The Observer in
an article this morning sums up the Liberal Democrats' party leader's opening speech to the LibDem Annual Conference in Birmingham last night:
Nick Clegg signals combative approach to coalition describing PM's party as political enemies who must be taken on
Nick Clegg's Liberal Democrats
have vowed to face down "ruthless" and "extreme" forces in the Tory
party to protect the British people from right-wing policies that would
widen inequality and benefit the rich.
At a rally on Saturday
night to open his party's annual conference in Birmingham, Clegg
underlined the Lib Dems' newly combative approach to the coalition,
describing David Cameron's
party as "political enemies" who must be taken on when necessary in the
national interest. After a traumatic year during which the Lib Dems'
popularity has plummeted and their leader has been accused of abandoning
his party's principles, Clegg struck a markedly more assertive note.
While
trumpeting his party's successes so far in influencing health and tax
policies, he said it was more prepared than ever to "fight tooth and
nail" for what was right. "We are prepared to be awkward," he said. "We
are not here to make things easy. We're here to put things right."
In an interview with the Observer, his deputy Simon Hughes goes further, telling the Conservatives
they have no mandate to drive through a rightwing agenda. Hughes says
the Tories have shown themselves to be "ruthless" operators in the first
16 months of the coalition over the referendum on electoral reform and
boundary changes and says the resurgent right of the party is "extreme"
on issues such as Europe and tax.
He says Tories must come to
their senses and realise that they did not win the last election – and
that they rely on the Lib Dems for power.
"Not only did they not
win but they got a third of those who voted," he said. "The Tory party
is not the dominant party in British politics that it used to be. It is
absolutely not the dominant force in Scotland and Wales that it used to
be. The Tory right have forgotten that."
In a rebuff to
Conservative hardliners he adds: "There is absolutely no majority in
parliament for your views. If there is a coalition government in the
national interest then extreme remedies and answers are not
appropriate."
The comments are bound to infuriate Conservatives as
the conference season opens. Many Tories are beginning to resent
profoundly the way the Lib Dems are already watering down Tory changes
on health and education and blocking Cameron from developing a more
hardline approach on Europe.
Clegg and his ministers are now
convinced they can claw back some of their pre-election popularity if
they can demonstrate that they are reining in the Conservatives and
stamping their own mark on government. Deep division between the
coalition partners will surface in Birmingham over tax, welfare, health,
pensions and last month's riots.
There's more detail in the article regarding specific initiatives the LibDems say they will take in the coming months—take a look!
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