors to the conferences organised by the Centre for the Resolution of Intractable Conflicts (CRIC) held at Harris Manchester College, University of Oxford in 2023 and 2024 respectively.

Most would remember Francis Fukuyama’s End of History and the Last Man (1992).  Following the end of the Cold War and the dissolution of the Soviet Union, we were lulled into believing that liberal democracy had won the day.  Yet September 11 occurred, and more recently the Russian invasion of Ukraine.  Alderdice in his Introduction to the special issue of Ending Wars cited that the Global Peace Index (GPI) the leading measure of global peacefulness has been deteriorating over the last 6 years and the rules based international order continues to be under threat.  At the time of writing this the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in Gaza conflict rumbles on though we may well have reached a denouement outside the sphere of the United Nations and of international law.

As Alderdice explains, building peace involves communities that have different perspectives finding ways of conducting their differences without the use of physical force.  With his background as a consultant psychiatrist, Alderdice sees politics as the “psychology of large groups” and how we function, not as individuals, but as communities.  The aim of conflict resolution may not necessarily entail reaching an agreement on all social, political and economic issues. Put simply, we merely need to reach a place where those who differ deeply can agree to disagree without killing each other”.

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Standing up for local government – why I’m backing Josh

Editor’s Note: This month party members will be voting to elect our next Party President. At Lib Dem Voice we welcome posts from each of the candidates – one to launch their candidature plus a maximum of one per week during the actual campaign.

Local government is the bedrock of Liberal Democrat politics. It is the layer of politics that is closest to the everyday lives of people – from the mundane to the momentous. It is local government that controls everything from bin collections and fixing roads to adult social care and SEN provision. In fact, around 800 essential services are delivered by this tier of administration. It is little wonder then that Liberal Democrats – long local champions – have been rebuilding and growing our presence on local councils up and down England.

Today our councillors already control billions in public money and deliver life-changing services. They do so diligently and conscientiously, never losing sight of the communities they represent. In my part of the world, South Cambs the Liberal Democrats have been the driving force behind three new towns being built: Northstowe, Waterbeach New Town and the large extension to Cambourne at West Cambourne – along with a future new village at Bourn Airfield. We are building new homes, new town hubs and services for local people with a careful eye on protecting and increasing the area’s bio-diversity. In short we are putting liberalism into action.

These stories of Liberal Democrats working hard need telling and I believe Josh Babarinde – who has been a councillor himself – is best placed to do this as President. I know that he will help bring the LGA, ALDC and HQ’s experience and expertise together to ensure that the work of our councillors get the profile they deserve and I know he has already started thinking of how we can make the bonds between our councillors and MPs stronger.

Josh wants to pilot a buddying scheme between some of our council group leaders and parliamentarians to help forge an even closer relationship between Westminster and our town and city halls. In South Cambs we are very fortunate to have wonderful MPs in Pippa Heylings, Ian Sollom and Charlotte Cane. We have been able to work hand in glove to secure the best outcomes for those we serve. Not every Liberal Democrat council group leader will be so lucky and Josh’s plan to pilot a buddying scheme, with our 72 MPs could have a real impact: just imagine how much we could learn from each other from social media use to campaigning in Parliament and beyond.

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Nice guys finish first in Dutch election 

‘Het kan wel’, a play on Barack Obama’s ‘Yes, we can’ quip, was ringing out in the Netherlands as Rob Jetten and his liberal D66 party surprised the pundits by winning the Dutch General Election last week. It was a close-run thing though, and it was only after all the postal votes had been counted that he was declared victorious against Geert Wilders’ nationalist PVV party, by a historically small margin of 28,000 votes. D66 will now be able to look to form a coalition government after increasing their seats from 9 in 2023 to 26 seats. 

Jetten’s style in this election was positive and energetic. It was clear that he was playing straight from the Obama and Trudeau copybook, and it cut through against the doom and gloom politics of the parties on the right and left. Jetten tapped into the question of ‘who’s flag’, by declaring himself a positive patriot and being photographed in the red, white and blue of the Dutch flag. He also made a good account of himself, and his party, in the media and even appeared on a popular TV quiz show, that seemed to work wonders for his personal credentials.  

Despite being only 38 years old, Jetten has been in Dutch politics for several years now and looks likely to be the youngest Dutch Prime Minister in Dutch history. He will also be the first openly gay Prime Minister. There is still a lot of negotiations to be had to form a coalition, but it looks like he could make the numbers work with the centre-ground parties of the Labour/Green Left, the Christian Democrats, or the VVD. With 76 seats needed for a majority, they may wish to bring in all these parties into the coalition to boost their numbers (to 86) in the House of Representatives.  

While it was a great night for liberals in the Netherlands, it was terrible for the PVV. Geert Wilders, a peroxide haired veteran, was seen as the pantomime villain having been the man who broke the last coalition leading to this snap election. His party lost 11 seats, and more importantly, lost the status of ‘man of the people’. Other hard right parties did make gains, and it’s not clear now whether he will continue as their leader, or whether there will be a realignment on the right of Dutch politics.  

As for the other liberal party in the Netherlands, the People’s Party for Freedom and Democracy, the VVD, they had a bizarre night. Despite losing two seats and dropping to their lowest share of the vote since the 1970s, there were scenes of jubilation as, up until a fortnight ago, it looked like it would have been a truly terrible night for the once dominant party of Mark Rutte. They were rescued by leader, Dilan Yesilgoz’s, strong performances in the final few televised debates. There will be an element of soul-searching for their members, but it looks likely that they will support Jetten’s formation of a coalition.  

