Lib–Lab pact
In British politics, aLib–Lab pactis a working arrangement between theLiberal Democrats(in previous times, theLiberal Party) and theLabour Party.
There have been four such arrangements, and one alleged proposal, at the national level. In manylocal councils in the UKthere are similar arrangements, although there are also arrangements where the Lib Dems and Labour oppose each other and instead form a local alliance with another party or with independent councillors.
19th century
[edit]Before theLabour Partyhad been formed, various candidates stood forParliamentwith backing from both theLiberal Partyand theLabour Representation League;these includedThomas Burt,Harry BroadhurstandAlexander Macdonald.These MPs were referred to as "Lib–Lab", although there was not a formal pact.
This agreement eventually fell apart with the formation of theIndependent Labour Partyand theLabour Representation Committee.
20th century
[edit]1903
[edit]In 1903, an agreement was made betweenHerbert Gladstone(then Chief Whip of the Liberal Party) andRamsay MacDonald(Secretary of theLabour Representation Committee) that, in thirty constituencies, the Labour Party and the Liberal Party would not stand against each other, and thus would avoid the risk of splitting their vote. As a result of this agreement, in contests against theConservative Party,29 Labour MPs were returned at the1906 general election.
1924
[edit]At the1923 general election,both parties campaigned on the issue offree trade.The Conservative Party, which had campaigned to introduceprotective tariffs,lost its parliamentary majority but remained the largest party in theHouse of Commons.The Liberals agreed to enable the formation of the first Labour minority government in 1924, under the leadership of Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald. The minority government lasted a little over nine months; ConservativeStanley Baldwinsucceeded MacDonald as Prime Minister.
1929
[edit]At the1929 general election,Labour won the greatest number of seats, but did not have a parliamentary majority. The now-much-weakened Liberals allowed the formation of the second Labour government by not aligning with the Conservatives to defeat the new government.
1977
[edit]In March 1977, the Labour government – lacking a majority following a by-election defeat – faced amotion of no confidence.In order to remain in office, Prime MinisterJames Callaghanapproached the Liberal Party, at the time led byDavid Steel.Former Foreign Secretary Callaghan had been Prime Minister for just one year, having succeededHarold Wilsonwho had led Labour to a three-seat majority at theOctober 1974 general election.
An agreement was negotiated, under the terms of which the Labour Party accepted a limited number of Liberal Party policy proposals and in exchange, the Liberal Party agreed to vote with the government in any subsequent motion of no confidence. This "pact" was the first official bi-party agreement since theSecond World War(there would bea Conservative–Lib Dem coalitionfollowing the 2010 general election), though it was far short of a coalition. The Lib–Lab Pact's end was confirmed on 7 September 1978,[1]by which time Callaghan was expected to call a general election, but instead he decided to remain as leader of aminority government.This government fell after a vote of no confidence was passed by one vote in March 1979, whereby Callaghan was forced to hold ageneral election in May,in whichMargaret Thatcherled the Conservatives into power.
Proposed coalition of 1997
[edit]In the lead-up to the1997 general election,a coalition government was discussed byTony Blairand the Lib Dems, according toPaddy Ashdown'sThe Ashdown Diaries.Ashdown, a strong proponent of a Lib–Lab coalition, said that from Blair's point of view, in order to get the Conservatives out of power and because he wanted to move his party towards theNew Labourideal, a coalition would strengthen his majority in the likely event of a victory. To get the Liberal Democrats into his Cabinet, he allegedly agreed on their terms ofelectoral reform.Blair was still considering attempting to form a coalition government with the Liberal Democrats on the day of the general election, until the full scale of his Labour Party's majority became clear at 03:05 on the morning of 2 May 1997; ending eighteen years of Conservative rule.[2]Encouraged by formerSDPleaderRoy Jenkins,Blair still considered bringing the Lib Dems into the Cabinet after his election victory, as he believed this would help to create apolitical realignmenton the centre-left and usher in a period of left-wing unity, and only reneged after Deputy Prime MinisterJohn Prescottthreatened to resign over the issue in 1998.[3]
21st century
[edit]Proposed coalition of 2010
[edit]After thehung parliamentresulting from the2010 general election,the Liberal Democrats, as they had indicated they would do so prior to the election,[4]first began negotiations with the Conservatives—the party that had won the most votes and seats—about the possibility of forming a government; but, after talks appeared to have stalled, complementary negotiations were undertaken with Labour.
