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Labour (before 1981) Social Democrats (1981–88) Liberal Democrats (1988–2021) 58 1.7 1980–2015 Menzies Campbell: Liberal Democrats 47 1.6 1987–2017 Harriet Harman: Labour 45 1.3 1981–2015 Charles Kennedy: Liberal Democrats 44 1.4 1983–2015 Clare Short: Labour 38 1.2 1980–2011 Nigel Farage: Conservatives (until 1992) UKIP (1993–2018)
The Limehouse Declaration was a statement issued on 25 January 1981 by four senior British Labour politicians, all MPs or former MPs and Cabinet Ministers: Roy Jenkins, David Owen, Bill Rodgers and Shirley Williams. [1] It became known as the Limehouse Declaration as it was made near David Owen's London home in Limehouse. [1]
This is a list of the British Liberal Party, SDP–Liberal Alliance, and Liberal Democrats general election manifestos since the 1900 general election. From 1900 to 1918, the Liberal general election manifesto was usually published as a form of a short personal address by the leader of the Party. From 1922, the party usually published a more ...
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New Party – The New Technology Social and Liberal Democrats by Hebden Royd, (1988). ISBN 9781851870752. [56] Politics is for People Harvard University Press, (1981). ISBN 9780140058888. [57] Her biography was published in 2013: Shirley Williams: The Biography, Mark Peel (Biteback Publishing) For details of Williams's early life see:
Eight years later, with the White House hanging in the balance and Trump’s poll numbers holding strong, many Democrats have now done a full 180 and want more Trump in the media, not less.
Daisy Cooper (born 29 October 1981) [4] is a British Liberal Democrat politician who has served as the Member of Parliament (MP) for St Albans since 2019.She has served as Deputy Leader of the Liberal Democrats since 2020, as well as the Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesperson since 2024.
In UK politics, the Gang of Four was a breakaway group of four Labour politicians who founded the Social Democratic Party in 1981, [1] including two sitting Labour MPs and a former deputy leader of the party.