Davey says the Lib Dems will be ‘responsible opposition’ to Labour
Davey is now talking about care, and the remarkable response he says he got after the Lib Dems released an election video in which Davey talked about his experiences caring for his disabled son.
Each time I speak about my story, I’m humbled by the number of people who get in touch to say “that’s my story too”.
But I confess I wasn’t prepared for so many incredible, heartfelt responses to that election broadcast.
People of all walks of life, of all political parties and none.
Like the couple whose adult son has similar care needs to John. Who kindly reached out to say that they know how it feels – especially the worry you have about what’s going to happen after you’re gone.
Just like Emily and I worry about John.
He says carers were not mentioned in Labour’s manifesto, or in the king’s speech. But there were mentioned at the first PMQs – because Davey asked about them, he says.
This is an example of the role the Lib Dems can play in opposition, he says.
This, friends, is the role all our 72 MPs will play in this parliament.
Using our strength – as not only once again the third party in the House of Commons but also the largest third party in a century –
To be the responsible opposition to this government.
And to speak up for people in our communities – taken for granted and ignored by the others.
Key events
Angela Rayner passed over as Reeves given use of Dorneywood mansion
Labour unveils ‘Change Begins’ as conference slogan
Hollie Ridley appointed as Labour’s new general secretary, after ‘outstanding’ role as election organiser
Davey says Lib Dem values are ‘antidote to populism and extremism that threatens British way of life’
Davey says role of Lib Dems is to ‘consign Conservative party to history books’
Davey says the Lib Dems will be ‘responsible opposition’ to Labour
Davey urges Labour to invest in NHS to make it ‘winterproof’, so this year’s winter crisis is last one
Ed Davey’s speech to Lib Dem conference
Lammy sidesteps questions about how much extra UK will contribute to help poor countries tackle climate crisis
Diane Abbott accuses Keir Starmer of treating her like a ‘non-person’
No 10 does not rule out tuition fees increase as universities call for rise in line with inflation to avert crisis
Lammy’s Kew speech seeks to put UK at centre of a reinvigorated climate fight – analysis
Home Office announces £75m extra for Border Security Command, as small boat arrivals since election pass 10,000
Lammy accuses last Tory government of being ‘climate dinosaurs’
David Lammy says goverment will build global clean power alliance
Ed Miliband says poorest will suffer if ‘delayers and obstructionists’ block green energy turbines and pylons
Brexit has had ‘profound’, negative impact on trade with EU, and it’s getting worse, report says
BMA says, even though junior doctors’ pay dispute over, strikes could happen again with further pay restoration
Jacob Rees-Mogg’s attacks on working from home were ‘bizarre’, says Labour
Minister struggles to defend Keir Starmer over his record of accepting freebies
Angela Rayner passed over as Reeves given use of Dorneywood mansion
Rachel Reeves has been given the use of Dorneywood, the 21-room Buckinghamshire mansion usually reserved for the second-most senior minister in government, instead of the deputy prime minister, Angela Rayner, Kiran Stacey reports.
The Tories have dismissed Ed Davey’s claim that his party is best able to provide an effective opposition to Labour. (See 3.17pm.) In a response to Davey’s conference speech, Richard Fuller, the Conservative chair, said:
This confirms that Ed Davey will not hold this Labour government, his ‘pen pals’ [see 3.11pm] to account.
The Liberal Democrats are supposed to be an opposition party, but all their MPs do is agree with everything that Labour want to do.
Only the Conservative party will provide an effective opposition to the Labour government.
Labour unveils ‘Change Begins’ as conference slogan
Labour has confirmed that its conference slogan will be Change Begins. (See 2.20pm.) Commenting on today’s political cabinet (a cabinet meeting devoted to party political matters, not government matters), a Labour spokesperson said:
Political cabinet then turned to a discussion of the Labour party conference and its strapline: ‘Change Begins’.
The prime minister said that stabilising the economy was the number one priority and that tough decisions were necessary now to deliver on our promise of change …
[Ministers] discussed the contrast between the Labour party conference which is focused on national renewal and a Conservative conference that will show that they have not learnt the lessons from their defeat.
