• 2025
  • Jan 2026
  • Feb 2026
  • Mar 2026
  • Apr 2026
  • May 2026
  • Jun 2026
  • Jul 2026
  • Aug 2026
  • Sep 2026
  • Oct 2026
  • Nov 2026
  • Dec 2026
  • 2027

Monthly Archives: January 2026

2nd  2026: Time to end ragebait politics (4) by Hina Bokhari
  Personal reflection; thank you 2025 and let’s make the most of 2026! (0) by Michal Siewniak
  Coalition Government again? (45) by Lord William Wallace
3rd  Ed Davey’s New Year Message (1) by The Voice
  Why is Trump getting away with Venezuela strikes? Thank heavens Lib Dems are condemning him? (32) by Caron Lindsay
4th  When the world’s policeman goes rogue (4) by Mo Waqas
  Huge opportunity for the Liberal Democrats in the 2026 Birmingham City Council Elections (11) by Roger Harmer
5th  Does post-growth economics belong in the Liberal Democrats? (27) by Rodrigo Palmer
  Replace the Police Commissioners with new Police Liaison committees (4) by Richard Kemp
  Cole-Hamilton unveils strategy to fix NHS workforce planning (1) by Mark Valladares
  Mathew on Monday: the rules matter – especially when our allies break them (18) by Mathew Hulbert
6th  5 January 2026 – today’s press releases (1) by Mark Valladares
  Sir Ed Davey pays tribute to Sir Archibald Sinclair (0) by The Voice
  The leader who helped to keep the Liberal flame burning through dark days (6) by Paul Walter
  Why liberal internationalism must reject camp politics (15) by Jack Meredith
  Passport index (0) by Michal Siewniak
  6 January 2026 – today’s press releases (0) by Mark Valladares
7th  The liberal order is not defended by manners; it is defended by resolve  (3) by Jack Meredith
  The UK must not be Trump’s unwitting accomplice in dangerous escalation (11) by Tanya Park
  Vince Cable writes….Tech and Trump (2) by Vince Cable
  Gerry Gable 1937-2026 (1) by Gavin Stollar
  7 January 2026 – today’s press releases (5) by Mark Valladares
8th  Nudging up closer to the EU (3) by Mark Corner
  A Liberal case for fairness across generations (9) by Dominic Rider
Advert

Recent Comments

  • Nigel Jones
    On the statistics, can we not say the same for all countries in the EU, i.e. that more come in than go out? Surely the way to monitor is to look at each countr...
  • Nigel Jones
    yet another issue is the need to meet with council officers, which is almost impossible if you have a full-time job without any spare time during the working ho...
  • Nigel Jones
    Perhaps I should quality my above comment a little. Before opting out of a senior educational role i might have been able to be in the role of councillor but I...
  • Nigel Jones
    Mary you are right to mention team work but there are an increasing number of jobs that demand so much time over certain periods that it makes being a conscient...
  • David Allen
    Tristan Ward: The Melian dialogue has lessons for both sides. Yes, the Melians suffered terribly when the Athenians declared that might is right, and then ...