Labour's delegation for negotiations included:Peter Mandelson,Andrew Adonis,Ed MilibandandEd Balls.Press rumours of a possible Lib Dem–Labour deal were publicised, with Prime MinisterGordon Brownalleged to be willing to offer to legislate for a change to thealternative votesystem, followed by a referendum on proportional representation, if an arrangement that would keep him in government could be agreed.[5]
A Lib–Lab coalition would, however, have been eight seats short of a majority.[6]A coalition of Labour, the Liberal Democrats, theSDLP,Plaid Cymru,theAlliance Party of Northern Irelandand theGreen Party—a "rainbow" or "traffic light" coalition—would have been needed to give a working majority of one.[6]For this, amongst other reasons, the talks failed. On the collapse of talks with Labour, a deal between the Liberal Democrats and the Conservative Party was reached (subsequently being approved by Liberal Democrats members at a special party conference).
There was a significant level of hostility to such a deal within the Labour Party, with coalition proposals being opposed by, among others, former Cabinet ministersJohn ReidandDavid Blunkett.[7]John Reid said that such a coalition would be "bad for the country".[8]
David Laws,chief negotiator for the Liberal Democrats in coalition negotiations, subsequently commented on Labour's preparation and conduct in negotiations; his main areas of criticism centred on Labour's lack of contrition about their record over the previous thirteen years, inadequate preparation for discussions, their unwillingness to accommodate Liberal Democrat policy proposals in the potential programme for government, and the arrogant and patronising attitude of specific key Labour figures. He said that whilst he felt Gordon Brown was quite serious about pursuing talks, he believed former minister Ed Balls was deliberately "sabotaging" them.[9]
Possible coalition after 2015 general election
[edit]Nick Cleggstated his opinion prior to the 2010 general election that the party which wins the most seats but fails to get an absolute majority in the house has the right to attempt to form a government first, either on their own or in a coalition.[10]He stated his willingness to work with the Labour Party if it won a plurality of the votes in 2015.[11]However, some reports said it was unlikely that this would happen under the leadership of Nick Clegg, as both Ed Miliband and Ed Balls voiced discontent with Nick Clegg over his partnership with David Cameron.[12]Later reports indicated that Miliband and Balls were more relaxed with the thought of a Lib–Lab government after the 2015 election. According to an article inThe Daily Telegraph,a shadow Cabinet minister who was close to Miliband said: "Our activists really hate Clegg. But if having him as Deputy Prime Minister was the price of getting Ed into Number 10 then they would have to stick it." For years, Miliband is said to have refused to speak to Clegg,[13]although relations thawed as the 2015 election grew closer. A senior party figure said, "The contact is there and the leaders' offices are now in touch." Senior members of Miliband's team, including Lord Adonis, the former Cabinet minister, had been urging him privately to prepare for fresh coalition negotiations after the 2015 general election because opinion polls suggested no party would win an outright majority in 2015.[14]
In 2014, Lib Dem ministerNorman Lambwarned that "it could be enormously damaging for [the Lib Dems]" if the party went into coalition with Miliband's Labour.[15]However, neither a coalition nor a pact between the Lib Dems and Labour was possible, following the Conservatives winning a majority at the 2015 general election and the loss of 49 Liberal Democrat seats. The scale of victory was unexpected by all major polls, and this was the first time a Conservative majority government had been formed in 23 years.[16]
Possible coalition after 2019 general election
[edit]Jo Swinson,the Liberal Democrat leader, hinted at a possible alliance after the2019 general electionin the event thatJeremy Corbynresigned as Labour leader.[17]Once again, this was not possible, because the Conservatives received a majority of seats at the election, meaning that a Lib–Lab pact would be below the majority mark.