D66’s success has come from a long march from obscurity. In 2006, they only just survived by a slither (winning only 3 seats) in the General Election and looked set to remain in the shadow of other parties from the centre ground, including the VVD. Many Liberal Democrats who attended the 2015 Autumn Conference in Bournemouth might remember a speech from Sophie in’t Veld, the then D66 MEP, who spoke about how, from a party’s lowest point, they can rebuild into a political force. This is something for Liberal Democrats to take note of.  

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Reclaiming radical hope: lessons from New York

What can the Liberal Democrats learn from Zohran Mamdani’s clean sweep victory of the NYC Mayoral Race?

This week, American Democrat Zohran Mamdani ended a year-long campaign with a decisive victory in the New York mayoral race, winning over 50% of the vote on record turnout. For progressives across the Western world, it was a breath of fresh air: a politics of hope had won. That same evening, at my local party’s AGM, we heard from Martin Tod, the Liberal Democrat candidate for the newly created Hampshire and the Solent Combined Authority. One line from his speech has stayed with me:

Being a Liberal Democrat means always being unhappy with the status quo. That’s hard when you’re the incumbent, but it’s essential.

I have long argued for a politics of hope. That conviction has only strengthened since the election of the 2024 Labour government, when the optimism of “things can only get better” gave way to the weary realisation that “these lot are just the Tories in red ties.” The status quo feels unchanged. Starmer and Reeves promised to repair fourteen years of Conservative austerity, yet little meaningful progress has followed. Disillusioned voters, desperate for something different, are drifting toward Reform UK – a party whose rhetoric increasingly echoes the dark language of Mosley-era politics. Reform demonstrably is not offering hope, but it is offering change.

A politics of hope is exactly the fight Mamdani waged in New York. His campaign insisted that things can and should be better, even under the tightening grip of the Trump regime and relentless media attacks branding him a socialist. Yet, in my view, his platform was not Democratic Socialism – it was a kind of Radical Social Liberalism, the kind of politics the UK desperately needs: energetic, positive, and disciplined on the issues that truly matter to people, however controversial. We need a Liberal Democrats who are unapologetically and loudly Pro-Palestine, Pro-Trans, and Pro-Protest – just as Mamdani was – while maintaining that same message discipline. Throughout his campaign he spoke in Spanish, Arabic, and English, presenting himself as a relatable everyman who could see, and name, the deterioration of the status quo. His message focused on halting and reversing the soaring cost of living in America’s largest metropolis.

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How can I stand in the rain leafleting for a party that does this?

I canvassed seventy-five doors for the Liberal Democrats last Saturday.

I know it’s not a massive number by many politicos’ standards — I mean, I did seven hundred and sixty-nine across the short campaign period last year — but it’s still a decent amount to do on one casualish action day, I think.

And yet, when I watch my partner (our local candidate) trawling through the local rag’s website for things we can use as Focus stories, I can’t help but wonder what I’m doing here.

I am (as far as I’m aware) the only trans member of our local party, and I’m our diversity officer too. I organised and ran the Lib Dem stall at our local pride event this summer, and I spent eight hours wearing my voice hoarse (top tip trans-masc people, it’s a great temporary alternative to T in terms of dropping about an octave) telling attendees that the Lib Dems are standing up for all queer people’s rights. It was a tough day, but it was exhilarating and I loved every second. It was a fantastic way to spend my first ever pride event.

I don’t know if I could do that in good faith any more.

I canvassed seventy-five doors last Saturday because this is the party I’ve signed up to, and because I really truly believe that my partner would be significantly better on the council than the God-awful complacent Labour people currently clogging up this ward. But I did have to slightly switch my brain off in order to do so, because I really don’t know what I would have said if a trans voter had asked me about our party’s policy on their rights.

Now, I know our party’s policy is excellent. We’re in favour of self-ID including a neutral option, a complete ban on conversion practices, and removal of the spousal veto. But at the same time, trans people within the party are not free to be who we are: not if we want to be counted in quotas.

(Non-binary people in particular now don’t show up in gender quotas at all, and it’s not like this can be blamed on the Supreme Court ruling, because non-binary people have never existed in UK law.)

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US election results are a huge relief – but it’s still the economy stupid

Embed from Getty Images

One of the strange things about US democracy (and there are many – as there are in the UK) is that when a party is defeated in a Presidential election it immediately ceases to have a recognised leader and wanders through the political wilderness like thousands of headless chickens.

No party has better demonstrated the above more than the Democratic party since the morning of November 6th 2024. They seem to have gone through a soul-searching exercise that has come up with very little in the way of answers as to why they lost, for a second time, to Trump.

So it was a great relief to see the US election results coming through today.

As Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez told MSNBC:

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Lib Dem Donna Harris leads Lambeth Council in rejecting committee seat for sex-charge councillor

Headshot of Cllr Donna HarrisWhen a review of Lambeth Council’s committee structure proposed putting a councillor who had been arrested  on charges of sexual assault, exposure and controlling and coercive behaviour on a committee that investigates wrongdoing, Lib Dem leader of the opposition Cllr Donna Harris was having none of it.

Donna, who is the chair of  Lib Dem Women, the official body in the Lib Dems representing women, led the efforts to get this stopped. For a week she tried, unsuccessfully, to block the move behind the scenes.

However, when the appointments came to Council recently, she spoke against them and they were ultimately rejected unanimously.

