- @snapesbabe So am I. Wish I wasn’t. #
- In the absence of a real meat mallet, tenderising turkey breasts with a wine bottle. #
- @having pineapple, spinach, carrots, apple, clementines #5aday #
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News reaches the voice that a talented local campaigner died last week when his car hit a tree.
A man who died in a car crash in Bristol has been named locally as community figure and Liberal Democrat candidate for Horfield – Tony Lewis.
Mr Lewis, aged 48, of Rodbourne Road, Manor Farm, was involved in an accident in Pen Park Road, Southmead, just after 6.10pm on Tuesday.
As reported by the Bristol Post, his Renault Clio hit a tree and a parked car.
Mr Lewis, who was also chairman of Manor Farm Action Group, has been described by his colleagues as a “champion for his community”.
Councillor Barbara Janke, leader of Liberal Democrat Group said: “Tony will be a sad loss to Liberal Democrats in Bristol.
“We all held him in high regard for his dedication and commitment to his local area and to Bristol. “We all will miss him as a valued colleague and a fighter for local democracy. We send his family and loved ones our sympathy at this sad time.”
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Iain Dale is currently linking to this US quiz called How Progressive are you?
Interestingly, Iain retitles it “How Conservative are you?” Maybe this adds something to the debate about whether Tories can in any way live up to the progressiveness (progressivity? progressivitationalism?) espoused by their leader.
In any case, I scored 348 out of 400, which is apparently “extremely progressive.”
Welcome to Catchup, bringing you the tastiest nuggets of LDV from the last fortnight, apart from Conference, which we caught up here.
We started the period with a debate about fairtrade. Good? John Pugh MP thought so; Julian Harris wasn’t so sure.
We learned where thousands of Lib Dems will be trekking to conference over the coming years.
We learned the Government had caved on individual voter registration – and Mark Pack explained why that was a good thing.
Our peers came out top. Ros Scott unleashed hell. Bob Russell MP campaigned to save pubs.
Guest contributors included Hywel Morgan, pointing out a rather ridiculous mistake by the BNP, Charlotte Gore thought Modern Liberty was rubbish, Geoffrey Payne kicked the bankers. York Membury gave us a historical perspective of life after Labour and Joe Taylor urged Lib Dem councils to ditch their in-house propaganda sheets. Whilst on the subject of local government, we also had two pieces on the subject of alternate weekly collection from Iain Coleman, who made it work in Cambridge, and a piece from the FT saying Lib Dem AWC plans cost them 24 seats in Waverley in 2007.
Laurence Boyce generated more heat than light when he decided to quit the party – over 70 of you had opinions about whether he should climb down off the parapet or jump; a good number of you had something to say about this week’s Question Time and a number of you had suggestions about how to improve the nation’s sales personnel after Mark Pack listed the worst sales calls he’s had recently.
Perhaps the most striking piece of writing this week was Karin Robinson’s beer fuelled rant in which she told us – “Yes you can!” and a number of us popped up in the comments to doubt whether actually we could.
It’s been a twitter-heavy fortnight: we urged you to tweet at conference and we reported back when you responded by the thousand. Even twitter-sceptics like our dinosaur editor-at-large Stephen Tall were secretly impressed.
CommentIsLinked@LDV
We linked to Jonathan Calder in the Guardian
Vince Cable warning about China
James Graham keeping his pecker up
Numerology
@LibDig Pig #13
94% of conference reps fooled by Kate Winslet
Golden Dozens: 108, 107, 106.
Haggis Neeps and liberalism #2
In our private members’ forum
Aberdeenshire expulsions
Postponed election technicality
Private landlord campaigns
Ron Paul foreign policy analysis
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Apologies to Martin, who, at Conference, I told that Voltaire said, “Mankind will not be free until the last prince is strangled with the entrails of the last priest.”
Not only did Voltaire not say, but Diderot didn’t say it either.
This comes hot on the heels that Voltaire also might not have said that he would defend to the death your right to say a thing of which he disapproved.
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