Category Archives: Announcement

SLF welcomes cancellation of ‘Coalition 2.0′

The Social Liberal Forum welcomes confirmation in the Independent on Sunday that there will be no new fixed coalition agreement for the second half of this parliament.

There is a lot more work to do on several bills currently passing through parliament – some of which, such as the Health and Social Care Bill, contain elements that we continue to find worrying. Others, for example implementation of the Vickers recommendations on banking, will require a concerted effort to pass into law. Now is not the time to plan a new raft of legislation. 

The original Coalition Agreement was an impressive document, containing many elements of a Social Liberal agenda for government and demonstrating the benefits of compromise – both for Liberal Democrats and for the country. 

However, it would not be appropriate to agree another full programme at this stage. Rather, we would like to see Conservatives and Liberal Democrats proposing their own ideas separately – as Nick Clegg did last week, with his welcome call for a further and faster rise in the income tax threshold. The two parties can then show how coalition works, positively, by examining each other’s ideas on their merits. We will support progressive social liberal measures, wherever they come from – and continue to oppose all measures that would widen the gap between rich and poor.

We believe that Social Liberal ideas are strong enough to attract consensus across government – and indeed across parliament – and we will continue to argue for them.

Ian Swales MP to be guest speaker at SLF North East meeting

Following a successful first meeting before Christmas, the Social Liberal Forum North East branch are delighted to be welcoming Ian Swales, MP for Redcar, as guest speaker at their next meeting.

The meeting will take place on Friday 10th February from 6.30pm until 7.45pm at Gateshead Civic Centre. All North East Liberal Democrat members are welcome to join us to discuss with Ian how the party can maintain our distinctive identity within the Coalition Government.

Gateshead Civic Centre is easily reached by car or public transport. There’s ample car parking on site, and the civic centre is just five minutes walk from Gateshead Metro Station. Full directions can be downloaded here: http://www.gateshead.gov.uk/DocumentLibrary/howtogettogateshead.pdf

More details from Brian Robson – brianrobson@hotmail.co.uk or 07949 297 030.

Nick Clegg rightly calls for the tax system to be made fairer

Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg told the Resolution Foundation today that Liberal Democrats will seek to aid those on low and middle incomes by raising the personal income tax threshold further and faster than previously assumed.

Already a significant example of Lib Dems securing fairness through tax reform, the Coalition Agreement set out the Government’s intention to make the first £10,000 of income exempt from tax by 2015. Given the continued squeeze on wages that puts family finances on ‘boiling point,’ Nick clearly set out how he would like the Coalition to lift the threshold sooner, asking “do you support a tax system that rewards the hard-working many? Or do you back taxes that favour the wealthy few?”

In a key passage of the speech, Nick linked the raising of the threshold with ensuring that those at the top of the income scale continue to pay their fair share.

With those at the top claiming the reliefs, enjoying the allowances, hiring other people to find the loopholes, while everyone else pays through the nose. So the Coalition is calling time on our unfair and out-of-whack tax system. We’ve put up Capital Gains Tax, ending the scandal of a hedge fund manager paying less on their shares than their cleaner paid on their wages. We’ve reduced tax breaks on pension funds for the very rich. We’ve clamped down on avoidance and taken steps to raise an extra £7bn through closing the tax gap.

These achievements to date may not be sufficient to fund the raising of the income tax threshold to £10,000, so Nick set out further ways in which the Coalition could rebalance the tax system – including the introduction of a General Anti-Avoidance Rule, and wealth taxes to make sure assets are fairly taxed.

The Social Liberal Forum welcomes moves to alleviate the squeeze on living standards that the Resolution Foundation recently highlighted. While the economic recovery remains fragile and the cost of living rises faster than incomes, we need a fairer tax system that reflects peoples’ ability to pay. As part of the radical changes needed to deliver the fairer economic settlement that Liberal Democrats seek to implement in government, we will continue to press for measures that make the tax system simpler, more transparent and fairer.

Liberal Democrats should continue to debate whether to support the Health and Social Care Bill

Despite the welcome and significant changes to the Health & Social Care Bill that Lib Dem parliamentarians have secured, there remain serious concerns both within the party, Parliament and the medical profession about the impact and timing of the reforms.

As the House of Lords prepares for report stage, it is right and proper for the party, from grassroots to leadership, to debate whether the damaging elements of the Bill have been sufficiently tamed, and whether further amendments can be sought in the Lords, to bring the reforms back in line with the Coalition Agreement and party policy as determined at spring conference last year.