Donna said that the appointmentsent the wrong message to every woman who expects our public institutions to be safe and fair:

I stand here today not only as a councillor, but also as the national party’s Chair of Liberal Democrat Women.
And I must say — clearly and firmly — that what I’m about to raise cannot be ignored.

This must be addressed on behalf of women everywhere who expect their councils to act with integrity, accountability, and respect.

The proposal to offer the independent member a seat on the Investigating Committee is deeply concerning.
It sends entirely the wrong message — to residents, to council staff, and to every woman who expects our public institutions to be safe and fair.

The independent member has been charged by police and faces a pending court case.
I fully recognise, as we all must, that he is innocent until proven guilty.
But while those proceedings are ongoing, it is wholly inappropriate for him to be given a committee seat —
especially one responsible for investigating the conduct of others.

Over the past week I’ve tried everything to prevent this, putting forward constructive alternatives.

The administration may say the current position is lawful — but laws can and should change.

Let’s be clear: this is not about prejudice.

It’s about safeguarding — about protecting the reputation of this council, maintaining public confidence, and ensuring everyone who works in or visits the Town Hall feels safe and respected.

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Economic growth – simple but not easy.   Part 1.

For decades the current governing party in the UK seems to have assumed that economic growth comes from the blunt instrument of government borrowing and spending. But as state debt has approached 100% of GDP, they have had to think beyond that. Unfortunately, this has not amounted to much, with ideological barriers and lack of experience among decision-makers hindering reforms. Labour tend to resort to photogenic one-off remedies, which may or may not ultimately contribute to any beneficial growth; a heavily subsidised weapons deal, a fantasy ‘new-town’, or a trade deal of exaggerated benefit.

Economic growth is not quite as easy as that, although scoping out required reforms is relatively simple.

To be effective the government instead needs to state its considered position on where it thinks growth comes from, and what hinders it. In addition there is the question of what type of growth is being pursued; surely not all growth is good, especially growth that is not environmentally sustainable, nor fiscally or socially sustainable.

Improving the ‘quality of growth’ sits, strategically, alongside the quest for aggregate higher growth. Environmentally sustainable growth must include the implementation of the ‘polluter pays’ principle. Fiscal sustainability means growth should not be generated through unsustainable debt. Social sustainability means growth that is not captured by a plutocratic elite, leaving everyone else behind, or even poorer.

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I know it’s hard but… please stay

It’s been a difficult time in this party recently. I’ll admit that. Those of us who are trans and non-binary have been vilified not just in the media, but within our own party too. I understand why some people want to leave or resign. It’s not easy to stay.

But if there’s one thing I’ve learned from being on the exec for Plus, it’s that the majority of our members, MPs, and activists support our rights. Most of this party fundamentally disagrees with the Supreme Court ruling.

And let’s be honest, if you do agree with it, you’re in the wrong party. The ruling is dangerous for both cis and trans women, and we must work to overturn it. There are already cases of cis women being kicked out of toilets because they don’t fit patriarchal stereotypes of what a woman should look like. Trans people are being left with nowhere safe to go in public.

Real Liberals are angry about this and want the Equality Act updated so it can no longer be used to strip away equality. But I digress.

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Diversity in name only

Warning: There are mentions made to studies referencing suicidal ideation in the trans community later on in this piece. If this topic causes you discomfort or concern, you may wish to avoid reading this article.

We are now a week removed from our party’s announcement of adherence to the Supreme Court’s ruling on gender identity in reference to our internal election diversity quotas.

During that time, we have heard from many people, including, but not limited to, Prue, Josh, Caron, Rebecca, Iain, Chris and me. There is, however, one person we haven’t heard from: Ed Davey.

Now, of course, there are many Liberal Democrat MPs who have yet to speak out. Still, as both our party’s leader and a previously outspoken supporter of the LGBTQIA+ community, it has been nothing short of a betrayal to hear nothing but radio silence from Ed. His article for the Lib Dem website, published during Pride Month, even referred to our Spring Conference’s reaffirmation of support for LGBTQIA+ rights, with the introduction of the supporting paper “Free To Be Who You Are“, which sets out a range of policies supporting the LGBTQIA+ community. Rereading his piece now, it does beg the question, “How much of this is legitimate support, and how much is pandering?”.

It’s ironic, really, that the paper is titled “Free To Be Who You Are”. Perhaps the subtitle “Unless you’re an elected official in the Lib Dems” is needed to reflect the reality of such a two-faced approach to allyship.

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Mathew on Monday: Human rights protect us all and we must defend them

There are moments in politics when you can feel not just the temperature of the debate shift, but the very foundations of our democracy tremble.

Last week, in the House of Commons, Ed Davey delivered one of those rare speeches that cut through the noise.

Calm, principled, and grounded in the best traditions of British Liberalism, Ed reminded Parliament and the country why the European convention on Human Rights – which Britain helped create, championed by none other than Winston Churchill – remains essential to who we are as a nation.

It shouldn’t need saying, but in 2025 it still tragically does: human rights are not a luxury, nor an inconvenience to be discarded when considered by some to be out of fashion.

They are the bedrock of our freedom, dignity and fairness.

They protect each and every one of us, not just in moments of high politics, but in the quiet moments when we suddenly find ourselves reliant on the protections we too often take for granted.

You don’t always know when you’ll need rights like the right to a fair trial, to family life, or freedom from discrimination.

But when you do need them, you really need them.

