Here's a another story I discovered when I visited Kibworth Library last week. This report is from the Market Harborough Advertiser and Midland Mail (3 January 1893), but the story appeared in newspapers across the country. A Novel Cricket Match. Saddington v. Kibworth Teams representing the respective cricket clubs of Saddington and Kibworth, met in an extremely novel encounter on Saddington reservoir on Saturday, when an amusing match on the ice ended in a draw. The match was played on skates, and the ice being in splendid condition, the leather hunting was very considerable, and consequently there were many boundaries ...

Posted by Jonathan Calder on Liberal England | Mute

Britain has spent the last few decades running a national experiment. We have taken essential infrastructure that behaves like a monopoly, we put it in private hands, and we hope competition somehow emerges. I can't blame the utilities executives. They got lucky and landed the utilities in the 80s, like some awful game of Monopoly we still pay for. No risk and all reward, what a deal! The results are familiar to anyone who has navigated unreliable rail services or warned their children of the dangers of swimming in the sea that was safe in their childhood. When a market ...

Posted by Oscar Renton on Liberal Democrat Voice | Mute

When I welcomed a delegation of British Liberal Democrats to Jerusalem and Ramallah last week, led by Gavin Stollar OBE and the Party's Foreign Affairs lead, Calum Miller MP, I was reminded that politics, at its best, is not a transaction but a relationship. It is built on trust, curiosity and, above all, friendship. In a region where suspicion is often the default setting, the simple act of sitting together – listening, disagreeing respectfully, and breaking bread – can itself feel radical. Our conversations were frank. They were searching. They were, at moments, uncomfortable. And they were deeply encouraging. I ...

Posted by Samer Sinijlawi on Liberal Democrat Voice | Mute

Reviewing Max Adams's The Mercian Chronicles: King Offa and the Birth of the Anglo-Saxon State AD 630-918 for the London Review of Books, Tom Shippey wrote of the difficulty in recovering the history of the kingdom of Mercia: Adams's title is deliberately ironic. There are no 'Mercian Chronicles', the fact of which has caused historians headaches for centuries. For Northumbria we have Bede's History of the English Church and People, written in Jarrow and finished in 731. For Wessex we have The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, first compiled under the aegis of King Ælfred in the 890s, but including much earlier information ...

Posted by Jonathan Calder on Liberal England | Mute

The latest edition of my email newsletter about work in Parliament, A Lord's Eye View, is out and you can also read it in full below. But if you'd like to get future editions emailed direct to you as soon as they are published, sign up now: Another update from Parliament, sooner than expected as there was a welcome bit of news last night as the House of Commons debated the Representation of the People Bill. Electoral Commission's independence to be fully restored When a Conservative government curbed the Electoral Commission's independence by taking on the power to set a ...

Posted by Mark Pack on Mark Pack | Mute

Roz Savage is right that "left" and "right" are poor maps for modern politics. Her alternative axes, especially "power hoarded vs power shared", are a better guide to what voters feel in daily life. But there is a risk in the slogan "Not left. Not right. Liberal." It is excellent as outward-facing messaging; it is incomplete as a description of our party. The Liberal Democrats are not a single ideological bloc. We are a coalition, intentionally, and that breadth is a feature, not a bug. We were formed through a fusion of liberal and social democratic traditions, and our constitution ...

Posted by Jack Meredith on Liberal Democrat Voice | Mute
Tue 3rd
10:02

The Joy of Six 1483

Taylor Lorenz argues that there is little evidence that social media is driving a mental health crisis among young people and a banning them from it would effect us all: "Removing anonymity from the web, which will inevitably happen when tech companies are required to identify and ban children, allows for easier government tracking and censorship of journalists, activists and whistleblowers, who rely on online anonymity." Opponents of traffic-reduction measures in cities sometimes claim that such policies discriminate against people with disabilities because they need cars to get about. In reality, Julia Métraux finds, walkable communities are good for them ...

Posted by Jonathan Calder on Liberal England | Mute

Nation Cymru reports on new research that has revealed mounting pressure on Wales' voluntary sector, with rising demand, worsening finances and growing reliance on reserves threatening the long-term sustainability of charities and community organisations. They says that the latest Baromedr Cymru findings from the Wales Council for Voluntary Action (WCVA) paint what the organisation describes as a stark picture of the challenges facing the sector: The survey, carried out in November 2025 and February 2026, gathered responses from more than 200 voluntary organisations across Wales. Generating income remains the single biggest concern, cited by 81% of respondents in the most ...

Posted by Peter Black on Peter Black | Mute