Claire Coutinho, the shadow energy secretary, has claimed Labour’s “ideological approach” to the climate crisis will be counterproductive. Responding to Ed Miliband’s speech this morning (see 11.43am), she said:
Under the Conservatives the UK built more offshore wind than any other country bar China and became one of the first countries to come off coal. We’re already a global leader in tackling climate change, but heaping costs on families in Britain won’t want to make other countries follow our lead.
Businesses, energy experts, and the unions have said that Labour’s ideological approach to energy will raise bills and send businesses abroad to countries with higher emissions. That’s worse for the British economy and worse for climate change overall.
Hollie Ridley appointed as Labour’s new general secretary, after ‘outstanding’ role as election organiser
Hollie Ridley has been appointed as Labour’s new general secretary, the party said this afternoon. The announcement came after Ridley was interviewed by the national executive committee which “concluded that she was the outstanding candidate to succeed David Evans”, the outgoing general secretary, the party said.
Ridley was Labour’s general election field director at the election. She transformed how the party organised, Labour said. “Innovation was central to her approach, including introducing the first ever fully digital polling day as well as overseeing the party’s voter persuasion and targeting strategy,” it said.
Ridley, who joined the party’s staff in 2011, as a trainee organiser, said:
The Labour party is the greatest vehicle for social progress in British history. But we can only do that when we win.
Keir [Starmer] has shown that the Labour party is at its best when it is outward facing and focussed on the needs of the British people. I look forward to working with him to deliver that in the years ahead.
Starmer said:
Hollie is an outstanding leader who played a critical role in the general election campaign. She brings experience, expertise and a clear vision about what is needed for continued electoral success.
We won the general election as a changed Labour party and I look forward to working closely with Hollie to remain true to that promise as we change Britain.
Ridley first got involved in Labour politics in her home town of Dagenham, where she was involved in challenging the BNP, Labour said.
This is from Luke Akehurst, a Labour MP who sits on the NEC.
Davey says Lib Dem values are ‘antidote to populism and extremism that threatens British way of life’
Davey said Lib Dem values were needed across the world too.
To resist the rise of the extremists – not just at home but around the world.
With Vladimir Putin waging his brutal war in Ukraine.
With the terrible humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza.
Hamas’s terrorist atrocities on October 7th.
Hostages still held captive. The continuing illegal occupations and the threat of regional escalation.
With the looming spectre of a second Trump presidency. How I hope and pray to see Kamala Harris defeat him this November.
At a time of such instability and uncertainty, it is our values that must prevail.
Decency. Compassion. Community. Respect for the rule of law.
Values that have always been at the heart of our party.
Our party believes that basic rights and dignity are the birthright of every individual.
Our party celebrates Britain’s diversity as a great strength.
Our party knows that our country thrives when it is open and outward-looking …
When it stands tall as a force for good in the world, instead of shrinking from it and turning inwards.
And crucially, our party stays focused on tackling the real problems in people’s lives –
From health and care to crime and the cost of living –
Instead of looking for scapegoats or conspiracy theories as a shortcut to electoral success.
Our values are the antidote to the populism and extremism that threatens our communities, threatens the traditions we cherish, and threatens the British way of life.
You are the antidote to hate and division
And Davey ended by saying the Lib Dems could use those values to build a brighter future.
Let’s offer real hope.
Let’s build a brighter future.
And let’s keep on winning, so we can make it happen!
Davey claims the role of the Liberal Democrats has never been clearer.
I believe our role in British politics – the Liberal Democrats’ purpose in British politics – has never been clearer than it is today.
Not just to vanquish what’s left of the Conservative Party. Not just to take their remaining seats.
And not just to be the careful scrutineers of Labour’s actions.
But after what we saw on our streets this summer, I have never been more certain of the need for a party with our principles and our values, front and centre of the political debate.
He says the rioting this summer was carried out by “a small minority of thugs resorted to appalling racism and violence”. They were not protests, he says.