And yet the drumbeat against these fundamental protections grows ever louder.

Nigel Farage’s Reform UK – a party that proudly positions itself as anti-rights and, it would seem, anti the rule of law – now threatens to drag our country down a dangerous path.

They talk breezily about leaving the ECHR as if it were a minor administrative tweak, not the ripping up of a promise we made to the world and to our own citizens after the horrors of war – a promise that every human being, whatever their background, status, or present circumstances, deserves dignity, equality, and justice.

For all of the bluster, this isn’t about sovereignty or “taking back control.”

It’s about weakening protections for ordinary people while handing more power to the already powerful.

This isn’t patriotism.

It’s authoritarianism dressed up as populism.

Liberal Democrats know better, and we must say so proudly.

We stand in the great British tradition of liberty under the rule of law, of fairness for all, and of defending the vulnerable – not scapegoating them for political gain.
The ECHR isn’t some foreign imposition.

It’s a British achievement.

A legacy of Churchill.

A beacon of hope to countries emerging from tyranny across Europe.

Leaving it would not make us stronger – it would leave us smaller.

Human rights protect us all.

They are not for one group or another – they are for every citizen, every family, every person who may one day find themselves needing justice, protection, or support.

Those rights were hard-won.

They must be fearlessly defended.

As Liberals we have always believed that the measure of a society is how it treats its people – all of its people, and especially its most persecuted and vulnerable.

Now, more than ever, we must say loud and clear: Britain must remain in the European Convention on Human Rights.

Our freedoms depend on it.

In praise of David Edwards

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Reflecting on a week as a trans Lib Dem councillor

Last week has been hard and the subject of a lot of soul searching.

I’m a Lib Dem for a lot of reasons. I believe in the values of liberalism and appreciate how the party approaches the nuance of those values in balancing individual and community or societal freedoms. I think a political movement that represents this and campaigns for a liberal vision of society that balances these freedoms to empower people, through decentralising of power and moving decision making closer to those it affects is an important thing for our society and is a way out of polarised extremism.

The thoughtfulness of the party’s policy making process to produce impactful, workable policies, and the effectiveness at which we campaign to win power to implement them is a unique place we occupy.

And I care about many of these policies. But being a trans woman I don’t get the option of whether or not trans politics/liberation is one of the policies I focus on, it has to be. As not only is it one that impacts me personally, as an elected trans representative, it is one I am looked at for, and expected to care about regardless.

So on top of fighting for affordable housing, cleaning up the streets in my area and advocating for residents left behind by a complacent Labour council, I’m having to fight against marginalisation. And it’s taking up more and more of my time and mental energy under the huge onslaught we are under: an onslaught of erosion of legal rights and protections, and a steady cultural shift which is seeing an erosion in trans acceptance and cruelty, bigotry and hate becoming acceptable.

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From now on, no decent person can vote Tory – UPDATE

Last week, I wrote about the appalling Tory plan to deport millions of legally settled people.

This plan involved cancelling the Indefinite Leave to Remain (ILR) of people who are not UK Citizens if they were (among other things) living in a council house, not earning more than £38,700, or had a disabled dependent receiving State benefits. As Shadow Home Office Minister, Katie Lam, said at the time, this policy would target “a mostly, but not entirely, culturally coherent group of people.”

It seems this may have been a step too far even for the Tories. The Guardian reports that …

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What is a liberal party for?

We’ve talked a lot about the changes the party has made to diversity quotas for the forthcoming presidential election this week. Presidential candidates Prue and Josh have had their say, as have Rebecca, Iain and Jack.

I have wanted to amplify other voices, but so many people have asked me for my view that I thought I’d give it to you too.

My heart is in a million pieces this weekend. To be fair, it’s been that way since the Supreme Court Judgement effectively ruined the lives of too many people I love for me to be silent on this issue. Ever.

Over the past four and a bit decades, I have seen on so many occasions the absolute joy that comes with being accepted as the person you are. When someone is recognised as the man or woman or person they have long known themselves to be, it is a real privilege to watch them become themselves rather than hide their true identity. To see them set free to live their best life as their true self, to live peaceably doing their own thing and not getting in anyone’s way.

That’s been the direction of travel for most of my adult life and I was proud that we lived in a country which was one of the best places in the world for trans people.

And then a fringe group, fuelled by £70,000 from a billionaire, were successful in winning their case at the Supreme Court in April, obtaining a judgement that in a very narrow set of circumstances, woman and man in the Equality Act had to be interpreted as this weird and according to doctors at the BMA “scientifically illiterate” definition of biological woman or man.

This judgement makes not one woman safer. In fact the amount of time we have spent talking about these issues over the past few years actively harmed woman’s safety, wellbeing, legal status and wellbeing because it has distracted from the real problems women face in every aspect of their daily lives. The judgement, does, however, make the lives of trans people extremely difficult. And not just trans people. Any woman who doesn’t satisfy narrow criteria on what a woman should look like is now likely to be challenged when doing something as basic as going to the toilet. It’s truly disgusting and demeaning and as liberals we should not stand for it.

What has rendered my heart into its broken state has been seeing the impact on those same people that I love. They are no less who they are, but they feel the weight of prejudice, they fear even the most mundane aspects of daily life. Nobody should be in that situation.

With a few notable exceptions, though, we’ve been silent. We’ve not stood up as we should have done for a marginalised group under fire. We’ve not told the human stories of those affected. We’ve not talked about how this is a dangerous distraction from the real issues facing women.

