British Liberal Democrats make big election gains
He bungee jumping from 160 feetrode a stomach-churning roller coaster, jumped off a water slide And fell into a lake while attempting to paddle.
As leader of the Liberal Democrats, a small, centrist party, Ed Davey spared himself the indignities of gaining media attention during a British election campaign dominated by larger parties.
The appearances, along with Mr Davey’s candid reflections on caring for his disabled son, have raised his profile and that of the Lib Dems, who made significant gains in this election. The party won 71 seats, its best performance in a century, and regained its status as the third-largest party in parliament.
Even during the 2015 elections, the party’s position in parliament had been reduced to eight seats.
In a statement, Davey, 58, said the remarkable turnaround was the product of a “positive campaign with health and care at its core.”
“I am humbled by the millions of people who supported us to oust the Conservatives from power and bring about the change our country needs,” Mr Davey said. wrote on social media.
A key driver of Lib Dem support appears to have come from voters in normally safe Conservative seats, who wanted to push out the governing party and found Davey’s centrist party more acceptable than the centre-left Labour Party.
The Lib Dems seized on the Conservatives’ vulnerability and challenged them in dozens of constituencies, particularly in their southern heartland. There they tried to persuade supporters of other parties to lend their votes to a Lib Dem candidate to defeat the incumbent Tory candidate, a strategy that paid off.
Mister Davey’s viral moments weren’t just stunts. In a touching message on social media Mr Davey also shed light on the lives of those who care for others, describing the challenges and rewards of caring for his disabled 16-year-old son. The video has been viewed more than 6.5 million times.
Mr Davey, who led a party that made health and social care a major priority during the campaign, also spoke about his childhood, how his own father died when he was four, leaving his mother to raise three boys under the age of 10 until she was diagnosed with breast cancer a few years later.
“My brother and I cared for her until she died when I was 15, so I was a young carer,” he says. said in an interview.
It’s been a long road back to political relevance for the Lib Dems, Britain’s most pro-European party, still recovering from their decision to enter a coalition government with the Conservatives in 2010, a time of deep austerity following the global financial crisis. The party angered students by reneging on a pre-election promise to abolish tuition fees — instead raising them — and was then punished by voters unhappy about cuts to public services.
In 2010, there were 57 Lib Dem MPs. At the last general election, in 2019, the party won 11 seats.
Mr Davey was criticised for serving as a minister in the coalition government with the Conservatives during a devastating scandal in which hundreds of people running post offices across Britain were wrongly accused of theft after a flawed IT system revealed shortcomings in their accounting.
The Lib Dem leader has since apologised for not doing more to investigate the scandal, saying he was sorry he ‘failed to see through the Post Office’s lies’.