Monthly Archives: November 2009

Social Liberal Forum Newsletter

Sorry we’ve been quiet for the last few weeks – for reasons that will become apparent below.  We had a tremendously successful conference season and would like to welcome everyone who signed up to this newsletter at one or other of our fringe meetings.

CONTINUITY AND CHANGE

The Social Liberal Forum executive has undergone some significant changes over the past couple of months.  Sadly, Richard Grayson and Alison Goldsworthy have resigned from the executive.  Alison has had to leave due to other work commitments while Richard is working hard on the party’s Federal Policy Committee and Manifesto Working Group.  We wish them both the best of luck and would like to take this opportunity to thank them for helping to get the SLF on its feet during its first few months.

The remaining executive members – Director Matthew Sowemimo and Secretary James Graham – are being joined by David Hall-Matthews and Peter Kunzmann.  David is a respected academic and a former Lib Dem candidate (Leeds North West, 2001) who readers of Reinventing The State may recall contributed a chapter on international development.  He takes over from Richard as the Chair of the organisation.  Peter has worked for the party and a number of MPs over the years and has a special interest in using public policy to promote happiness.

The one thing our change in personel has highlighted is the need for the SLF to get itself on a firmer democratic footing.  This has always been part of our plans after the general election, but we have decided to bring these forward.  Watch this space for more information.

MANIFESTO PRIORITIES

The new Social Liberal Forum executive has published a joint statement on what we see are the key priorities for the next Liberal Democrat manifesto.  These include:

  • A firm commitment to reduce income inequality over the course of the next Parliament;
  • The richest in society should take a greater part of the strain in reducing the budget deficit and we should present ourselves as the party of fair, redistributive taxation;
  • A low carbon economy and a global climate change agreement based on the principles of contraction and convergence;
  • Youth unemployment should be another priority – the party is right to stick with its commitment to scrap tuition fees.

The full statement can be found here.

SOCIAL NETWORK

Many thanks to the dozens of you who have joined our Social Network over the past few weeks.  If you have not done so already, please do: http://socialliberal.ning.com/

Although only early days yet, this Social Network is set to be crucial tool for coordinating our activities.  Please join so we can keep you better in touch.

Cheers,

James Graham
Social Liberal Forum

Bookmark and Share

Manifesto Priorities – A Statement from the Social Liberal Forum Executive

As the Liberal Democrats move towards finalizing the party’s manifesto, The Social Liberal Forum sets out the key principles that we believe should be the basis for formulating tax policy and spending commitments:

  • The party should commit itself to the goal of reducing income inequality over the next parliament. Proposals to reduce public spending should be assessed in terms of whether they further that objective.
  • Tax increases for the richest members of society should take the greater part of the strain in reducing the budget deficit in order to protect vulnerable users of public services, like housing, health services and social care. In 1993 the Clinton Administration faced with a big structural budget deficit expressly chose to use tax increases rather than spending cuts as the major means of deficit reduction.
  • We should be the party of fair, redistributive taxation. We welcome the proposal to include a 0.5% property tax on mansions over £1 million and see this as an addition to our reconfirmed policy of replacing the Council Tax and replacing it with a Local Income Tax.
  • Immediate action to further the transition to a sustainable, low carbon economy is essential and this goal should substantially influence tax and spending policies. A global climate change agreement should be based on the principles of contraction and convergence.
  • Reducing youth unemployment should be another priority for the next government. Academic evidence has shown that youth unemployment generates serious losses in lifetime earnings that can persist up to twenty years after a period of unemployment. In the last two recessions large numbers of people out of work for long periods became stigmatized, depressed and hard to place – a phenomenon known as ‘scarring.’
  • The abolition of tuition fees is important so that students from working class communities do not face the re-imposition of barriers at university level. Our policy on fees has been reaffirmed at the Harrogate Conference and by FPC. The policy is right and is popular.

We believe applying the principles outlined above to policy development would make a reality of calls for progressive austerity.

The Social Liberal Forum Executive

Bookmark and Share