The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Davey urges Lib Dems to ‘smash blue wall’ as PM ‘already given up’

- BY SOPHIE WINGATE

Sir Ed Davey has told the Liberal Democrats spring conference that the prime minister “sounds like he’s already given up” and that setting the general election date is “pretty much the only thing left that Rishi Sunak controls any more”.

The Lib Dem leader said the Tories “no longer represent British values of decency, tolerance and the rule of law”, as he challenged members to “smash the blue wall” at the national vote.

The Lib Dems are using the gathering in York to prepare for a further push into traditiona­l Conservati­ve stronghold­s, particular­ly seeking to win over voters in the south and south-west of England.

Sir Ed rallied members to “make this a once-in-ageneratio­n election” as he argued that his party was the only one to offer “transforma­tional change”, while the Tories and Labour were just “tinkering around the edges”.

Mr Sunak this week ruled out holding an election on May 2, indicating that he would send the country to the polls in the latter half of 2024.

In his speech yesterday, Sir Ed said the election date was “pretty much the only thing left that Rishi Sunak controls any more”.

“He certainly doesn’t control his party. Certainly not his cabinet. Certainly not the healthcare crisis or the economy,” he said.

“In fact, the prime minister sounds like he’s given up.”

Sir Ed accused the PM of “outrageous­ly running down the clock” and “squatting” in Downing Street “while the crises facing our country just get worse and worse”.

The Tories were overseeing “political, economic and financial instabilit­y” because they had “been consumed by the most damaging, neverendin­g soap opera in British political history”, the Kingston and Surbiton MP said.

“And Tory MPs have given us another episode this weekend, with plots for yet another prime minister – a fourth in less than two years,” he added.

It comes as Mr Sunak faces reports that some Conservati­ve MPs are plotting to replace him before the election, and criticism over his handling of the emergence of alleged racist remarks about an MP by major Tory donor Frank Hester.

Addressing the racism row, Sir Ed said: “If this week’s news has shown anything, it’s that we must also cap donations to political parties so that even the wealthiest racists cannot buy power and influence over the Conservati­ve Party.

“The party that brought us Boris Johnson, Suella Braverman and Lee Anderson, proudly funded by a man who made the most appalling racist and sexist comments – the Conservati­ves no longer represent British values of decency, tolerance and the rule of law.”

Sir Ed urged Mr Sunak to call a national vote immediatel­y, saying the Lib Dems were “up for the fight” and “the country can’t wait a moment longer to see the back of this terrible Conservati­ve government”.

“We can make this a once-in-a-generation election,” he said.

He argued the case for having more Lib Dem MPs in Parliament, saying: “The mess our country is in demands not a plan to tweak things, but a plan to transform everything.

“Tinkering around the edges won’t come close to solving anything, and yet that’s what both the Conservati­ves and Labour are offering. They’re both trying to cloak themselves in the costume of change, but they’re both really saying ‘keep things the same’.

“The Liberal Democrat approach is different, because we don’t just want to change things on the surface – paper over the cracks but leave the foundation­s to crumble – we want real change.”

He said that would only happen “if we change our political system”, as he called for proportion­al representa­tion to replace the first-past-the-post set-up.

Repealing the Fixed Term Parliament­s Act was “a shameless act of Conservati­ves rigging the system in their favour”, he added.

Sir Ed also made the crisis in the NHS and social care central to his conference address, setting out “big, bold reforms” to ensure people could see a GP, NHS dentist or pharmacist when they needed to.

“Investing wisely in community services, to save lives and save money in the long-run, instead of just throwing cash at crisis after crisis with nothing to show for it,” he said.

He called on all parties “to include in their manifestos a cast-iron commitment to finally hold cross-party talks on social care to finally forge the agreement that has been kicked down the road for far too long”.

Tory Party chairman Richard Holden said: “Sir Ed Davey’s vacuous ramblings told the country nothing about what the Lib Dems stand for. Just like Sir Keir Starmer’s Labour Party, they can’t say what they would do, because they don’t have a plan.”

 ?? ?? FIGHTING TALK: Sir Ed Davey has told the party faithful to prepare for a ‘once-in-a-generation election’ later this year.
FIGHTING TALK: Sir Ed Davey has told the party faithful to prepare for a ‘once-in-a-generation election’ later this year.

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