He goes on:
It’s absolutely right that anyone involved in those riots now faces the full force of the law.
And let me say to all of you from Muslim and ethnic minority communities, who watched in fear – as those awful scenes unfolded –
Who were forced to ask whether it was safe to step out onto your own streets, to go into your own city centres, or to pray at your own mosques –
We stand with you. You should always feel safe. And we will work with you to tackle the appalling scourge of Islamophobia and racism.
Davey says role of Lib Dems is to ‘consign Conservative party to history books’
Davey turns to the Tories.
And the Conservatives are already showing that they are unfit for opposition too.
It’s hardly surprising I suppose.
Expecting that lot to hold the government to account on the NHS or the economy would be like putting a bull in charge of repairing the china shop.
I mean, who would leave the job of upholding ethical standards in government to the gang who put Boris Johnson in Number 10?
And when the country needs an Opposition to scrutinise next month’s Budget, it’s not a job for the Tory geniuses who cheered Liz Truss and Kwasi Kwarteng to the rafters, is it?
Just look at the quartet heading to Birmingham in a fortnight to audition for the job of Conservative leader.
They really are scraping the bottom of the barrel with these new TV reality shows, aren’t they?
And he says it is now the job of his party to stop them ever returning to power.
The modern Conservative Party is so out of touch with so many of their former voters – so far removed from the real lives of ordinary people –
That it no longer merits a place at the top table of our politics.
We can’t let them back – after all the damage they’ve done to our great country.
We can’t let them off the hook – after the chaos and misery they’ve caused.
Friends, our job is to consign the Conservative Party to the history books.
The Lib Dems made a good start at the election, he says, winning 60 seats from the Tories.
Voters who believe in the fundamental British values of fairness, decency, freedom, and respect for the rule of law –
And who no longer see those values reflected in the party of Boris Johnson and Liz Truss –
But who found those values strong in the Liberal Democrats.
So friends, on the fourth of July we made a great start. But now let’s go further.
Let’s finish the job.
Davey says the Lib Dems will hold Labour to account, champion practical solutions on issues like health, care, the cost of living, sewage, nature and the climate.
And they will oppose Labour if it is wrong – as it was over winter fuel payments, he says.
Davey goes on:
Back when I was first elected in 1997, Paddy Ashdown adapted the serenity prayer for a better, more constructive approach to opposition.
Paddy’s Serenity Prayer went like this:
“May we have the power to oppose what we must oppose.
Courage to support what we must support.
And the wisdom to know the difference.”
Davey says the Lib Dems will be ‘responsible opposition’ to Labour
Davey is now talking about care, and the remarkable response he says he got after the Lib Dems released an election video in which Davey talked about his experiences caring for his disabled son.
Each time I speak about my story, I’m humbled by the number of people who get in touch to say “that’s my story too”.
But I confess I wasn’t prepared for so many incredible, heartfelt responses to that election broadcast.
People of all walks of life, of all political parties and none.
Like the couple whose adult son has similar care needs to John. Who kindly reached out to say that they know how it feels – especially the worry you have about what’s going to happen after you’re gone.
Just like Emily and I worry about John.
He says carers were not mentioned in Labour’s manifesto, or in the king’s speech. But there were mentioned at the first PMQs – because Davey asked about them, he says.
This is an example of the role the Lib Dems can play in opposition, he says.
This, friends, is the role all our 72 MPs will play in this parliament.
Using our strength – as not only once again the third party in the House of Commons but also the largest third party in a century –
To be the responsible opposition to this government.
And to speak up for people in our communities – taken for granted and ignored by the others.
Davey urges Labour to invest in NHS to make it ‘winterproof’, so this year’s winter crisis is last one
Davey is turning to health and care, the two issues he says were at the heart of the party’s campaign.
Echoing the argument made by Daisy Cooper yesterday, he says it was a Liberal, William Beveridge, who invented the NHS. He goes on:
We need to transform the way we do health and care in this country.
And our MPs have already taken the lead on that in this new parliament.
