Thrill to footage of Nevill Holt Hall (now widely accepted to be the chief model for Bonkers Hall) from 1:13 and of Market Harborough cattle market from 9:57. This film brings home just how powerful the British state became during the Second World War. Thanks to Mark Howson for posting it on Bluesky - he says the Clarkes are still farming near Medbourne.

Posted by Jonathan Calder on Liberal England

Just before the Christmas recess I sat down in the Commons cafeteria opposite a Conservative front-bencher whom I knew. 'There will have to be a coalition after the next election,' he told me, 'bringing you together with Labour and the Greens.' I realised after absorbing this that he was effectively telling me that the Conservatives could not revive in time to hope for a majority, and that the prospect of either a Reform majority or a Tory-Reform coalition gave him nightmares. It's 3½ years at most until the next general election. Plenty of crises and shifts in political moods may ...

Posted by Lord William Wallace on Liberal Democrat Voice

When I gave up on The Times a few years ago, I reinvested those freed-up funds into some proper journalism - the Economist and the Washington Post. Quentin Letts had been the trigger for me, but it was probably inevitable - newspaper of record, indeed - although I did think that I was probably getting the better of the deal. And, despite all of the gloom, I still value my subscriptions. At least, I did until Jeff Bezos decided to place his mark on the Washington Post. Now, regardless of what your preferences in terms of coverage, what most thinking ...

Posted by Mark Valladares on Liberal Bureaucracy

2025 has been a good year! It has quite a few ups and a few downs, however as humans, we have an amazing ability to adapt and embrace the most difficult challenges. I had many moments when I thought: "what's the point of all of this" and many moments, when I felt energised, driven and highly motivated. From a professional perspective, I have experienced quite a few changes; after many years and some amazing experiences, I left my full-time job with the Community Alliance Broxbourne and East Herts and I started a new role with the North Herts and Stevenage ...

Posted by Michal Siewniak on Liberal Democrat Voice

There has been some talk recently of Andy Burnham challenging Keir Starmer for the leadership of Labour. In effect, some are seeing him as the Prime Minister in waiting. This is of course totally ludicrous for the following reasons:Burnham is not currently an MP or peer, thereby excluding him from the position of Prime Minister.A Burnham leadership bid is in effect an admission by the

Posted by Jonathan Wallace on Jonathan Wallace

Why not make writing a guest post for Liberal England one of your New Year's resolutions? It could be on the Liberal Democrats, politics more generally or... anything really. Why not something on a local campaign or quirky piece of history? Please drop me an email if you want to discuss your idea first: I'd hate you to spend time on a piece I wouldn't want to publish. Here are the 10 most recent guest posts published here:Councillor defections: The trickle becomes a stream - Augustus CarpLet next week's online summer school rekindle your Radical Liberal fire - William LaneWhat ...

Posted by Jonathan Calder on Liberal England

As we enter 2026, the UK is in desperate need of a political reset. From manufactured outrage to simplistic blame games, this is the age of TikTok politics, where complex policy challenges are reduced to 40-second clips, and success is measured more in social posts shared than real lives improved. But here's the crucial reality check: most people are absolutely sick of it. Young people especially tell me all the time how the whole tribal and adversarial politics is a complete turn-off. "Why can't you politicians all just work together?" one asked me plaintively the other day. And I completely ...

Posted by Hina Bokhari on Liberal Democrat Voice

Both the Guardian and the Independent feature new year's day articles looking forward to the Welsh Senedd elections in 126 days time, and in particular the position of Reform in those contests. Coincidentally (or not), Nation Cymru published an article on new year's eve by Desmond Clifford, a former head of office for the Welsh First Minister, which demands to know why Labour is undermining the devolution they created, and which very much reflects the hopeless position Welsh Labour are currently in as a result of their own actions, but also, of course, the impact of Keir Starmers government. The ...

Posted by Peter Black on Peter Black