Serpents, Goats and Turkeys: A Century of Liberal-Labour Relations
By (Author) David Laws
Biteback Publishing
Biteback Publishing
1st January 2025
19th September 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Hardback
384
The book tells the story of the relationship between the Labour Party and Liberal Party (later the Liberal Democrats) over the last 100 or so years, focusing on the formal and informal arrangements that have sustained the parties in office in the UK. This includes electoral pacts, support for minority governments, formal pacts, and full Coalitions. The book will look at how both parties might respond if there is a hung parliament in the future, and what this might mean for electoral reform.
It focuses on periods where one party needed the other to secure electoral support or the ability to govern. The book also looks at the development of policy thinking in both parties over this period, to consider whether and when policy positions have diverged or converged. It will consider attitudes in both parties to voting reform, and how this has changed over time.
Drawing on the history of this period, it considers Labour/Lib Dem options in the event of a future hung Parliament. Should the parties work together Would they be able to Which model of cooperation would work best What are the prospects for voting reform
David Laws was the Liberal Democrat MP for Yeovil from 2001 to 2015. He helped negotiate the historic Lib DemConservative coalition in 2010 and briefly served as Chief Secretary to the Treasury, before becoming Minister of State for Schools in the Department for Education and Minister of State for the Cabinet Office. David is co-editor of the influential Orange Book and author of 22 Days in May, Coalition and Coalition Diaries.