Clegg rejects coalition warning

Warren Bradley and Nick CleggWarren Bradley (left) campaigns with Nick Clegg in 2008

Nick Clegg has rejected a call from a senior Lib Dem councillor to end the coalition in order to save his party.

The Lib Dem leader and deputy PM told the BBC that Warren Bradley had “said these things before” and was “wrong”.

Mr Bradley wrote to him saying many Lib Dem councillors could lose their seats on 5 May due to coalition policies.

The Lib Dems are braced for poll losses at the English local elections but Mr Clegg has urged them to “hold their nerve” and stick with the coalition.

Mr Bradley led Liverpool Council until last May when Labour took control for the first time since 1998, and went on to fight off a leadership challenge.

In a letter to Mr Clegg, leaked to the BBC, Mr Bradley warned that local election defeats could set the party back 40 years in Liverpool and said local councillors were “tired of defending the indefensible”.

“The boil is about to come to a head and burst (probably on election night) when we lose some very well respected and experienced colleagues from Liverpool City Council.”

Mr Bradley claimed many long-serving Lib Dem councillors could be defeated “not because of their record, but because of your record and the perception of what we as Liberal Democrats now are”.

“As a party we have to reconsider what and who we are before we disappear into the annals of history as a political party who promised so much hope, yet failed because they wanted control and power.”

Nick Clegg

Nick Clegg: Warren Bradley is ‘wrong’ to ask to end the coalition

He urged Mr Clegg to “sever ties from the coalition”.

After the Lib Dems lost control of Liverpool City Council last year, Mr Bradley narrowly fought off a challenge as Lib Dem group leader. In July he warned, in a leaked e-mail, that a “weak coalition” could see the party “wiped out”.

Mr Clegg has found himself a target for anger over tuition fees and spending cuts since entering coalition with the Conservatives following last May’s general election and the party’s poll ratings have fallen from an average of 21% to 13%, according to BBC research.

The Lib Dems, who control 22 councils in England – 19 of which will be contested on 5 May. About half of all Lib Dem held council seats will not see elections in May.

Asked about his latest criticism, Mr Clegg told the BBC: “Warren’s said these kind of things before. He is wrong. We are in the middle of a very difficult repair job because of the total mess that Labour left behind.”

He said he had not replied to Mr Bradley, nor spoken to him, but advised him to “highlight the benefits” the government’s decisions were bringing to Liverpool – such as the raising of the income tax threshold and the restoration of the earnings link to the state pension.

“Those are the things I think we should concentrate on.”

He said it was “not right” to abandon plans to “fix the economy” when it was in its most difficult phase.

“I don’t think it is right in politics when you are trying to do a difficult job… to start arguing amongst yourselves.”

He added: “I think sometimes people like Warren Bradley and others forget what we are dealing with. As a country we are borrowing £400m every single day… that is enough money which is being borrowed every day that could build a primary school every 20 minutes.”

Lib Dem Business Secretary Vince Cable also told the BBC: “The point I would make to Warren and his colleagues is we do have a massive national economic problem and the Lib Dems went into government in order to provide stable government and in order to help dig the country out of its enormous economic hole.

“That’s a long-term project, it’s going to take the five years of this Parliament, we’ve got to show stamina, this is a marathon not a sprint.”

He suggested the “admirable” Mr Bradley concentrate on the Lib Dems’ record in “restoring Liverpool” and concentrate on mistakes made by a previous Labour council.

On Monday Tavish Scott, the Lib Dem leader in Scotland, joked about Mr Clegg’s admission in a magazine interview last week that he “cries regularly to music”. He told Clyde 2 radio: “Nick Clegg doesn’t make me cry, grimace occasionally, but not cry.”

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

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