This, despite our Conference voting in massive numbers just 7 months ago, in favour of a policy paper that is fully in support of the right of trans people and all LGBT+ people to be who they are. Just six weeks ago, our Conference overwhelmingly for the second time against a constitutional amendment which would have required our trans and non binary colleagues to be counted as the sex they were assigned at birth.

I want to give you a bit of background on the quotas. I have spent most of my adult life banging my head against a brick wall trying to get this party to a place where it took women’s representation seriously. But then finally, about 10 years ago, in a windowless room in the party’s former HQ in Great George Street, we got a decent way forward, after much wrangling. I found myself in a room with constitutional wonks like Mark Pack, Jeremy Hargreaves and Jon Ball and we came up with a workable framework for ensuring better and more balanced representation for a number of under-represented groups. The gender quota has also been used on occasion to increase the number of men on a committee when more than 60% of women have been elected. I don’t love that so much because, to be honest, women have been under-represented for so long that we could literally have every place on every committee for the next 2000 years and still not redress the historical imbalance but that’s by the by. But we got these quotas in and I think that they have made a difference even when they have not needed to be used. Our federal committees are more diverse and that is a good thing.

I want these quotas to stay and be used for as long as it takes for there to be a world free of discrimination. But how would I feel about benefitting from their use when my trans and non binary siblings cannot without the indignity of being counted as who they are not.

And now this week, on the eve of ballots being issued, the party issued a statement instituting pretty much what Conference rejected. Did I say it was just 6 weeks ago?

The establishment line, from talking to many people about this in recent days, seems to be:

a) we have advice and we can’t do anything else or the anti-trans groups or individuals will sue us

b) we can’t do as the Scottish Greens have done (with great reluctance) and suspend our gender quota until the legal landscape is clearer for a justification that makes no sense to me.

My feelings on the points above:

a) Try harder. There is more than one legal view on this and we are very likely to get sued from the other perspective to. Our approach seems to be inconsistent with several other laws, including the Human Rights Act and GDPR as far as I can see. Of course I don’t want to see one penny of our members’ money going to anti-trans litigants but I feel like we could be doing a lot more to build a successful challenge.

b) But Conference emphatically rejected the changes announced last week so surely there is no authority to impose them. And any pushback on how the Scottish Greens can do this and we can’t just gets meaningless word salad in return.

c) The communications around this would make an omnishambles look competent and have been woefully inadequate. The initial announcement was slipped out on our internal elections website without candidates being alerted. Not only that, but we should have had a clear statement that this was horrific and that we wanted to see clear changes in the law to ensure that everyone’s rights were respected.

While I am sure that the email sent to candidates late on Friday was well-meaning, it spectacularly failed to show any understanding of how people are actually feeling. It was described to me by one frustrated person thus:

As you’ll notice, we’ve been forced to stand on your fingers as you dangle from the edge of a cliff. We hope you’re not affected by this, but if you are, here’s a helpline where you can access our leaflet, “Dealing with Gravity”. We hope this will be comforting as you plummet hundreds of feet. Have a great weekend!

d) Acquiescing to this is not an isolated incident. We have been consistently throwing the people our preamble requires us to speak for under the bus in this ill-thought through exclusive pursuit of soft Tory voters.

Which is doubly stupid as soft Tory voters are likely to be socially liberal and horrified at what is happening on many levels.

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Tom Arms World Review

Trump’s Asia trip was a tour of important political contrasts.

In Malaysia, Japan and South Korea he was treated with obsequious knee-bending accommodations. As his helicopter Marine One flew past the landmark Tokyo Tower was lit up with red, white and blue, AND, the final touch, topped with Trumpian gold.

But it was the South Koreans who won the toadying prize. President Trump was greeted with a 21-gun salute, a band that played “Hail to the Chief” followed by his campaign rally theme song, “YMCA”.

But it didn’t stop there. South Korean President Lee Jae Myung presented Trump with his country’s highest medal and a replica of an ancient Korean royal crown. Then, at the state dinner, the South Koreans served a “Peacemaker’s Dessert” which consisted of brownies topped with edible gold.

Finally, the South Koreans agreed to invest $20 billion a year for the next ten years in the American companies that Trump chose. The kowtowing worked. Trump reduced US tariffs on South Korean products from 25 percent to 15 percent

Then, Trump met his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping. There were no bands, no red carpets, and no Trumpian gold. The venue was a non-descript military building on the edge of Busan International Airport. Both men looked tense when they shook hands for the cameras.

It was clear that the two men were meeting as equals and Trump was ill at east. At meeting’s end, Trump—in typical hyperbolic overstatement—called the get-together with XI “amazing” and gave it a score of “12 out of ten.”

It was not amazing. Both sides met because they had looked into the abyss created by Trump’s tariffs and Chinese refusal to concede a Trump victory in a trade war with the US.

China is the only country with the economic strength and political will to challenge Trump’s tariffs. It did so by cutting off American access to essential Chinese rare earth minerals. The meeting in South Korea eased American tariffs and allowed renewed access to the minerals. But it did little to reduce tensions between the two countries.

There was no sign of the obsequiousness that Trump enjoyed everywhere else in Asia. There was no talk about Chinese support for Russia in Ukraine; or a renewal of meetings of military leaders or cooperation on climate change or talks on the development of artificial intelligence. The world needs improved relations between Beijing and Washington and there was no sign of it in Busan. This meeting dealt with only one aspect of bilateral relations between the two super powers– trade. At best it was a start and should receive a score of five out of ten.

