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Winning back every seat? Clegg has a long way to go

The Lib Dem leader's speech will not reverse the public view that he has said one thing and done ano

It was fighting talk from Clegg today, and it went down well in the conference hall. Channelling Neil Kinnock in his 1985 speech to the Labour conference, he proclaimed: "you don't play politics with people's jobs".

He spoke these words in an angry, raised tone, reminiscent of his performance in the election debates, when he presented himself as being above the fray, with greater concerns than the petty politicking of the two main parties. However, while Clegg may want to frame his entry into coalition as a new kind of politics, the impression the public is left with is, unfortunately for him, precisely the opposite. In the comedown from Clegg-mania, the overwhelming view is that he's just the same as the rest, saying one thing and doing another.

Today's speech did little to correct that view. Clegg was disingenuous on tuition fees, putting on his best forlorn/misunderstood face and implying that people are angry because they have misunderstood the bill:

No matter how hard you work on the details of a policy, it's no good if the perception is wrong. We can say until we're blue in the face that no one will have to pay any fees as a student, but still people don't believe it.

In fact, people are not angry because of their "perception", but because of photographs of Clegg, and other ministers, grinning next to a pledge to vote against a rise in tuition fees if they were elected. It is not good enough to dismiss this as "easy promises of opposition" as opposed to "the invidious choices of Government". People do not like being lied to, and it will be nigh on impossible to explain away that basic fact.

Clegg was consistent in his narrative of differentiation and necessity: the Liberal Democrats "are in nobody's pocket", and had no choice but to enter the government. It went down a storm with delegates, but this attempt to frame the Lib Dems' role in the coalition as a noble and selfless act is unlikely to reverberate beyond the conference hall.

The steady decline in Lib Dem support may have just about stopped, but that is not the same as reversing the losses. There is a very long way to go if Clegg is to come anywhere near the promise he made today of winning back every single seat lost.

11 comments

madasbalooons's picture

I am now convinced that he comes from another planet.

swatantra's picture

I'd settle for just 30 seats Nick which is a nice number to handle in any Coalition and exert some clout without too much effort.

David Wearing1's picture

Spot on, Samira.

Playing politics with people's jobs is exactly what Clegg's doing. This whole coalition exercise is to show that the Liberals are a "serious party of government". If they believe in Osbornomics they certainly didn't give that impression to voters pre-election. They signed up to it afterwards so they could make a show of playing with the big boys and thus tart up their threadbare cv. And that self-serving little game is costing people their jobs, their services, their businesses, their livelihoods and their education.

It would be very good for British democracy if the LibDems were wiped out as a party, pour encourager les autres. Voters would be sending a clear message: this is what happens when you try to take us for mugs. The country would be in a healthier place as a result of that sort of fear being put in those politicians who retained their seats.

Fraziel1's picture

Here is hoping he loses his seat.The lib dems were hammered at the Scottish elections and it would be lovely if ut was repeated nationwide at the general election.

Suzanne's picture

This man is infuriating at times. His arrogance knows no bounds and is completely unjustified. With just about the best private education money can buy he gets a 2:1 in social anthropology.
The idea that he tries to lecture us on the harsh realities of economics is rediculous. He's been shown to be a liar and there's no getting away from it. I wonder what 'under no circumstances' means to him. The real problem for Clegg is that the public understand all too well

Freeman2's picture

Clegg really is, literally, a twerp and the more people have seen of him the more they know that. He has all the over-emphasis when he speaks of the amateur, the 6th form debater.

Graeme's picture

Freeman, you are spot on.

Graeme Hancocks's picture

An arrogant man who seems to regard the general public as idiots for not "getting it/him". As others have remarked, we "get it/him" only too well.

I dont wish to appear too unchristian but Clegg is loathsome.

p j wall's picture

Nick Clegg now that you`ve finished talking bile to your sheep, go away and be a good little tory arse licker!, and don`t forget to keep thanking Flashman for being allowed to wipe his arse when he tells you to!!, you are such a feeble, lying lightweight of a politician!, enjoy your final three and a half years in british politics, because you and most of your other lying,unprincipled MPs will be a distant memory ater 2015!, you pathetic shithouse!!, the electorate don`t like blatent liars!, now go and give Eric Pickles his bed bath!, thats all you`re fit for!!!.

Ivan Miletitch's picture

Clegg is the deputy prime minister, not the leader of an opposition party. He supports Cameron's policies, voters will remember that (as they did last time) at the next election along with all his broken electoral promises (tuition fees / VAT etc ...) & his party will be relegated to the negligeable quantity they really are

trevor marwood's picture

Blank comment for a
Blank man and party !!

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