Liberal Party (UK, 1989)

Liberal Party
Leader Steve Radford
Chairman Fran Oborski
Founded 1859 (1859) (Historical),
1989 (1989) (Present day)
Ideology Liberalism,
Euroscepticism
Political position Centre
International affiliation None
European affiliation None
European Parliament Group None
Official colours Orange and Black
Local government[1][2]
Website
http://www.liberal.org.uk/
Politics of the United Kingdom
Political parties
Elections

The Liberal Party is a United Kingdom political party. It was formed in 1989 by a group of individuals within the original Liberal Party who felt that the merger of the party with the Social Democratic Party, to form the Liberal Democrats, had ended the spirit of the Liberal Party, claiming that the new Liberal Democrat party was dominated by the Social Democrats.

Contents

Current

The Liberal Party currently has 25 councillors.[3] It put up a full slate of candidates in the North West England region for the 2004 European Parliament elections, and came seventh, with 4.6% of the vote (0.6% of the total British popular vote). Membership is around 200 nationally and attendance at assembly is around a dozen members.

At the 2001 UK general election, the party came second behind Labour in Liverpool West Derby, pushing the Liberal Democrats into third place. However, they were unable to repeat this at the 2005 general election, finishing third behind the Liberal Democrats but still beating the Conservatives; they repeated this performance at the 2010 general election.

The party president is Steve Radford and the party chairman is Fran Oborski. The party anthem is The Land, also popular amongst Liberal Democrats.

The party states that it exists "to build a Liberal Society in which every citizen shall possess liberty, property and security and none shall be enslaved by poverty, ignorance or conformity. Its chief care is for the rights and opportunities of the individual, and in all spheres it sets freedom first."

Policies

The Liberal Party's highest policy-making body is its annual conference, the Liberal Assembly, at which all party members are entitled to vote. Liberal policies include:

History

The contemporary Liberal Party is claimed by some to be one of Britain's oldest political parties, the Liberal Party founded in 1859. This claim is disputed, and the dispute centres around events which took place in 1988–89. In that year the old Liberal Party and the Social Democratic Party voted to merge to create a new party, which was initially called the Social and Liberal Democrats (SLD) but later became known just as the Liberal Democrats.

Initially, at the time of the merger, many members believed that the new party would be broadly a continuation of the Liberals, but as the Liberal Democrats settled down and developed clear policies, some Liberals such as the former Member of Parliament Michael Meadowcroft decided that the Liberal Democrats were not the party for them and so in 1989 they set out to re-establish the Liberal Party.

It was legally a new organisation (the headquarters, records, assets and debts of the old party were inherited by the Liberal Democrats), though its constitution asserts it to be the same party as that which had previously existed. (Liberal Democrats dispute this claim citing the 88% of Liberal Party members who voted, were in favour of merger.) Meadowcroft, who had been elected President of the Liberal Party just before the merger took place, now took up that post in the re-founded party. The (new) Liberal Party was refused membership of the Liberal International, although some of the party’s members take part in LI activities though the British Group of the Liberal International (BGLI).

The re-founded party included a number of councillors and even entire council groups from the pre-1988 party, some of whom continue to be Liberal councillors today. Since then the number of Liberal councillors has fluctuated slightly but has neither risen nor fallen dramatically.

In 2002, the party's first president, Michael Meadowcroft, stepped down from the post and was replaced by Councillor Steve Radford. In 2007 Meadowcroft joined the Liberal Democrats.[4] In 2009 Radford stood down from the post and was replaced as president of the party by former councillor Rob Wheway. However, Wheway served only a single year as leader and Radford was re-elected as party president in 2010.

During the 2009 European Parliament election the Liberal Party's Steve Radford participated in the NO2EU electoral alliance.

See also

References

External links