Lib Dem HQ has decided to stop making an effort in unpromising Westminster by-elections. Regular guest poster Augustus Carp argues that they've got it wrong. Today I want us to think about a rather unusual chap called Ian Stuart - he was the "area manager" or whatever it was called of the Liberal Party in the Home Counties in the 1980s. On our rare meetings I found him to be a rather genial cove, although I gather he was not always popular with the party hierarchy. Anyway, it was his lot to be the Liberal Party candidate in the long-forgotten ...
One of Petula Clark's early films in her child star days was Trouble at Townsend, which was based on a short story by this blog's hero Malcolm Saville. In her memoirs Is That You, Petula? she briefly remembers making the film: Rather less glamorously, around the same time I made an educational film for children called Trouble at Townsend. It was about a city boy and girl going to the countryside and having adventures. The little boy in the film with me put on weight and got too plump for his costume. We filmed some of it on a farm, ...
America will survive the Iran War. It has survived worse. Israel may not be so fortunate. Superpowers can afford mistakes. Small countries living in dangerous neighbourhoods cannot. People have been predicting the decline of American power since Vietnam. America lost in Vietnam, failed in Iraq and Afghanistan, and suffered humiliation in Somalia. Yet the United States remains the world's dominant military and financial power. Superpowers can absorb defeats. They possess strategic depth. Of course, the same may not be said about individual politicians. Donald Trump has been seriously weakened inside and outside MAGA world. So have the Republican politicians who ...
If you want a night out in Swansea, you go to Wind Street (pronounced Wine Street), where a large number of pubs and restaurants have set up shop on what is now a largely pedestrian street as pictured above. But it hasn't always been like as this website makes clear: Wind Street (Wyne Street in 1567) follows virtually the same line as it did in medieval times. It is likely that several of its buildings, in all or in part date from these times. Its curve follows that of the Tawe. Along with Butter Street (now St Mary Street), Castle ...
Welcome to my summary of the latest national voting intention polls for the next general election, along with the latest MRP projections and party leadership ratings. If you'd like to find out more about how polls work, how reliable they are and how to make sense of them, check out my book, Polling UnPacked: the History, Uses and Abuses of Political Opinion Polls, or sign up for my weekly email, The Week in Polls: General election voting intention polls PollsterConLabLDGrnRefLab leadFieldwork Find Out Now 18% (nc) 15% (-1) 12% (-1) 17% (nc) 27% (+2) -12% (4th, vs Ref) 17-18/6 GB ...
In recent weeks I have found myself in a WhatsApp group with a flood of photos coming in from sun-drenched climes. Pictures of lovely people, cloudless skies and a most astonishing array of urban cafes! Where is this paradise? Have my in-laws been messaging me from the glorious Philippines? Have I stumbled into an exhibition of Mark Valladares photos of European capitals staging Liberal International meetings? No, the travelogue I have been enjoying is from North Acton ward, London Borough of Ealing where a by-election takes place on June 25. Arguably, in my 35 years of witnessing council by-elections, one ...
The "disappearing scientists" panic sweeping the US has led to a rediscovery of a spoof television programme along similar lines that was broadcast in Britain in June 1977. It had originally been scheduled for 1 April. And it has reminded me that there was similar concern here, 10 years after that broadcast, about a spate of deaths among GEC-Marconi scientists. There are some not very good podcasts about it, but the video above is a contemporary news report of one shocking death that refers to several others. It's from Thames Television and dates from 1987, so the conspiracy theory had ...
Cameron Thomas was arrested on suspicion of controlling and coercive behaviour and assault
Further information about the arrest of the Liberal Democrat MP Cameron Thomas have emerged today. BBC News quotes a statement from Gloucestershire Police: "On Wednesday, a man in his 40s from Tewkesbury was arrested on suspicion of controlling and coercive behaviour and assault. "The man was interviewed by officers before later being released on police bail." That report also quotes a spokesperson for the Liberal Democrats: "Cameron Thomas MP has had the party whip suspended pending the outcome of a police investigation. "Allegations of this nature are extremely serious, and it is important that the police are able to investigate ...
Yesterday the Church of England apologised for the part it played in forced adoptions in the past. Some years ago the Catholic Church issued a similar apology. Earlier this week we heard that the Government is also planning to issue an apology, when the Education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, told the Education Select Committee: The prime minister will have more to say on this shameful period in our history, reflecting the gravity of what has happened. But here and now, let me say to all of those affected, you will get the apology that you so profoundly deserve. It is quite ...
Ed Davey's call for Labour to drop its 'torpor and timidity' and rejoin the single market is welcome and shows the EU's one consistent supporter in UK politics, the Lib Dems (and the Liberals before them). The first thing to say is that his statement puts paid to all those ideas about Lib Dems having no policies (beyond mending the local church roof, of course) while other parties at least make it clear where they stand. Really? Is that how Starmer's Labour Party behaves? Ed Davey is right to say that the Labour Party's talk of a 'reset' just seems ...
A bumper fifteen principal authority council by-elections this week, including a clutch from Wales caused by councillors getting elected to the Senedd. [IMG: Richard Lee election leaflet June 2026] Let's start with a Lib Dem win in sad circumstances: Chelmsford Springfield (Essex) Countermanded Election Result: [IMG: 🔶] LDM: 54.6% [IMG: ➡] RFM: 27.5% [IMG: 🌳] COM: 12.3% [IMG: 🌍] GRN: 3.7% [IMG: 🌹] LAB: 1.9%Liberal Democrat WIN (New Ward Boundaries) — Election Maps UK (@electionmaps.uk) 2026-06-19T12:50:14.775Z Thank you respectively to Jake Austin, Mel Sullivan and Tanvir Ahmad for being the Liberal Democrat candidates. What do the polls say? The results ...
"When news of the arrests of the three Ukrainians broke, a rumour soon began to spread online that the alleged perpetrators were, in fact, Ukrainian male sex workers employed by Starmer and that the arson attack was revenge for unpaid bills. Perhaps unsurprisingly, one of the most influential online figures involved in spreading this 'Rent Boys' conspiracy theory was Stephen Lennon." Joe Mulhall and Nick Lowles argue that Tommy Robinson is Putin's useful idiot. Theo Rodwell fears the Liberal Democrats are being held hostage by Conservatives who have lent them their votes. "The mayor of New York, Zohran Mamdani, announced ...
At the end of our weekly council by-election reports from ALDC they usually thank the Lib Dem candidates for flying the flag in unwinnable wards. And that is what we must do today. So a big thank you to Jake Austin (Makerfield), Mel Sullivan (Aberdeen South) and Tanvir Ahmad (Arbroath and Broughty Ferry) for putting up with all the hoo-ha and making sure Lib Dems were on the ballot papers. This now provides our readers with an opportunity to discuss the results and their wider implications, in the comments below. * Mary Reid is a contributing editor on Lib Dem ...
Oakham Nub News wins our Headline of the Day Award for a worrying story from Rutland. Ever fair-minded, the judges point out that though the document exposes pervasive administrative backlogs, repeated statutory failures, severe asset mismanagement, and critical operational risks.everything else about the body is tickety-boo.
The Independent reports on findings by researchers at the Centre for European Reform think tank that almost every sector of the economy has been hit by Brexit. The paper says that the study found that exports of chemicals and pharmaceuticals have fallen by 21 per cent since the UK left the EU, while those classed as "agrifood" are down 29 per cent: The report argues that many of the economic costs of Brexit stem from Britain's departure from the bloc's single market, suggesting recent calls for a new customs union with the EU would only have a limited impact. Almost ...