A Timely Reform by Ian Ridley

Blog & web site of Ian Ridley

Lose the sound bites, lose the coalition “line”

September 4th, 2010

I first began to get worried about some Lib Dem sound bites during the closing stages of General Election campaign. Nick Clegg was on Radio 5 I think. He was asked a question about the economy and kept repeating the phrase “Greedy Bankers” in the answer. It took the radio presenter to point out that not all bankers are necessarily greedy.

Lib Dem Cabinet Ministers have continued this trend towards ill-chosen sound bites when defending coalition policy. We have had Clegg’s “Gold plated pensions” in reference to the public sector, when most public employees earn modest wages. I agree that public sector final salary schemes need to be looked but I wouldn’t generalise them as “Gold-plated”. This sound bite didn’t exactly reach out to public sector employees and make friends.

Danny Alexander calls the VAT rise “unavoidable”. However there are alternatives in the Lib Dems’ own manifesto:

  • Mansion Tax;
  • Ending tax avoidance;
  • Not renewing Trident;
  • Restricting pension tax relief to the basic rate.

Taken on their own they would, at the very least, have reduced the amount of VAT increase. Other alternatives not in the manifesto include income tax rises (gasp) or other revenue-raising changes to income tax thresholds.

And this is what frustrates me the most. It is not just the poor presentation of policy via sound-bite,  it is the unwillingness of Lib Dem Ministers to talk about Lib Dem manifesto commitments that have been traded away in the policy discussions with the Tories.

VAT is a key example of this. Nick Clegg defends this and other “painful” budget measures because,

“Things have changed in the last few weeks. The international situation has deteriorated very badly indeed – that’s why we had to move very quickly on it.”

Danny Alexander, as I wrote earlier, called it, “unavoidable”.

Another defence used by some Lib Dem Ministers is, to précis, “it’s all Labour’s fault and they would have put up VAT anyway.”

All these of the could and have been said by Tory Ministers. There is “a coalition line” that no-one in the Cabinet seems to deviate very far from. All normal for a single party government but strange behaviour for a coalition of two parties.

What no Lib Dem Minister has really spelled out is,

“VAT rises are our first preference but it is a compromise between Liberal Democrat and Conservative priorities. We would have preferred to raise money by a Mansion Tax,  cancelling the Trident replacement, reducing tax loopholes and ending higher rate pension relief but the Tories did not agree to these.”

We need to be hearing and reading more of the nuts and bolts of how the coalition has reached policy agreements and what the Lib Dems initially brought to the table. Ministers are keen to talk about the “good news” of which Lib Dem policies are in the coalition programme but we need to hear more about those that aren’t. These are the policies that really distinguish us from the Tories, simply because the Tories won’t agree to them.

If Lib Dem Minsters continue along the present path,  it will look like the Tories are cherry-picking Lib Dem policies to soften coalition cuts and tax rises. Voters will increasingly be unable to identify a distinctive Liberal Democrat position.

And then the question, “Why vote Liberal Democrat?” will be difficult to answer.

Playground cuts leave a sour taste

August 11th, 2010

So the Coalition have announced the end of the Playbuilder scheme, scrapping or scaling back hundreds of community playground projects. The exact direct savings to the public purse are unclear. The scheme’s overall budget was £235 million to fund 3,500 projects. According to the BBC less than 1,300 have been completed so a rough guess might be that £150 million won’t be spent.

Now rewind a few days to the suggestions to end free milk for the under fives. That would have saved £50-59 million per year.

The need for free milk for young children is unclear. The scheme originated when wartime rationing was still in force. However milk and other sources of nutirition are easily bought now. The BBC has a good article on the pros and cons. The main concern is probably that milk may help suppliment the diet of children whose parents do not provide them with the nutrition they need.

The Playbuilder cuts have raised mutterings about increased childhood obesity.

I admit I am comparing apples with oranges here: Playbuilder uses Capital (one-off) funds whereas Nursery Milk is a annual cost. However, costs over a three year period would seem to be roughly similar.

So what we have is a choice between 2 schemes that basically cost the same over three  years. The Coalition has decided to keep the milk and cut the playgrounds without explaining the health benefits/ impacts of these decisions.

Instead the perception is that school milk is an “untouchable” due to the (erroneous) legacy of ““Maggie Thatcher the Milk Snatcher”. Playgrounds are a soft target.

I would not like to think that the Coalition make their decisions based on focus group rather than facts.

William Hague not to address Lib Dem Conference

August 7th, 2010

William Hague (or any other senior Tories) will not be addressing the Liberal Democrat Autumn Conference in Liverpool next month.

According to Liberal Democrat Voice,

‘A party spokesman said:

“William Hague is not part of the conference agenda and I can confirm that he has not been asked to speak at the Liberal Democrat conference. No Conservative ministers have ever been approached to speak at our conference.

Fringe events are still being finalised, and it is of course possible that an independent group may have invited Mr Hague to speak at their Fringe event.”‘

This is in response to the Dail Mail’s assertion that,

“William Hague is being lined up to speak at the Liberal Democrats’ annual conference next month in a move designed to cement relations between the coalition partners.”

Which just goes to prove (again) that you can’t believe anything everything you read in the Daily Mail papers.

(Hat tip to Lib DemVoice & Liberal England).