Qatar is a top contender for the next Nobel Peace Prize. Forget Donald Trump. He is good at making a lot of noise about peace deals. Qatar just goes about quietly doing the job of international conciliator.

In fact, the country’s 2003 constitution says that its foreign policy is “based on the principles of strengthening international peace and security by means of encouraging the peaceful resolution of international disputes.”

It is this constitutional determination that has turned Qatar into the Switzerland of the Middle East. During the war in Afghanistan, it became the safe haven headquarters of the Taliban leadership. As a result, it was also where negotiations were held to end the war.

But that is not all, in September Qatari diplomats helped negotiate the release of Elizabeth Tsurkov, an Israeli-Russian researcher held captive for two years by Iraqi militia. They also brokered talks between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, which culminated in a peace deal in June.

Qatari’s peace-making efforts are not confined to the Middle East and Africa. They are also mediating between the Colombian government and the drug gang Clan del Golfo. So, Trump, look out, Qatar is coming up fast on the inside track.

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Observations of an expat: The shutdown

As the US government shutdown enters its fifth week it is a bad time to be an American and a federal employee; need help with food bills; need to travel by plane; need to buy drugs; have to pay health insurance; require Medicare, require Medicaid, be resident in a care home or be in the military or require help with heating bills.

As just about every American is in some way affected by at least one of the above factors, it is fair to say, that it is a bad time to be an American.

The government shutdown is the cause of the current round of American headaches. And the cause of the government shutdown is the Democratic Party’s intense dislike of Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill.

They don’t like the bill’s tax cuts for the wealthy or for corporations. But their biggest gripe is what the One Big Beautiful Bill will do to the health of the nation. It will effectively emasculate Obamacare, put up health insurance premiums by as much as 100 percent, deny Medicaid and Medicare benefits to millions and raise drug charges.

The White House said pass the budget and then negotiations can be held about the health situation. The Democrats don’t trust Trump to hold meaningful talks after he gets what he wants.

So, they have refused to pass the budget and the federal government entered its 22nd shutdown since 1976. This one looks like it will break the record of 35 days. That was set in the first Trump presidency over a dispute for funding for a wall on the southern border.

The president appears unconcerned about the shutdown. In the middle of it he took off for a tour of Asia. The Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson, is helping to stretch it out by refusing to recall Congress. Russell Vought, Director of the Office of Management Budget (OMB), is using the shutdown to fire tens of thousands of federal employees. Trump has also said that federal employees who work for nothing during the shutdown will not receive back pay when the shutdown is over.

In the meantime, this weekend, the government’s food assistance programme (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Programme or SNAP) will run out of money. An estimated 25 million Americans receive help from SNAP to pay their food bills.

Another six million Americans receive federal assistance with their heating bills under the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Programme. As the cold weather sets in, those payments will stop.

Air traffic controllers are classified “essential workers” which means that they have to turn up for work whether there is any money to pay them or not. They have been working for zero pay for a month and many of them are calling in sick in order to support their families by working part-time at other jobs that pay them. Transport Secretary Sean Duffy has said that any air traffic controller who fails to turn up for work will be fired. In the meantime there is chaos in American airports with delays and cancellations.

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British Muslims need Liberal Democrat allies now more than ever

As one of the first Muslim women elected to the London Assembly, I’m proud to represent one of the most diverse cities in the world. But that pride comes with a price. Frequently, I receive Islamophobic abuse and threats online simply for existing as a Muslim in public life.

When I first stood for election, I knew I’d face racism and misogyny – that was just the reality for people who look like me. I told myself I’d need thick skin and I promised myself I wouldn’t let it get to me.

But lately, I have to admit: it has got to me. It got to me when I did a post about my local mosque being attacked for the second time in as many months but was met with a torrent stream of hate instead of support or sympathy.

And it doesn’t stop online. Strangers have told me to my face that “all Muslims should die” or that I should “go home.” Each incident adds to the unease that has become a constant companion for so many Muslims in Britain.

For those who aren’t Muslim – or perceived to be – it’s hard to explain just how relentless and everyday the abuse has become. The numbers tell part of the story: Home Office data shows a 19% rise in hate crimes against Muslims just over the past year. Tell MAMA, which monitors Islamophobic incidents, reports a sharp escalation in attacks on people and places of worship in recent months. But the data can’t capture what it feels like – the anxiety that gnaws at you every time you step outside or open your phone.

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ALDC’s by-election report 30 October 2025

4 parallel white vertical lines on orange background ALDC logoThis week, there was six by-elections, of which we were attempting to defend one.

In Bromsgrove, congratulations to Councillor Sam Ammar and the local Liberal Democrat team, who were able to successfully gain this seat off Reform UK. This was a decisive victory for us, with an over 20% vote share increase compared to this May’s election.

Worcestershire County Council, Bromsgrove South
Liberal Democrats (Sam Ammar): 1,416 (51.9%, +20.3)
Reform UK: 911 (33.4%, -1.5)
Conservative: 309 (11.3%, -5.8)
Labour: 92 (3.4%, -4.1)

Liberal Democrats GAIN from Reform UK

Turnout: 30.3%

Congratulations are also due to Councillor Ukonu Obasi and the Tunbridge Wells Liberal Democrat team, who successfully defended this district seat with a resounding victory. Meanwhile, the Greens and Reform UK were competing for a distant second place, with the latter ultimately ahead.

