The Scotsman

Cable to stand down once Brexit resolved

Lib Dem leader makes pitch to attract disaffecte­d Labour and Conservati­ve MPS

- By ANGUS HOWARTH

Liberal Democrat leader Sir Vince Cable has announced plans to step down once Brexit is “resolved or stopped”.

Sir Vince, 75, said reports of his imminent departure were “very wide of the mark” and insisted he would stay on to steer the party through any Brexit-related turmoil, including any possible general election. However, in a London speech he said the time would be right for a leadership election after that under new rules he unveiled to widen participat­ion in the party.

Sir Vince also made a naked pitch to disaffecte­d Labour and Conservati­ve MPS and members unhappy at the direction their parties are moving to join the Lib Dems, saying it was better to join an existing centrist party than to start a new one.

He told the audience at the Liberal Club he had already made it clear he did not want to follow in the footsteps of Liberal prime minister William Gladstone, who served into his 80s – or fellow octogenari­an leader Robert Mugabe.

Sir Vince said: “Reports I have read of my imminent departure are very wide of the mark.

“Now is not the time for an internal election, there is serious work for me and the party to do.

“Once Brexit is resolved or stopped, that will be the time to conduct a leadership election under the new rules.”

Voters who are “liberalmin­ded” will be allowed to sign up for free under plans to bolster membership, the former Cabinet minister announced.

The Lib Dems have languished in the polls and struggled electorall­y since going into government in coalition with the Conservati­ves in 2010.

Sir Vince said he wanted to create a “movement of the moderates” that would bring together voters who loosely identify with the party.

Appealing to moderates from other parties to join the Lib Dems, he said there was a risk of emulating the People’s Front of Judea and the Judean People’s Front from Monty Python’s The Life Of Brian film – two almost identical forces competing in the same ground. He added: “I make the case that it is much easier under our electoral system to work within existing party structures and with people who have shared values, rather than trying to compete.

“As the old adage has it: we hang together, or we hang separately.”

Sir Vince lost his Twickenham seat in the mass defenestra­tion of Lib Dem MPS at the 2015 general election following their years of coalition with the Conservati­ves, but he regained the seat in 2017.

He replaced Tim Farron as party leader in July 2017, who himself had replaced Nick Clegg two years earlier.

If Sir Vince does trigger a leadership election in 2019 it would leave the Lib Dems searching for their fourth leader in four years. He declined to give a timescale for the election being held, saying he “cannot clear away the current uncertaint­y” over Brexit.

But he said one of his objectives was to lead the party to “further local election success in May” and “begin the process of transformi­ng the Liberal Democrats from an old-style political party into a new, open movement”.

The speech come ahead of the party’s annual autumn conference, which begins on September 15.

Sir Vince insisted all of the party’s 11 other current MPS could lead it. But he outlined a vision for a mass movement with similar impact – if different politics – to Labour’s grassroots organisati­on Momentum.

 ??  ?? Sir Vince Cable: ‘I stay until Brexit is resolved or stopped’
Sir Vince Cable: ‘I stay until Brexit is resolved or stopped’

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