Possible coalition after the 2024 general election
[edit]After the2023 local elections,in which both Labour and Liberal Democrats made gains. BothKeir Starmer,the Labour leader, andEd Davey,the Liberal Democrat leader, refused to rule out a possible alliance after the2024 general election.[18]On 13 June 2023,Labour Party National Campaign CoordinatorShabana Mahmoodruled out a Lib–Lab pact in the by-elections inMid Bedfordshire,Uxbridge and South RuislipandSelby and Ainsty.[19]
Welsh Parliament
[edit]When the first elections to the newWelsh Assemblytook place in1999no one party had an absolute majority, and initially Labour sought to run a minority administration. Following a series of close votes and much criticism of the weakness of the Assembly administration, Labour and the Liberal Democrats formed a coalition in October 2000 with the two parties sharing power, including ministerial appointments, with Labour the majority party. The agreement ended at theelections of 2003when Labour won 50% of the seats and decided to form a minority government.[20][21]
On 11 May 2016, following the2016 electionsix days earlier, when the governingLabour Partyhad 29 AMs elected, one fewer than in2011and two short of an overall majority, Welsh Assembly members failed to elect a newFirst Ministeron their return to theSenedd,after the roll-call tied the vote at 29–29;Plaid Cymrunominated its leaderLeanne Wood,and won the backing of theConservativesandUKIP,while Labour's incumbent First MinisterCarwyn Joneswon the support of sole Liberal DemocratKirsty Williams,the only non-Labour member to back Jones in the tied vote for First Minister (and who, up until the day after the election, had been the leader of theWelsh Liberal Democrats), and his own party.[22]On 19 May 2016, after Jones was reinstalled unopposed as First Minister, following a deal with Plaid Cymru,[23]Williams was namedCabinet Secretary for Educationin Jones's newWelsh Government;her appointment as Education Secretary was subject to ratification by Liberal Democrat members at a special conference inNewtown, Powys,on 21 May 2016 and was overwhelmingly approved.[24][25][26]
Scottish Parliament
[edit]After thefirst general electionto the reconvenedScottish Parliamentin 1999, theScottish Liberal Democratssigned up to what was termed a "partnership government" withLabour,with both parties providing ministers in a shared government.
Although standing on separate manifestos in the succeeding2003 Scottish Parliament electionthe joint working continued, with Labour'sJack McConnellserving asFirst Minister,and the Lib Dems'Jim Wallaceserving under him asDeputy First Minister(andMinister for Enterprise and Lifelong Learning) who was then succeeded byNicol Stephenof the same party as Deputy First Minister.
TheScottish Parliament general election of 2007saw theScottish National Party(SNP) surpass Labour as the largest party by one seat.[27]The Scottish Liberal Democrats decided against coalition with either the SNP or Labour, and abstained in the vote for First Minister, won by SNP leaderAlex Salmond.[27]
Gibraltarian Parliament
[edit]The major UK political parties do not stand candidates for election in theGibraltar Parliament,but form affiliations with the local Gibraltarian parties, with the Liberal Democrats affiliating with theLiberal Party of Gibraltar(LPG) and Labour affiliating with theGibraltar Socialist Labour Party(GSLP). The two parties formed theGSLP–Liberal Alliancein 2000 and together have been the government in power since 2011.
Constitutional committee
[edit]Whilst not a pact, ahead of the 1997 election Labour Leader Tony Blair and Lib Dem leader Paddy Ashdown set up theLabour-Liberal Democrat joint committee on constitutional reformto discuss devolution in Wales and Scotland, and led to Prime Minister Tony Blair setting up a joint Lib–Labcabinet committee.In part this led to the Scottish and Welsh alliances noted above. The committee was disbanded by Tony Blair andCharles Kennedyin September 2001.[28]
See also
[edit]- Conservative–DUP agreement
- Lib–Con pact
- Progressive alliance (UK)
- Purple coalition(similar governing arrangement found inBelgiumand theNetherlands)
References
[edit]- ^"1978: Callaghan accused of running scared".BBC News.7 September 1978.