Tunbridge Wells Borough Council, St John’s
Liberal Democrats (Ukonu Obasi): 629 (53.3%, +2.1)
Reform UK: 177 (15.0%, -1.2)
Green Party: 160 (13.5%, +6.3)
Tunbridge Wells Alliance: 105 (8.9%, +4.8)
Conservative: 90 (7.6%, -3.6)
Independents for Tunbridge Wells: 20 (1.7%, -0.1)

Liberal Democrats HOLD

Turnout: 28.4%

In Stevenage, Reform UK were able to gain a seat off Labour, who came in a distant second place. Thank you to Nigel Bye and the local team for flying the Liberal Democrat flag.

Stevenage Borough Council, Roebuck
Reform UK: 513 (39.2%, new)
Labour: 353 (26.9%, -12.4)
Conservative: 157 (12.0%, -11.4)
Liberal Democrats (Nigel Bye): 148 (11.3%, -5.5)
Green Party: 139 (10.6%, -4.9)

Reform UK GAIN from Labour

Turnout: 25.83%

In Kent, Reform UK were able to gain a seat, with the defending Thanet Independents not standing a candidate. Thank you to Matthew Brown and the local team for flying the Liberal Democrat flag.

Thanet District Council, Garlinge
Reform UK: 348 (44.6%, new)
Conservative: 250 (32.0%, +10.6)
Labour: 62 (7.9%, -12.3)
Green Party: 61 (7.8%, -1.3)
Liberal Democrats (Matthew Brown): 36 (4.6%, new)
Independent: 24 (3.1%, new)

Reform UK GAIN from Thanet Independents

Turnout: 21%

In Scotland, the SNP were able to gain their first seat of this local electoral cycle, with the defending Conservatives in fourth place on first preferences. Thank you to Willie Galloway and the local team for flying the Liberal Democrat flag.

Stirling Council, Stirling East
First Preferences:
SNP: 808 (36.4%, +1.8)
Labour: 530 (23.9%, -1.7)
Reform UK: 517 (23.3%, +9.2)
Conservative: 147 (6.6%, -5.6)
Green Party: 141 (6.3%, +1.3)
Liberal Democrats (Willie Galloway): 79 (3.6%, +0.6)

SNP GAIN from Conservative
Elected at Stage 6

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We need to talk about the end of life

We need to talk about how the UK supports its growing number of older people, and in particular about the end of life. One of the many weaknesses of British politics is that its structure does not make it easy to link related issues, But the age of retirement, pensions for the elderly, the rising proportion of the NHS budget spent on those over 70, the cost of drugs, social care, palliative care, and the debate over assisted dying, are all interlinked – above all by the pressures they all put (now and potentially) on the UK budget.

The problem of providing and funding long-term care for the elderly was grasped by (Liberal Democrat minister) Stephen Williams during the coalition government, but weakly supported by Conservatives and opposed by the Labour opposition.

Theresa May as Prime Minister tried again to address the balance between private and public funding of long-term care, only for Labour to attack it as a ‘Death Tax.’ Since then care provision has drifted and costs have risen. The dominance of the private sector has grown as many cash-strapped local authorities have sold off their care homes, as charities have retreated from the sector and private equity has bought into it – driving up what Councils have to pay and holding down carers’ wages. Enterprising private providers have built retirement villages and apartment blocks for the well-to-do, but there is little new provision for poorer retirees. Local Council budgets are now weighed down by social care costs to the exclusion of other needs.

Right-wing attacks on the size of Britain’s welfare budget have omitted to mention that nearly 60% of welfare spending now goes on pensions: 8% of GDP, up from 2% after World War 2 as life expectancy has risen. When Lloyd George introduced old-age pensions, less than half the population lived long enough to benefit. Many of us now draw our pensions for 25 years or more, and medical advances will continue to lengthen life expectancy (and increase what the NHS spends on elderly people).

Liberal Democrats in the coalition government were proud of our commitment to the ‘triple lock’ on pensions. 15 years of pensions rising faster than inflation have shrunk pensioner poverty and enriched those also benefitting from post-employment pensions (like me). The case for ending the triple lock is strong – although the temptation for opposition parties to oppose the government doing so may still be stronger. The case for increasing taxes on better-off pensioners is even stronger; we benefit from a range of financial concessions but pay a lower rate of taxation than those in employment – because we no longer pay national insurance. But there’s little chance that Reform and the Conservatives, the parties of older people, would accept the logic of any increase, faced with the wrath that the Mail and the Telegraph would unleash.

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Vote for a megaphone president to challenge populism

Editor’s Note: In November party members will be voting to elect our next Party President. At Lib Dem Voice we welcome posts from each of the candidates – one to launch their candidature plus a maximum of one per week during the actual campaign.

Friends, this week ballot papers have been sent out and are landing on (digital) doormats. Our members will choose our next Party President, and members of the federal committees.

Since launching my campaign to be our next Party President I’ve been clear that ensuring the Liberal Democrats are the first and last line of defence against the rising tides of populism and nationalism must be the top priority for the next President.

At this point in our country’s history, and at this point in our party’s story, we need a campaigning President committed to taking on this external threat. 

Regrettably, in recent weeks especially, we’ve seen exactly why this matters so much. 

When Reform MP Sarah Pochin exclaimed that she is ‘driven mad’ by the sight of Black and Asian people in TV adverts, I spoke out, publicly condemning her textbook racism and making clear that racist comments have no place in our society.

