Sometimes, you know, I wish I could. Then the Liberal Democrats come along to remind one how difficult it is to support them. But, in theory, could one vote for a truly liberal party? Of course one could. And would, if only one were so available. In Massie's Better Ordered Political Landscape the Liberal Democrats would, roughly speaking, be the equivalent of Germany's Free Democrats*.
It's true that there are some liberals** in the Lib Dems - one thinks of the gang at Liberal Vision and other bloggers such as Charlotte Gore - but they're a minority within their own minority. As Mark Littlewood says, a new BBC poll confirms this: asked who the party should support in the event of a hung parliament, twice as many Lib Dem councillors favour a coalition with Labour as would support a Tory-led coalition.
Doubtless this reflects the number of Tory-Lib Dem battles in English councils but it's still a telling result, not least because in the event of a hung parliament the electorate will clearly have rejected Labour. Lib Dem voters, mind you, seem to be more sensible, preferring a Cameron-led government by 61-26%.
This divide between the party activists and the people who vote for it ought not to be too surprising. The members are always vastly more frightening than the actual voters. This is true of all political parties. But the Lib Dems, one can't help but feel, would be more palatable if they were just a theory and not, alas, a reality.
And, of course, they have form when it comes to propping up terrible Labour ministries. For eight years the Lib Dems cheerfully betrayed their name and their heritage and supported the Scottish Labour Party in Edinburgh. The result was as predictable as it was enraging: illiberal bill after illiberal bill passed into law and all so that cheery Jim Wallace and Captain Mainwaring*** could sit at the cabinet table.
Still, David Cameron can be well pleased with all this since he may now suggest, not wholly unreasonably, that a vote for the Lib Dems is half a vote for Labour. That's a clarifying matter indeed and bad news for decent Lib Dem MPs - such as my own Michael Moore - who face a Tory challenge.
UPDATE: The promise of electoral reform might also explain this - and, frankly, Labour's own interests are served by changing the voting system - but if that happens there's every chance, surely, that the Lib Dems would split themselves? How long could the alliance between liberals and lefties endure?
*Technically, they may claim they are since they sit in the same group at the European Parliament. But Fianna Fail are in that group too so let's not pretend this establishes your liberal bona fides.
**That is, of the classical variety.
***Also known as Ross Finnie.
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daniel maris
September 21st, 2009 1:37pm Report this commentDon't know what they are like these days, but the Free Democrats used to be a right old rag bag including an assortment of quite prominent ex-Nazis. I seem to recall that the old Liberals used to be regularly embarrassed by who turned up at the Liberal International meetings.
Gavin Webb
September 21st, 2009 2:05pm Report this commentAs the former Lib Dem PPC for Burton and councillor in Stoke-on-Trent, I recently resigned from the Lib Dems because the party wants to jump on the 'progressive' bandwagon just like Labour and the Tories. Certainly I have faced much abuse from many Lib Dems whilst an active member because I dare have the audacity to argue liberal ideas and principles.
John Ware
September 21st, 2009 3:36pm Report this commentI find the LDs pretty soggy but then recall that on the two big issues of the past decade, Iraq and the economy, they have called it right.
Dave B
September 22nd, 2009 5:10pm Report this commentI think the political debate in the UK would be better if rather than the left/right labels, we used statist/localist labels.
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