- ^Wheeler, Brian (2007-05-10)."The Tony Blair story".BBC News.Retrieved2007-05-14.
- ^Watt, Nicholas(23 October 2000)."Prescott dismisses coalition 'dreams'".The Guardian.Retrieved7 February2024.
- ^Savage, Michael (2009-11-23)."Clegg reveals Lib Dems are prepared to back Cameron".The Independent.London.Archivedfrom the original on 2022-06-14.
- ^"Labour 'ready to concede defeat'".BBC News. 2010-05-11.
- ^abTravis, Alan (2010-05-10)."Con-Lib or Lib-Lab – how the rival coalition deals might work".The Guardian.London.
- ^Wintour, Patrick (2010-05-11)."Coalition talks: Labour revolt may scupper deal with Liberal Democrats".The Guardian.London.
- ^"John Reid: Lib-Lab coalition 'bad for the country'".ITN News @ YouTube. 10 May 2010.Archivedfrom the original on 2021-12-21.
- ^Bradley, Ruth (2010-11-23)."Balls" sabotaged "coalition talks".BBC News.
- ^"Clegg does not rule out Lib Dems joining any coalition".BBC News. 13 April 2010.
- ^Ross, Tim (23 July 2012)."Clegg would form coalition with Labour after election".The Telegraph.London.
- ^Savage, Michael (10 September 2012)."Depose Clegg if you want a Lib Lab coalition, Balls tells Lib Dems".The Times.London.
- ^Wintour, Patrick; Syal, Rajeev (17 February 2014)."Ed Miliband snubs Clegg's openness to Lab-Lib pact after 2015 general election".The Guardian.Retrieved2020-12-27.
- ^Ross, Tim (19 April 2014)."Ed Miliband would let Nick Clegg keep his job in Lib-Lab pact".The Daily Telegraph.
- ^Mason, Rowena (5 October 2014)."Senior Lib Dem Norman Lamb warns against coalition with Labour".The Guardian.Retrieved27 December2020.
- ^Cowling, David (17 May 2015)."Election 2015: How the opinion polls got it wrong".BBC News.Retrieved27 December2020.
- ^Taylor, Rebecca (9 December 2019)."General election: Jo Swinson hints she would work with Labour if Jeremy Corbyn quit".Sky News.
- ^Adu, Aletha; Walker, Peter (9 May 2023)."Keir Starmer refuses to rule out Lib Dem coalition after next election".The Guardian.Retrieved10 May2023.
- ^Gye, Chloe Chaplain, Hugo (2023-06-13)."Labour rules out Lib Dem pact and aims to win three by-elections - including Dorries's old seat".The Independent.Retrieved2023-06-15.
{{cite web}}
:CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^"National Assembly 2003 Election Results".BBC News. 2003-05-02.Retrieved29 December2012.
- ^"What happens in the event of no overall majority for any party?".National Assembly For Wales. Archived fromthe originalon 30 August 2014.Retrieved29 December2012.
- ^"Welsh Assembly: Deadlock in vote for first minister".BBC News. 11 May 2016.Retrieved2016-05-20.
- ^"Carwyn Jones reappointed first minister after Labour-Plaid deal".BBC News. 18 May 2016.Retrieved2016-05-20.
- ^"Welsh Government includes Lib Dem Williams at education".BBC News. 19 May 2016.Retrieved2016-05-20.
- ^Jones, Ciaran (21 May 2016)."Kirsty Williams confirmed as Education Secretary in Carwyn Jones' cabinet".Wales Online.Retrieved3 July2016.
- ^Walter, Paul (21 May 2016)."+++80% of special Welsh conference members vote to back Kirsty Williams as Education Secretary in Welsh government".Lib Dem Voice.Archived fromthe originalon 29 May 2016.Retrieved3 July2016.
- ^ab"Salmond elected as first minister".BBC News. 16 May 2007.Retrieved21 March2015.
- ^"Lib-Lab Constitutional Reform Committee Disbanded".BBC News. 2001-09-20.Retrieved29 December2012.