The party needs to debate whether in the absence of such further changes, and considering the substantial changes already underway on the NHS front-line, the Bill can retain Lib Dem support – the Social Liberal Forum will continue to support the likes of Graham Winyard, Charles West, Evan Harris and Shirley Williams as they seek to secure that debate.

for further information, please contact prateek.buch@socialliberal.net

First meeting of East Midlands Social Liberal Forum

The first meeting of the newly-formed East Midlands branch of the Social Liberal Forum will take place on Saturday, December 3rd, 2011, at the Leicester Secular Society building, on Humberstone Gate in the city, starting at 7pm.

This first meeting will be informal and will seek to set out what the aims are for the regional branch, how we can further Social Liberal values/policies in our region and feed into the national organisation and the regional and federal parties, we’ll also hopefully have one or two speakers and be inviting people to become involved with East Midlands SLF (we’ll be looking in the first few meetings to form a steering group of around eight people, from across the region.)

Regional Organiser, Mathew Hulbert, says: “I’m really excited that we’ve been able to arrange our first meeting and hope to see a good number of SLF members/supporters from across the region coming along and getting involved.”

He went on, “Socially Liberal values have never been more needed, as we seek to balance our role in Coalition Government with the Conservatives with the need to ensure we remain a radical and progressive party, with socially liberal principles as our core foundation.”

Anyone wanting more information can contact Mathew via: mathew@barwell.eu (just the one ‘t’) or via Twitter: @mathewhulbert

SLF North East to hold first meeting

Following a successful recruitment drive at the recent regional conference, the Social Liberal Forum’s branch in the North East will be holding their first meeting on Thursday 1st December 2011. Dr David Hall-Matthews, the Chair of the Social Liberal Forum, will be the guest speaker.

The meeting will take place from 7.30pm until 9pm in the Whickham Room at Gateshead Civic Centre. All North East Liberal Democrat members are very welcome to join us to discuss how we can create an SLF Branch in the North East which will champion the social liberal values we hold dear.

Gateshead Civic Centre is easily reached by car or public transport. There’s ample car parking on site, and the civic centre is just five minutes walk from Gateshead Metro Station. Full directions can be downloaded here:

http://www.gateshead.gov.uk/DocumentLibrary/howtogettogateshead.pdf

More details from Brian Robson – brianrobson@hotmail.co.uk or 07949 297 030.

Returning to the fold

By James Graham

I am delighted to announce that, as of this week, I am coming back to the fold of the Social Liberal Forum as its Head of Political Strategy.

For those who don’t know, alongside Richard Grayson and Matthew Sowemimo, I was part of the original troika which set up the SLF and served on its executive until September last year when I resigned to focus on my day job.

If I’ve been a little hesitant to come back, it has been because I’ve been so impressed with what the SLF has achieved over the past year due to the sterling efforts of the team which Mark Blackburn, David Hall-Matthews and Evan Harris built around them. SLF has ten times the members it had when I left, has held a successful conference, has lead a high profile campaign (on the NHS), has branches in most regions around the country and has just orchestrated its most ambitious conference programme yet. For a team of unpaid volunteers, that’s impressive work. I don’t mind admitting that the prospect of living up to that record is quite daunting. Thankfully, SLF team isn’t going anywhere.

What I’ll be focusing on over the next few months is developing our political strategy with a view of ensuring that we get balance right between reacting to events and setting the agenda. For a small group of volunteers, this is quite challenging. The SLF Council had a very productive meeting this weekend in which we went through all the top policy areas we need to be working on; it should surprise no-one to learn that the list is much longer than we can ever hope to achieve. We are going to have to pick our issues carefully to avoid getting lost.

Top of our list however was the economy. Prateek Buch has already done sterling work on what he calls our “Plan C” (and what Vince Cable prefers to call Plan A-Plus). Regardless of your view about the coalition’s macroeconomic policy, the fact remains that the global situation is much worse than it looked a year ago. There is no shame in admitting that many parts of it are worth revisiting.

Compass and a group of other organisations has just unveiled its “Plan B“. The SLF is not a part of that coalition, but we very much welcome the debate we hope it will kickstart and intend to participate in it.

One thing that won’t be changing is the SLF’s support for the coalition – and in particular the coalition agreement. That doesn’t mean we won’t be critical of the government, especially when (as in the case of NHS reform) it intends to go down a path that the two parties did not agree on during the coalition talks. But it does mean we will be forthright in our support for the Lib Dems’ decision to enter the coalition, and we will be sympathetic to the dilemmas that coalition inevitably puts our parliamentarians in.

