You'd think that putting the day's piece to bed after 11.30 p.m. should cover everything. But no, the Press Teams both in London and Cardiff had one last shot in the dying moments of yesterday, so I'm including them with today's batch. Enjoy... Theresa May Must Give the People the Final Say – Welsh Lib Dems PM must now change course and offer people the final say Soaring numbers of children trapped in temporary accommodation is shameful Welsh Lib Dems Welcome Prostate Cancer MRI Scans Govt must set out plans to avoid NHS winter crisis Lib Dems demand MPs holidays ...

Posted by Mark Valladares on Liberal Democrat Voice

Here she is, as acted by Monica Dolan and written by Russell T. Davies, in A Very English Scandal: "Jeremy, I'm not a fool. I practically grew up with Benjamin Britten. I've seen something of the world. I fled from Hitler, for God's sake. My own son married a hippie in a yurt. And I've toured with orchestras—I couldn't begin to tell you the things I've seen. So there's no need to protect me."The award is made by Alex Ross.

Posted by Jonathan Calder on Liberal England
Thu 13th
20:45

Six of the Best 836

"What is clear is that Theresa May's deal is dead. What is not clear is whether any deal exists that can pass through parliament." Martin Veart on the latest Brexit developments. Janette Martin says the collections held at the University of Manchester Library deepen our understanding of Peterloo and its cultural impact on the city of Manchester. Stephen Kotkin revisits Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn: "On this centenary of his birth, and tenth anniversary of his passing, we can see that Solzhenitsyn was dead-on about the soul-crushing Soviet system, from a moral and not just a political point of view, and to a ...

Posted by Jonathan Calder on Liberal England

Just published - eFocus email newsletter from the Whickham area Lib Dem Focus Team. Key stories in this edition are the granting of planning permission for executive homes on Whickham Highway, Woodmans pub in line for award, Whickham School turf cutting ceremony, Sunniside Methodist fair, Christmas lights switch on and consultation on fire service cuts. You can see edition 110 on this link.

Posted by jonathanwallace on Jonathan Wallace

A European conservative group co-founded by the Tories and led by Brexit campaigner and MEP Daniel Hannan has been asked to repay more than half a million euros of EU funds... The group will be denied a further €187,245, which had been withheld pending investigation. [The Guardian] Following in the steps of Ukip, who also had to repay big sums after breaking Euro-rules, the Alliance of Conservatives and Reformists in Europe had Dan Hannan as its Secretary General until December last year. The problems come from claims that money was spent on events that have little relevance to the European ...

Posted by Mark Pack on Mark Pack
Thu 13th
17:53

What is your leverage?

Yesterday's phoney war over the leadership of the Conservative Party has got me thinking. The hardline Brexiters (confusing referred to in the media as just 'Brexiteers') sought to remove Theresa May over the desirability of the Brexit deal she has achieved with the European Union. This is not their Brexit; they are betrayed; they must show how angry they are. But I still wonder if there was any more substance than that. Could a hardline PM have got a better deal? They claim they could, but how? The EU has made little if any concession to the UK, and their ...

Posted by Joe Otten on Liberal Democrat Voice

Now here's a thing: A European conservative group co-founded by the Tories and led by Brexit campaigner and MEP Daniel Hannan has been asked to repay more than half a million euros of EU funds following an investigation into their spending, the Guardian has learned. ... Hannan, who has championed Brexit for more than a quarter of a century and was ACRE's secretary-general until December 2017, is told that there are grounds to suspect a conflict of interest on his part, in leaked documents seen by the Guardian. Hannan called that conclusion "absurd" and accused investigators of making false insinuations ...

Posted by Jonathan Calder on Liberal England
Thu 13th
15:24

If you were PM....

