Lib Dems to consult on Tory coalition deal
The Liberal Democrats’ federal executive and the MPs are to meet at 7.30pm to discuss the coalition deal negotiated with the Conservatives.
154 items found
The Liberal Democrats’ federal executive and the MPs are to meet at 7.30pm to discuss the coalition deal negotiated with the Conservatives.
We are in a time of omens in which we search for routes through the voters’ wisdom in refusing to trust any party to deliver us from the evil of deficits, writes Jon Snow.
Nick Clegg speaks outside Lib Dem HQ – and makes an overture to the Tories.
With the Erith and Thamesmead result we now have a definitive piece of news – it will be a hung parliament, it can’t mathematically be anything else.
Jon Snow blogs on his first thoughts about last night’s general election result
Gary Gibbon blogs on how David Cameron looks set to move into Downing Street, but how he won’t be in as strong a position as he would have wanted.
As the election campaign nears its close, Jon Snow blogs on what results the result may throw up on Friday.
Gary Gibbon blogs on David Cameron’s comments at this morning’s Conservative press conference.
The claim “Sarah loves Marmite, I love marmalade.” Gordon Brown during a TweetMinster on Twitter session, 22 April 2010 The background The prime minister submitted to Twitter this afternoon. Along with other questions on comparatively trivial matters such as electoral reform, the economy and foreign affairs, the First Lord of the Treasury was asked whether…
Nick Clegg’s children are amongst those stranded abroad by the volcanic ash. Maybe it’ll give him extra time to focus on the week ahead and trying to hold onto the most extraordinary and unexpected sudden poll surge many people can remember, writes Gary Gibbon.
Sir John Chilcot’s decision to take evidence from the prime minister not many weeks shy of a general election reminds you that it’s not just the politicians who feel on trial here, writes Gary Gibbon.
Two Cabinet ministers made a modest push within government to have a referendum on Scottish independence on the same day as the general election – but have accepted they won’t ge their way.
The policy of the Labour Party appears to have shifted from support of the first past the post system for general elections to AV without so much as a meeting of political Cabinet to look it over.
There is what feels like a nasty coalition between the media and the political classes. There seems to be an acute desire to bring whatever it is to the boil and then lance it (mixing metaphors). But I’m not sure there is actually anything very specific to bring to the boil beyond the residual right-left…
For the 92 hereditary peers in the House of Lords, their time in Parliament is set to come to an end. The Labour government promised in its manifesto to finish what it started in 1999: abolishing the hereditaries.