Showing posts with label Tories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tories. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Cable: Lib Dems 'restrain' Tories

18 April 2011 Last updated at 20:48 GMT Vince Cable on how his party has "stopped" Tories' making "offensive" policies in Scotland

Business Secretary Vince Cable has said the Liberal Democrats are "restraining" the Conservatives in government.

In a BBC interview, the Lib Dem MP claimed his party had stopped their coalition partners pursuing many Thatcherite policies, which he said had caused "revulsion" in the 1980s.

Mr Cable was in Scotland to address the Edinburgh Chamber of Commerce.

Labour and the SNP attacked Mr Cable for leaving out the sections of his speech attacking the Tories.

Political difference

His comments had been released to the media ahead of his speech but were not delivered.

Mr Cable, one of the most senior Lib Dems in the coalition government, earlier told BBC Scotland: "We're making a very significant difference politically, by restraining what a Tory government would have done on its own.

"For example, lifting large numbers of low earners out of tax, reversing Mrs Thatcher's measure of de-linking pensions from earnings.

"These are big achievements, that we've been able to do at a UK level, and I think people in Scotland will recognise that we're actually greatly improving the results of the government, as a result of our being part of it."

However, Mr Cable's speech in Edinburgh did not include his reference to the "negative side of Thatcherism, such as the Poll Tax, mass unemployment and the claims that there was no such thing as society", which had been pre-released to the media and on Twitter.

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All that Vince Cable has succeeded in doing is portray the Tories as the nasty party, and destroy what remained of Lib Dem credibility in Scotland by continuing to prop them up in government at Westminster”

End Quote Michael Russell SNP Scottish Labour Leader Iain Gray said: "Clearly Nick Clegg tried to stop Vince Cable making this speech because it is an astonishing attack on his coalition partners.

"He is clearly uncomfortable with the government of which he is a senior member, as are former Lib Dem voters who feel increasingly let down."

The Scottish National Party's Michael Russell said: "This is a complete shambles by the Lib Dems.

"All that Vince Cable has succeeded in doing is portray the Tories as the nasty party, and destroy what remained of Lib Dem credibility in Scotland by continuing to prop them up in government at Westminster."

A Scottish Conservatives source said of Mr Cable's comments: "They are clearly desperate for attention and getting more desperate for votes."

Speaking after the Edinburgh event, Mr Cable was asked to give his view on comments by Scottish Lib Dem leader Tavish Scott on the BBC's Politics Show.

Mr Scott said he was not "particularly comfortable" with his party's links with the Tories at Westminster.

Mr Cable indicated he did not believe the party's role in the coalition would have a damaging impact on its chances at the Scottish election.


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Sunday, February 13, 2011

Tories 'stifling voting debate'

11 February 2011 Last updated at 17:42 GMT David Cameron David Cameron has said he will campaign against changing the voting system A Conservative activist has accused his party of stifling debate about the case for change to the UK electoral system.

John Strafford said supporters of a switch to Alternative Vote were told they could not hold a meeting at the party's Spring conference in Cardiff.

This contradicted David Cameron's call for an "open debate", he said.

The Conservative Party, whose leaders back the existing first-past-the post system, said they had not received any application from Mr Strafford.

The government plans to hold a referendum on whether to retain first-past-the-post or switch to AV on 5 May, providing the legislation needed to authorise the poll in time is approved by Parliament by 16 February.

The vast majority of Tory MPs support retaining first-past-the-post, arguing that it has historically resulted in stable government and maintains a direct constituency link between the public and MPs.

'Debate needed'

It is understood the cross-party Yes to Fairer Votes campaign, which supports a switch to Alternative Vote, sought to stage an event at the Tory spring conference but were turned down.

Mr Strafford, who said his Conservative Yes to AV movement came under the umbrella of the official Yes campaign, argued he and other activists were being denied the chance to debate the merits of the two systems.

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Quite a lot of prominent Conservatives do not want to come out and say they are pro-Alternative Vote because they know they will get a lot of flak from the grass roots”

End Quote John Strafford Campaign for Conservative Democracy He told the BBC that party officials had not given any explanation for the decision and he would canvass delegates about the issue at the conference.

"David Cameron has said Conservatives have a free vote on the issue so why can't we have a debate," he said.

The activist, who runs the organisation Campaign for Conservative Democracy, said a growing number of elected officials and party members - including councillors and peers - supported a switch to AV although he would not disclose who they where.

"Quite a lot of prominent Conservatives do not want to come out and say they are pro-Alternative Vote because they know they will get a lot of flak from the grass roots," he said.

The AV system offered the party an opportunity to re-connect with younger voters and broaden its electoral appeal, he said.

The electoral landscape had changed dramatically in the past thirty years, he added, with smaller parties garnering more votes and fewer Tory and Labour candidates being elected with the backing of more than 50% of voters in their constituency.

Critics say is a fundamental weakness of the current system which a switch to AV will help to mitigate.

Mr Strafford, who first made his claim in an article for the ConservativeHome website, said the Tories had to adapt to the new environment or risk "becoming a rump party in the south of England".

But a Conservative Party spokeswoman said she was "confused" by Mr Strafford's comments as the party had not received any request from him to stage a meeting in Cardiff.

Wedding row

A number of senior Conservatives, including Ken Clarke and party chairman Baroness Warsi, have pledged their support for the cross-party No to AV campaign - as have a number of former Labour ministers and MPs from both parties - while David Cameron has said he will campaign against any change.

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Under the AV system, voters rank candidates in their constituency in order of preference.

Anyone getting more than 50% of first-preference votes is elected.

If no-one gets 50% of votes, the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated and their backers' second choices allocated to those remaining.

This process continues until one candidate has at least 50% of all votes in that round.

The Yes to Fairer Votes campaign has also attracted support from across the political spectrum while both the Lib Dems and Labour have launched their own pro-change movements.

The rival cross-party campaigns have been involved in a row over the potential impact that the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton - which will be held six days before the poll - may have on the final days of the referendum campaign.

The No campaign has accused its rival of "politicising" the wedding - a claim rejected by the Yes campaign - after a source for the Yes campaign told the Guardian newspaper that the event could usher in a "coming-into-summer, more optimistic, more of a yes mood".

Under first-past-the-post, voters are allowed to vote for one candidate and the individual obtaining the most votes is elected.

Under the AV system, voters rank candidates in their constituency in order of preference.

Anyone getting more than 50% of first-preference votes is elected and if no-one gets 50% of votes, the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated and their backers' second choices allocated to those remaining.

This process continues until one candidate has at least 50% of all votes in that round.


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