An interesting quiz popped into my inbox from those nice people at Unlock Democracy. You have to imagine that you are PM – after all, that job may well be up for grabs in the near future. You are presented with a series of policy dilemmas – would you rather do x or y? Actually, in some cases, I was a bit "NEITHER" or "NOT QUITE LIKE THAT" or "BOTH" but that is part of the fun. It has a serious point: Every day decisions affecting millions are made by a handful of ministers, while the rest of us struggle ...

Posted by Caron Lindsay on Liberal Democrat Voice
Thu 13th
14:02

Blue - on - Blue Brexit

There are some cheerleaders, such as Jeremy Vine on BBC Radio 2 who is using his show to call the public to get behind Theresa May and her deal. The same deal that on Monday the 10th of December the Prime Minister decided to pull rather than face defeat in the Commons. That analysis of defeat was accurate when, following the motion of no-confidence in the PM from within her own party, it transpires that 117 of her own MPs failed to back her. This may seem a small number when compared to the 200 that did but, this exact ...

Posted by Martin Veart on Martin's View
Thu 13th
14:00

What is a movement?

In the discussion - and sales talk - around the party reform proposals, people often talk of creating a movement, sometimes equated to a supporter scheme. Sometimes, as in that video, it's presented as an alternative to a political party. There is a danger of positive language being repeated till people stop asking what it means. So what is a movement and how's it different from a political party? "Movement" suggests moving - towards some shared goal. Parties can do that, but you can't have a movement for not changing things much. Movements require mass participation. Any party can call ...

Posted by Simon Banks on Liberal Democrat Voice
YouGov
Thu 13th
13:02

The Bastards thwarted

(The impolite word in the title is not mine, but is borrowed from John Major) So, Mrs May has survived a vote of no confidence among Troy MPs by 200 votes to 117. Last night I caught leading Brexiteer Jacob Rees-Mogg on television explaining that in his view this was a very narrow majority. I make it 63% to 37%. Yet Rees-Mogg regards the 52/48% vote in favour of leaving the EU as the sacred "will of the people" which it is almost blasphemous to question (even though the 52% represents only 37% of those entitled to vote.) Is there ...

Posted by Peter Wrigley on Keynesian Liberal

This follows on from my post on November 29th. The Sri Lankan Supreme Court has just ruled unanimously that President Sirisena acted illegally when he dissolved Parliament and called early elections. The Supreme Court confirmed the constitutional position, which is that the President can only call elections four and a half years after the last ones, or with the support of a two-thirds majority of Parliament. In late October, President Sirisena also dismissed Prime Minister Wickremesinghe and replaced him with Mahinda Rajapaksa. However, Parliament twice passed motions of no confidence in Rajapaksa. For good measure, yesterday they passed a motion ...

Posted by Paul Walter on Liberal Democrat Voice

Yesterday, in between delivering Focuses and attending a meeting of the Whickham Library volunteers, I turned my hand to predictions about the Theresa May confidence vote, knowing that my political projections of the past couple of years have been rather wide of the mark. I suggested she would be fine if she had less than 70 MPs voting against her, she was in a grey zone with 70-100 voting

Posted by jonathanwallace on Jonathan Wallace
Thu 13th
11:01

Love, actually

A message to Theresa May & all Britons on Brexit Here is a video column from the D66 (Dutch Social-Liberal, pro-European sister party), featuring Kees Verhoeven, our MP for European Affairs. Hope you enjoy! https://twitter.com/D66/status/1072408573475463168 #makelovedontBrexit * Bernard Aris is a Dutch historian (university of Leiden), and Documentation assistant to the D66 parliamentary Party. He is a member of the Brussels/EU branch of the LibDems.