It is a challenging time and the Lib Dems have an absolutely crucial role in keeping the Tory hard right at bay and negotiating a viable alternative. What is clear is that Labour currently have nothing to offer. On health, they have been ineffectual – it is nothing short of a national scandal that Ed Miliband kept an underperforming John Healey in place for as long as he did – and on the economy they have not fared much better. But that should be a matter of regret; a strong opposition is crucial for accountable government. Labour’s drift towards authoritarian populism over the past year has ultimately only helped the Tory right in blocking much needed reforms on civil liberties and the constitution. That is a shameful record for a party leader who stood on a platform of making the Labour Party more liberal.

It is clear that a robust social liberal voice has never been more important. We’d be very interested to hear what you think we should be focusing on; please leave your comments below.

Fundamentally though, we need your generosity if we are going to step up our activities over the next year. Please give what you can afford by following this link.

Majority of conference calls for detailed debate on the Health Bill

An attempt to suspend standing orders and allow an emergency motion on the Health and Social Care Bill was approved by a majority of conference representatives but failed to get the two-thirds majority needed (235 voted to suspend standing orders against 183 who opposed it).  Commenting on the vote, Chair of the Social Liberal Forum Dr David Hall-Matthews said:

“Despite the steer to leave the agenda as it is, a clear majority of conference representatives voted to ensure that health was properly debated.  We regret that the motion will not be debated but feel that we have made our point.

“This wasn’t just a debate about the future of the NHS; it was about the health of our party’s democracy.  We cannot allow party policy to be dictated by government.

“It is clear from the mood at conference that the party still has deep concerns about the Health and Social Care Bill.  In the interests of party unity, it is crucial that the leadership and members of the House of Lords listen carefully and respond positively as the legislation enters the final stages of its passage through parliament.”

Vice Chair of the Liberal Democrats’ Federal Policy Committee Dr Evan Harris added:

“I am confident that the widespread concern about the health bill in its current form will come across when it is discussed at conference later this week.”

North West SLF launched

Following a brief recent history of the national Social Liberal Forum from Kat Dadswell, John Commons, the Chair of the Manchester party, spoke on why he felt that Social Liberalism and by extension the Social Liberal Forum were particularly needed in the North West region. Former MP for Rochdale Paul Rowen made the point that we shouldn’t be made to feel that opposing Conservative policies is a bad thing – we need to be on the side of our neighbours and residents in the North West.

John Leech MP (Manchester Withington) then gave us his views firstly on what a step forward it is for people from all over the region to come together in this way to discuss policy for a change! A number of members suggested we back John Leech’s soon to be proposed EDM on asking the treasury to look at ways to peg the tax threshold to the minimum wage – no one would pay tax unless they earn at least the minimum wage. John has been speaking to Vince about the matter.

John Leech also spoke on a number of issues where he felt that Lib Dem MPs would like to be able to push the Conservatives more on. On the matter of the government’s welfare reform plans, he said members should operate a “tough love” policy with our MPs, both through members’ lobbying and through conference holding the MPs and the leadership to account and showing exactly what the party expects of its MPs. “The more pressure we bring at conference, the better we can make things in Parliament.”

A steering committee of 10 members was elected, including members from all over the region. The NW branch of the SLF hope to meet every other month somewhere in the region and will be meeting next in October in Preston, details to follow.

Social Liberal Forum (Scotland) Meeting in Glasgow on 25 June

Following our successful fringe meeting at the Scottish Spring Conference in Perth, the Social Liberal Forum (Scotland) will hold a further meeting in Glasgow. The venue is Room 9 in Partick Burgh Hall, from 10.30am to 12.30pm on Saturday 25 June. The meeting will be open to all card-carrying Liberal Democrats but we obviously hope that a high percentage of SLF members will attend.

The aim of the meeting is to canvass opinion as to how best to progress social liberal objectives within the Scottish Party.

The agenda is not yet fixed and further details and a venue map will be notified later; however I am able to confirm that we have secured Robert Brown as a speaker. Robert has served the Scottish Parliament as Convenor of the Education Committee and as Deputy Minister for Education and Young People. He was Liberal Democrat Spokesperson on Justice in the past Parliament.

There will be no charge for attendance but you may find a bucket collection is taken!

Please contact me if you have any queries.

Norman Fraser
Interim Secretary
The Social Liberal Forum (Scotland)

Tel: 0141-946-4102

Email: norman.fraser@tiscali.co.uk