A welcome promised in Hastings for disgruntled Lib Dem voters
August 30th, 2010 at 11:45 pm by andrewAndrew Grice writes in the Inependent:
Ed Miliband has much more than winning the Labour leadership in his sights. He is convinced he can complete the first realignment in British politics since the Social Democratic Party of David Owen and Roy Jenkins left Labour in 1981.
“There is a progressive majority in this country; we did not secure enough of it at this year’s election,” he told The Independent. “I am uniquely well placed to heal the split there was in 1981 with the SDP, and win back people from the Liberal Democrats to Labour.
“We have seen half of a realignment of politics, with what Cameron has done with Clegg. The other half can happen with me as Labour leader, because I think I can offer a home to former Liberal Democrats and bring together a social democratic economic policy, redistribution, greater equality and putting individual liberty at the centre of who we are.”
Why is he so well qualified? Because he shares the Liberal Democrats’ agenda on civil liberties, ID cards, the detention of terrorist suspects without charge and university tuition fees, he replies. “The Liberal Democrats are on a journey. Clegg is taking them in a direction a lot of Lib Dem supporters are deeply dismayed about,” he said.
“I offer a home for Liberal Democrat voters in which they don’t have to trade abolition of ID cards for a reactionary assault on the welfare state, and they can be true to their values on both civil liberties and economic policy.”
Meanwhile Nicholas Watt, writing in the Guardian, reports David Miliband’s somewhat ambiguous comments on Labour’s ID card policy:
David Miliband makes it clear that Labour has to reassemble the coalition that handed Blair his victories. In an interview with G2, which took place during a tour of community groups in Milton Keynes and Stevenage, he says: “Unless we start winning back the Milton Keynes, we’ll never win power. We’ve got just 10 seats out of 212 in the south, excluding London.”
He makes clear he has no patience with his brother’s criticism of the governments of Blair and Gordon Brown. “I’m not going to run away from the best of what we’ve done over the last 13 years and I’m not going to reduce our crime policy to ID cards, or reduce our foreign policy to Iraq. We did lots of other things as well. We shouldn’t get into a situation where just because we find one thing people disagree with, we trash the whole of it.”