Posted by Bernard Aris on Liberal Democrat Voice
Thu 13th
11:00

My tweets

Wed, 12:56: RT @WHO: It's Universal Health Coverage Day! Universal Health Coverage means that ALL individuals & communities receive the health service... Wed, 16:05: RT @pmdfoster: Ahem. Sorry to intrude on today's Westminster drama but.... A faction of the Tory Party is trying to unseat @theresa_may o... Wed, 18:28: RT @aljwhite: I don't say this lightly, but this is the worst British political crisis since Wednesday. Wed, 20:41: A data point. https://t.co/p73ulp1DeM Wed, 21:23: RT @lmharpin: Told @theresa_may has now been told result of #voteofconfidence ahead of 9pm media announcement Wed, 22:01: May gets 200 to 117 against. I don't ...

Thu 13th
10:26

Watergate delivery

While the Conservatives were tearing themselves apart yesterday I headed out to the Watergate Estate in Whickham to deliver 370 Focuses. The newsletter is currently going out across the Whickham area of the three Whickham wards. I have lots more to deliver in my own ward! The lead story is Labour's decision to build hundreds of executive homes on Whickham Highway. Other stories include news

Posted by jonathanwallace on Jonathan Wallace
Thu 13th
10:19

Goodbye Andrew

On Tuesday I attended the funeral of Andrew Friend at Durham Crematorium. Andrew had been a presenter at Tyne Tees TV, a constituent of mine (before boundary changes) and a friend. He and his then partner Jonathan had experienced one of our self-sufficient dinners at our house. I last saw Andrew in March when I took Richard to an appointment at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital. We had a quick chat

Posted by jonathanwallace on Jonathan Wallace

As predicted by most, May won the no confidence vote last night comfortably, 200-117. Rees-Mogg was in there almost instantly trying to paint it as a loss for the prime minister, but it wasn't. There is some talk about her authority being weakened: it was dealt a massive blow with the 2017 general election result and was finished last week when she had to pull a vote on something she has spent her entire premiership working on because she was facing a triple-digit loss. She can't have less authority than she did pre-confidence vote because it was already at a ...

Posted by Nick on nicktyrone.com

The world has changed a lot over the past 30 years, becoming both more open and democratic and more prosperous. Well-being indicators of those most in need, especially in terms of health and education, have improved dramatically. But we still confront tremendous challenges, ranging from climate change to growing inequalities, especially within countries, and from conflict and fragility to migration. In addition, a profound dissatisfaction with liberal democracy and perceptions about the way it works has set in, not only in the developing world but also in countries that have traditionally been considered the cradles of democracy. So despite the ...

Posted by Alina Rocha Menocal on Liberal Democrat Voice

As Theresa May announced that she would no longer be asking the House of Commons to vote on her Brexit deal, the course of action open to the official Labour opposition seemed to be clear. The Tory party was split and in chaos, the DUP wanted shot of May and the other opposition parties were clamouring to join them in a vote of no confidence. However, Jeremy Corbyn hesitated and his moment was lost. Instead the European Research Group gambled on using their own party procedures in an attempt to defenestrate May as Tory leader, and lost. May secured 63% ...

Posted by Peter Black on Peter Black
eUKhost
Thu 13th
06:00

Distracted by Christmas

Tomorrow - Friday 14th December - and on Saturday : Distracted by Christmas - at Platform Arts, Riverside Drive. An original comedy with the highs and lows of Christmas - the lists, the shopping, the baking, the cooking, the decorating, the expectations ... the distractions that can overwhelm and overtake the real meaning of Christmas. Come prepared to laugh! It starts at 8pm and is free of charge but reservations recommended by emailing info@newscottish.org

The Welsh Liberal Democrats have announced that an agreement has been reached between Education Secretary Kirsty Williams and new First Minister Mark Drakeford. The agreement affirms both parties' commitment to the 2016 Progressive Agreement and its shared priorities. Alongside noting the significant progress made since Kirsty Williams became Education Secretary, the agreement also unveils new education policies and reforms that will be implemented over the coming years. The agreement recognises the distinct identities and policies of each party, while allowing each party to on occasion express different positions on reserved matters. For more detail, go to

Posted by LD Neath on Aberavon & Neath Liberal Democrats