The Lib Dems are finished – time to focus on the Tories

December 10, 2010 12:41 pm

Lib Dem BirdBy Mark Ferguson / @markfergusonuk

The Liberal Democrats are dead. Finished. Their death warrant was signed at 17.41 yesterday evening. As long as they continue down the path they are on they will consign themselves to history as a national party. They were at 8% in the polls before so many of their number (and all of their “leading lights”) broke their pre-election pledges. The only way is down for the Liberal Democrats.

It is easy to crow at their demise. At LabourList we’ve often predicted their demise. Many of you have used these pages to pour scorn on a party which has often attacked Labour from the left, and now helps to govern the country from the right.

But there is another party in government, and that us the beast we have to slay if we wish to return to government. Even if Labour were to win all Lib Dem seats at the next election (which we won’t), we still need to win Tory seats to regain power.

Much has been made of broken promises from Clegg and Cable, but this has let the Tories off the hook. Cameron has been guilty of breaking a crucial promise, saying that he wouldn’t make frontline cuts before doing just that. Andrew Lansley said there would be no more pointless reorganisations of the NHS – before he handed 80% of NHS funding to GPs.

What we need to do now is turn these broken promises against the Tories in the same way that Clegg’s broken promises have been turned against the Lib Dems.

Of course it’s much easier to attack the Lib Dems – and certainly more fun – but as Ed Balls points out in Tribune today, this simply lets the Tories off the hook.

So let’s ignore the Lib Dems. They have self-destructed and are no longer our concern. We have four and a half years to beat the Tories – that’s the fight we must win.

Comments are closed

Latest

  • Comment Housing upheaval can be traced back to Thatcher

    Housing upheaval can be traced back to Thatcher

    If further evidence was needed that the Government is destroying our communities then it came by the bucket load with proposals to relocate hundreds of housing benefit claimants. Councils across London desperately searched for a solution to the housing benefit cap that made it impossible for some of the capital’s poorest residents to stay in their homes. First we heard of plans to move residents to Darlington, Stoke, Hull and parts of Yorkshire. But the revelation that Westminster Council planned [...]

    Read more →
  • Featured The austerity consensus has collapsed

    The austerity consensus has collapsed

    There is no alternative: the only way out of Britain’s current economic plight is massive cuts to public spending. Taxes on the wealthiest must be slashed: they are blocks on aspiration and economically counterproductive. Austerity is the only game in town. Or so we have been told ever since the Coalition was formed in the rose gardens of Number 10 Downing Street. The overwhelming majority of the media has gladly reinforced the Government line, and those voices calling for an [...]

    Read more →
  • Comment Should Labour go further on football reform?

    Should Labour go further on football reform?

    “As a party, Labour should take great pride in the fact that we initiated Supporters Direct, but now is the time to go further.” These sentiments, expressed in a recent article for Progress by Steve Rotheram MP, hark back to a time where the landscape was somewhat different for the Labour party, but similar in many ways to that faced by football supporters in 2012. The Football Taskforce was established soon after Labour came to power in 1997, with the [...]

    Read more →
  • Comment Making Labour Policy: Who calls the tune?

    Making Labour Policy: Who calls the tune?

    Excellent election results and rising polls have brought a mood of unity and created space and time for serious work on policy. Francois Hollande’s victory shows that austerity is not the only option, and Labour must start to develop an alternative agenda, rejecting the Tory politics of resentment and division in favour of policies which are fair, principled and credible: on housing, crime, transport, health, schools, higher education, manufacturing, tax, defence, social care, equality, employment rights and the environment. We [...]

    Read more →
  • News It’s the budget what won it…

    It’s the budget what won it…

    Why did Labour win the 2010 local elections so convincingly? It’s the budget right? This graph of polling from TNS BMRB certainly suggests that. Labour’s slim lead extends rapidly following the budget (highlighted) – and current stands at 12 points (42/30). And as for why Labour did better in 2012 compared to the 2011 elections – just compare May and May 2012. A year is a long time in politics…

    Read more →