Our movement must always lead with courage, compassion and conviction. We must show that liberalism is not just something we say, but something we do, even when it might be intimidating.

That’s the approach I’ve tried to show throughout this campaign: standing up for our values, challenging injustice, and collaborating across our movement. Working with my fellow presidential candidate to stand up for the rights of our trans and non-binary members following the changes to quota rules this week is the most recent example of that. 

Since launching my campaign, I’ve travelled the length and breadth of Britain meeting swathes of members in person, online and at Federal, Scottish and Welsh Conferences. 

I’ve been inspired meeting our council leaders, hearing about how we are delivering for residents in their patches, and seen the courageous fight our teams are putting up in places like West Northamptonshire where we are challenging the Reform council day-in-day-out. 

I’ve listened to these experiences. I’ve heard some frustrations about what support is currently missing and, more positively, about our hopes for our future. 

I am inspired by our collective determination to make our party stronger, more representative and more ambitious than ever.

To deliver on that shared ambition, I’ll focus on five priorities:

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We get the Royals we can’t vote for

So, Prince Andrew is to be “stripped of his titles.” How satisfying. How symbolic. How utterly pointless.

We can all share a brief moment of catharsis — the monarchy wagging a disapproving finger at one of its own. A round of headlines, a flurry of official statements, a sense of something being done. And yet, what has actually changed? Andrew remains, by sheer accident of birth, a prince. We can shuffle around the titles, hide him from the balcony, pretend he’s no longer “His Royal Highness”. And beneath it all lies the more uncomfortable truth: these gestures exist to fill the space where justice should have been. There’s been no prosecution, no accountability — only the pageantry of consequence.

The truth is as embarrassing as it is simple: we get the royals we can’t vote for. Every time we let the institution roll on, unquestioned, we endorse it. Every time we accept that someone’s birth entitles them to constitutional privilege, we sign off on the next scandal, the next “slimming down” that changes absolutely nothing.

As Liberals, we should have no truck with inherited power. It’s indefensible that a 21st-century democracy still clings to a family business masquerading as a constitutional necessity. If we genuinely believe in equality, accountability, and merit, then the monarchy isn’t an eccentric quirk — it’s an insult.

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Liberalism, living our values and quotas

Liberalism means you can do what you want as long as you don’t limit others’ freedoms. That’s why I have written to the party leadership asking them to step into the quota debate for the Federal Elections. Even if only a few party members are affected, making people register to stand for election by a gender they don’t identify with is wrong. It goes against our core values and must not happen.

Setting quotas in the way proposed may satisfy one group but harm another group’s basic rights, indeed the new interpretation forces quotas to work in the opposite way to what was intended. Until the law changes, which I hope our leadership will support, we shouldn’t allow this.

Denying gender reassignment and self-determination breaks the liberal values many of us stand for. Our party has fought for true equality, and abandoning these principles is deeply wrong. Just weeks after honouring a trans woman with the Patsy Calton award, treating her as a man in internal elections is cruel and must be changed if we want to keep calling ourselves Liberal.

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Joint statement from Josh Babarinde and Prue Bray on diversity quotas

Presidential candidates Prue Bray and Josh Babarinde have issued a joint statement on the changes to diversity quotas which we are reproducing in full below.

Both of us are deeply concerned by the impact of the changes to diversity quotas for the Liberal Democrats internal Federal Elections that was made on 27th October, the day before voting opened.

We have spoken with countless members who are similarly outraged at the unacceptable consequences of this decision on the dignity of trans and non-binary members of the Liberal Democrats.

Together, as Presidential candidates, we have been urgently working with party colleagues to help find a way forward – within the law and within the constitution – while recognising that options are limited and the road ahead is long.

To move forward, it is essential firstly that the legal basis on which the decision was made was clear and that the art of the legally and constitutionally possible and impossible is also clarified.

Having made this representation on behalf of members, we are able to report that the party has agreed to our request to facilitate a meeting between the King’s Counsel who issued the legal advice in question, and 1 representative of each of the AOs represented on the Federal People and Development Committee (Lib Dem Women, LGBT+ Liberal Democrats, the Lib Dem Campaign for Race Equality, the Lib Dem Disability Association, the Young Liberals).

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Prue Bray writes: My presidential pitch

Editor’s Note: In November party members will be voting to elect our next Party President. At Lib Dem Voice we welcome posts from each of the candidates – one to launch their candidature plus a maximum of one per week during the actual campaign.

Anyone who has attended a hustings, read our manifestos, looked at our websites (mine is https://prue4president.co.uk/ ) or has otherwise been following the internal federal Presidential election, will know by now that my vision for the role includes a significant focus on promoting more collaborative working more consultation, more co-operation, and more constructive engagement across the party.   

To some people those might seem soft and woolly and “nice to have”.   They are in fact crucially important for the future success of the party.   We are good at campaigning and in recent years, we have been good at winning elections.  But we could do so much better if we were all collectively pulling together in the same direction.   And that is not always the case.

In my view that is what the job of the President is about: getting the party into the best shape it can be to support campaigning.  In our enthusiasm for the politics and the campaigning, we sometimes forget that we are a multi-million pound organisation that has to be run properly and effectively so that the politics and the campaigning can also be effective.

The reason I am standing for President is that on too many occasions I have seen the negative impacts of failing to collaborate, failing to consult, failing to co-operate and failing to engage.  It holds us back, it makes us less effective, and it sometimes causes massive upsets. And one of those has happened this week.

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