There’s a reason Wes Streeting calls us his 72 new pen pals.
Because from the second each of our MPs entered parliament they were on the case.
Speaking up for all those people who’ve watched their loved ones waiting hours in pain and distress for an ambulance to arrive.
And patients waiting weeks just to see their GP, while their illness got worse and worse.
Parents searching in vain for an NHS dentist for their kids.
And cancer patients waiting months or even years to start treatment.
Davey says fixing the NHS won’t be easy. But it can be done, he says, and he calls for more investment in frontline services.
Starting with a whole new focus on community services – helping people to get care more quickly and more locally – with more GPs, more NHS dentists and more community pharmacists.
So fewer people end up in hospital in the first place.
Davey says investment in the NHS will save money in the long run.
The problem is, the Treasury simply isn’t wired to think this way.
Instead, we have the short-term negative thinking that leads governments to postpone hospital repairs and cancel new buildings.
Short-term thinking to save a bit of money now – even though you know it will only cost a lot more in the future.
Practically every year I can remember, governments have ended up announcing hundreds of millions of pounds of emergency funding to help the NHS through another winter crisis.
To paper over the cracks.
What if – instead of stumbling from crisis to crisis, instead of throwing more and more money at just plugging the gaps – what if we invested now to make the NHS winterproof?
The government could and should make this year the last winter crisis in our NHS.
So I urge Labour: do not make the same mistakes the Conservative party did.
Be more positive. Act now.
Davey says he wants to remind people who far the party has come in the last four years, when he first spoke to them as leader.
At that point Boris Johnson and Dominic Cummings were in No 10, and still on speaking terms. And Rishi Sunak, as chancellor, was the most popular politician in the country.
He recalls byelection victories, and the Lib Dems gaining 700 seats in local elections.
Local government and community politics “have always been the bedrock of our party”, he says.
For it’s in our communities, door-to-door, where we can truly hear what people are worried about. And where we can rebuild trust.
Trust. The single most powerful commodity in a democracy.
Humbling and hard-won.
In July, millions of voters put their trust in us – many of them for the first time in their lives.
Trusting us to stand up for them. To be their local champions. To fight for a fair deal.
That trust – the people’s trust – is our mandate. And now we must be true to that mandate and repay that trust in full.
Davey thanks party staff for their work.
And he goes on:
And let me shine a spotlight on a second group of people whose contribution to our success isn’t recognised as much as it should be.
I’m talking about all those candidates and all those local parties who set aside their own ambitions to go and help colleagues in target seats. The candidates who didn’t win.
As scripture tells us, in the Book of McCobb, chapter 2, verse 7:
“Greater love hath no candidate than this, that they and their team go canvassing in a nearby target seat.”
Dave McCobb is the party’s campaign director.
Ed Davey starts with a joke about his campaign hijinks.
Do you know they wanted me to wear a wetsuit today? But I said it was abseiling or nothing?
Winning 72 seats was the best result in the party’s modern history, he says.
And Conference, how fitting it was that the final seat to declare – number 72 – was the home of one of the great champions of that more liberal society.
Our dear friend Charles Kennedy.
Davey thanks party members. And he invites them to applaud themselves.
Ed Davey, the Lib Dem leader, is on the stage now.
He is singing Abba, Take a Chance on Me.
(The last party leader who came on stage to Abba was Theresa May.)
The video is now showing some of Davey’s election campaign whacky photocall stunts.
And it ends with a reminder that the election led to a six-fold increase in the number of Lib Dem MPs.
At the Lib Dem conference they are now showing a video about Ed Davey, which starts with him talking about his decision to talk more often and more openly about his severely disabled son, and Davey’s life as a carer looking after him.
At the Lib Dem conference Daisy Cooper, the deputy leader, is welcoming the party’s 72 MPs onto the stage.
They just keep coming.
The Tories are using the government’s decision to cut winter fuel payments to help raise funds for the party, Kevin Schofield reports in a story for HuffPost UK. He says an email has been sent to to supporters urging them to “chip in any amount” to help the parties campaign against the policy.